The Sentinel: A Jack Reacher Novel
The Sentinel: A Jack Reacher Novel book cover

The Sentinel: A Jack Reacher Novel

Hardcover – October 27, 2020

Price
$13.99
Format
Hardcover
Pages
368
Publisher
Delacorte Press
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-1984818461
Dimensions
6.3 x 1.23 x 9.26 inches
Weight
1.3 pounds

Description

“I loved The Sentinel ! Classic Reacher, great story. Brilliant, brilliant, brilliant. I do love the spare writing style, the descriptions, Reacher’s responses to threats. Joyous stuff. I hope there will be many more Reachers to come.” —Conn Iggulden “It’s great to be back in [Reacher’s] company in a world where the bad guys get what’s coming to them. . . . A smooth transition for a much-loved character.” — The Observer “As always, the bad guys—this time, Russian spies and American-Nazi thugs—discover too late that they are no match for Reacher. Despite the change in authors,xa0the writing remains tight and the non-stop action is as propulsive as ever.” — Associated Press “As ever, [Reacher is] the sole, unrivalled champion of the average man.” — Daily Mail “Fresh, perfectly plotted, and packed with action, The Sentinel is one of the year’s best, must-read thrillers.” — The Real Book Spy “It’s terrific.xa0.xa0.xa0. The story is just as powerful.xa0.xa0.xa0. Brutal action mixes with keen-eyed detective work as Reacher metes out his own brand of justice.xa0.xa0.xa0. If this novel is a harbinger of what’s to come, then Jack is in good hands.” — Booklist (starred review) “Much of The Sentinel is humorous as Reacher patiently teaches bad guys about the flaws in their tactics. While there’s lots of action, the novel also feels like a procedural as Reacher interviews suspects and delves deeper toward the truth.xa0.xa0.xa0. [ The Sentinel has] one of the most inventive action sequences in recent memory.xa0.xa0.xa0. It continues the series without any sense that there’s now a coauthor. In a year of drastic change, fans will welcome the consistency.” — Publishers Weekly Praise for the Jack Reacher series “The truth about Reacher gets better and better. . . . This series [is] utterly addictive.” —Janet Maslin, The New York Times “Jack Reacher is today’s James Bond, a thriller hero we can’t get enough of. I read every one as soon as it appears.” —Ken Follett “Reacher is the stuff of myth. . . . One of this century’s most original, tantalizing pop-fiction heroes.” —The Washington Post “The Reacher novels are easily the best thriller series going.” —NPR “Reacher is a man for whom the phrase moral compass was invented:xa0His code determines his direction. . . . You need Jack Reacher.” — The Atlantic “I pick up Jack Reacher when I’m in the mood for someone big to solve my problems.” —Patricia Cornwell “[A] feverishly thrilling series . . . You can always count on furious action.” — Miami Herald Lee Child is the author of more than two dozen New York Times bestselling Jack Reacher thrillers, with most having reached the #1 position, and the #1 bestselling complete Jack Reacher story collection, No Middle Name . Foreign rights in the Reacher series have sold in one hundred territories. A native of England and a former television director, Lee Child lives in New York City and Wyoming. Andrew Child , who also writes as Andrew Grant, is the author of RUN, False Positive, False Friend, False Witness, Invisible, and Too Close to Home . Child and his wife, the novelist Tasha Alexander, live on a wildlife preserve in Wyoming. Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. Chapter 1 Rusty Rutherford emerged from his apartment on a Monday morning, exactly one week after he got fired.He spent the first few days after the ax fell with his blinds drawn, working through his stockpile of frozen pizzas and waiting for the phone to ring. Significant weaknesses, the dismissal letter said. Profound failure of leadership. Basic and fundamental errors. It was unbelievable. Such a distortion of the truth. And so unfair. They were actually trying to pin the town’s recent problems on him. It wasxa0.xa0.xa0. a mistake. Plain and simple. Which meant it was certain to be corrected. And soon.The hours crawled past. His phone stayed silent. And his personal email silted up with nothing more than spam.He resisted for another full day, then grabbed his old laptop and powered it up. He didn’t own a gun or a knife. He didn’t know how to rappel from a helicopter or parachute from a plane. But still, someone had to pay. Maybe his real-xadlife enemies were going to get away with it. This time. But not the villains in the videogames a developer buddy had sent him. He had shied away from playing them, before. The violence felt too extreme. Too unnecessary. It didn’t feel that way anymore. His days of showing mercy were over. Unlessxa0.xa0.xa0.His phone stayed silent.Twenty-xadfour hours later he had a slew of new high scores and a mild case of dehydration, but not much else had changed. He closed the computer and slumped back on his couch. He stayed there for the best part of another day, picking at random from a stack of blu rays he didn’t remember buying and silently begging the universe to send him back to work. He would be different, he swore. Easier to get along with. More patient. Diplomatic. Empathetic, even. He would buy donuts for everyone in the office. Twice a month. Three times, if that would seal the dealxa0.xa0.xa0.His phone stayed silent.He didn’t often drink, but what else was there left to do? The credits began to roll at the end of another disk. He couldn’t stomach another movie so he retreated to the kitchen. Retrieved an unopened bottle of Jim Beam from the back of a cabinet. Returned to the living room and put a scratchy old Elmore James LP on the turntable.He wound up asleep, facedown on the floor, after—xadhe wasn’t sure how long. All he knew was that when he woke up his head felt like it was crammed full of rocks, shifting and grinding as if they were trying to burst out of his skull. He thought the pain would never end. But when his hangover did finally pass he found himself experiencing a new emotion. Defiance. He was an innocent man, after all. None of the bad things that had happened were his fault. That was for damn sure. He was the one who’d foreseen them. Who’d warned his boss about them. Time after time. In public and in private. And who’d been ignored. Time after time. So after seven days holed up alone, Rutherford decided it was time to show his face. To tell his side of the story. To anyone who would listen.He took a shower and dug some clothes out of his closet. Chinos and a polo shirt. Brand new. Somber colors, with logos, to show he meant business. Then he retrieved his shoes from the opposite corners of the hallway where he’d flung them. Scooped up his keys and sunglasses from the bookcase by the door. Stepped out into the corridor. Rode down in the elevator, alone. Crossed the lobby. Pushed through the heavy revolving door and paused on the sidewalk. The mid-xadmorning sun felt like a blast furnace and its sudden heat drew beads of sweat from his forehead and armpits. He felt a flutter of panic. Guilty people sweat. He’d read that somewhere, and the one thing he was desperate to avoid was looking guilty. He glanced around, convinced that everyone would be staring at him, then forced himself to move. He picked up the pace, feeling more conspicuous than if he’d been walking down the street naked. But the truth was that most of the people he passed didn’t even notice he was there. In fact, only two of them paid him any attention at all.The same time Rusty Rutherford was coming out of his apartment, Jack Reacher was breaking into a bar. He was in Nashville, Tennessee, seventy-xadfive miles north and east of Rutherford’s sleepy little town, and he was searching for the solution to a problem. It was a practical matter, primarily. A question of physics. And biology. Specifically, how to suspend a guy from a ceiling without causing too much permanent damage. To the ceiling, at least. He was less concerned about the guy.The ceiling belonged to the bar. And the bar belonged to the guy. Reacher had first set foot in the place a little over a day earlier. On Saturday. Almost Sunday, because it was close to midnight by the time he got into town. His journey had not been smooth. The first bus he rode caught on fire and its replacement got wedged under a low bridge after its driver took a wrong turn twenty miles out. Reacher was stiff from the prolonged sitting when he eventually climbed out at the Greyhound station so he moved away to the side, near the smokers’ pen, and took a few minutes to stretch the soreness out of his muscles and joints. He stood there, half-xadhidden in the shadows, while the rest of the passengers milled around and talked and did things with their phones and reclaimed their luggage and gradually drifted away.Reacher stayed where he was. He was in no hurry. He’d arrived later than expected, but that was no major problem. He had no appointments to keep. No meetings to attend. No one was waiting for him, getting worried or getting mad. He’d planned to find a place to stay for the night. A diner, for some food. And a bar where he could hear some good music. He should still be able to do all those things. He’d maybe have to switch the order around. Maybe combine a couple of activities. But he’d live. And with some hotels, the kind Reacher preferred, it can work to show up late. Especially if you’re paying cash. Which he always did.Music first, Reacher decided. He knew there was no shortage of venues in Nashville, but he wanted a particular kind of place. Somewhere worn. With some history. Where Blind Blake could have played, back in the day. Howlin’ Wolf, even. Certainly nowhere new, or gentrified, or gussied up. The only question was how to find a place like that. The lights were still on in the bus depot, and a handful of people were still working or waiting or just keeping themselves off the street. Some of them were bound to be local. Maybe all of them were. Reacher could have asked for directions. But he didn’t go in. He preferred to navigate by instinct. He knew cities. He could read their shape and flow like a sailor can sense the direction of the coming waves. His gut told him to go north, so he set off across a broad triangular intersection and on to a vacant lot, strewn with rubble. The heavy odor of diesel and cigarettes faded behind him, and his shadow grew longer in front as he walked. It led the way to rows of narrow, parallel streets lined with similar brick buildings, stained with soot. It felt industrial, but decayed and hollow. Reacher didn’t know what kinds of businesses had thrived in Nashville’s past, but whatever had been made or sold or stored it had clearly happened around there. And it clearly wasn’t happening anymore. The structures were all that remained. And not for much longer, Reacher thought. Either money would flow in and shore them up, or they’d collapse.Reacher stepped off the crumbling sidewalk and continued down the center of the street. He figured he’d give it another two blocks. Three at the most. If he hadn’t found anything good by then he’d strike out to the right, toward the river. He passed a place that sold part-xadworn tires. A warehouse that a charity was using to store donated furniture. Then, as he crossed the next street, he picked up the rumble of a bass guitar and the thunder of drums.The sound was coming from a building in the center of the block. It didn’t look promising. There were no windows. No signage. Just a thin strip of yellow light escaping from beneath a single wooden door. Reacher didn’t like places with too few potential exits so he was inclined to keep walking. But as he drew level, the door opened. Two guys, maybe in their late twenties with sleeveless T-xadshirts and a smattering of anemic tattoos, stumbled out onto the sidewalk. Reacher moved to avoid them, and at the same moment a guitar began to wail from inside. Reacher paused. The riff was good. It built and swelled and soared, and just as it seemed to be done and its final note was dying away, a woman’s voice took over. It was mournful, desperate, agonizing, like a conduit to a world of the deepest imaginable sorrow. Reacher couldn’t resist. He stepped across the threshold. Read more

Features & Highlights

  • #1
  • NEW YORK TIMES
  • BESTSELLER • THE BLOCKBUSTER JACK REACHER SERIES THAT INSPIRED TWO MAJOR MOTION PICTURES AND THE STREAMING SERIES
  • REACHER
  • Jack Reacher is back! The “utterly addictive” (
  • The New York Times
  • ) series continues as acclaimed author Lee Child teams up with his brother, Andrew Child, fellow thriller writer extraordinaire.
  • “One of the many great things about Jack Reacher is that he’s larger than life while remaining relatable and believable.
  • The Sentinel
  • shows that two Childs are even better than one.”—James Patterson
  • As always, Reacher has no particular place to go, and all the time in the world to get there. One morning he ends up in a town near Pleasantville, Tennessee.But there’s nothing pleasant about the place.In broad daylight Reacher spots a hapless soul walking into an ambush. “It was four against one” . . . so Reacher intervenes, with his own trademark brand of conflict resolution.The man he saves is Rusty Rutherford, an unassuming IT manager, recently fired after a cyberattack locked up the town’s data, records, information . . . and secrets. Rutherford wants to stay put, look innocent, and clear his name.Reacher is intrigued. There’s more to the story. The bad guys who jumped Rutherford are part of something serious and deadly, involving a conspiracy, a cover-up, and murder—all centered on a mousy little guy in a coffee-stained shirt who has no idea what he’s up against.Rule one: if you don’t know the trouble you’re in, keep Reacher by your side.

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
30%
(19.1K)
★★★★
25%
(15.9K)
★★★
15%
(9.5K)
★★
7%
(4.4K)
23%
(14.6K)

Most Helpful Reviews

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Will the real Jack Reacher please come back

It does seem to be Jack Reacher who never loses a fight, travels light, never does laundry, happens into adventures. But capturing the "Reacher" essence in narrative and dialog proves elusive for Lee's brother. Parts Lee may have penned. I certainly hope the laughable, worn out storyline isn't Lee's. (Spoiler alert, go to page 189 of the hardbound.)
As a diehard Reacher fan, never again!
35 people found this helpful
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Definitely not a Jack Reacher book

When I heard that there was a new Jack Reacher book coming out; I preordered it in April. I saw the cover indicating that there were two writers and my thoughts were this should be interesting.

This book definitely was not interesting, it wasn't bad but it wasn't good either. It wasn't a Jack Reacher book! There was no depth to it with no build up. I read it over 3 days and each night when I put the book down, I would think that maybe tomorrow the real Jack Reacher would appear.

I started following Lee Child after the two Jack Reacher movies featuring Tom Cruise. Watching the reviews I saw that these movies were based on books by Lee Child, so i went over to the library, found a few, read them, loved them and realized that the library didn't have all of them. I went on Amazon and ordered all 25 books. Good books are like good movies; I get lost in them. As I read these books, I could imagine Tom Cruise doing all the stunts. Every time that a new book would come out; I would read that book, then re-read all of the 25 other books and then re-read the new book.

Lee, your book followers made you famous and your movies & cable shows have or will make you more money then you will ever need. This book with your name on it; was a "bait" and "switch" tactic on your part. Your move to include your brother didn't help the Jack Reacher series, it killed the series. If you didn't have time to write a good book then maybe you should have waited or did another book of short stories.

Other than the introduction; what part did you write? Or did you not write any of it?

DISAPPOINTING!!!!!
22 people found this helpful
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All the Reacherisms are there....but something is missing.

This is a new Reacher. From the outside it looks the same and at times sounds the same, but it is definitely different. I have read all of Child's books and what is most missing from this book is the author himself. There is very little of Lee Child in there. And, in some sense -- Lee Child IS Jack Reacher. This was not totally unexpected. After all, Lee is handing the franchise over to his brother Andrew. That said, I had hoped it would not have so clearly different.

It's not the the basic character has changed. The new book drops in all the same Reacherisms. For example, Andrew mentions Reacher's thing for prime numbers on more than one occasion. But, the way Reacher thinks and they way his actions are explained is just not the same. I am inclined to give Andrew a bit of a pass here, but he needs to become Reacher if this is going to work. This is the kind of Reacher book I would have expected any competent ghost writer to have written. The fight scenes are perhaps where this difference is noticed the most. Lee Child had a way of choreographing it and explaining it as it happened that you got a real sense of Reacher's attitude and mindset. In this book -- that narrative feel is lost. Reacher still uses his elbows and his massive size -- but, in brother Andrew's hands it seems rather phony (as if the author was watching the action instead of living it.)

Overall, I disagree with some of the negative comments about the writing or the writing style. It is for the most part, well written or at least readable. And it is better in the sense that a lot of the word salad extra paragraphs used to punch up the word count are gone. And plot-wise it is Reacher plausible. That is to say -- what you would expect in a Reacher book, i.e. Just believable enough to suspend critical thought. I did not care for the NAZI, alt right, and Russian Election storyline at all, though. Not because of the obvious pandering here to left wing fantasy -- but, because it really didn't make much sense. The NAZI angle was mostly unnecessary and did little for the plot. And the Russian election piece ("the Sentinel") itself is rather childish and simple. Again, from a Reacher perspective - not all that dissimilar from many of Lee Child's plots. But, disappointing all the same. Then again, to be fair -- the last several Reacher books have been fairly light on plot. Past Tense is a horribly thin re-work of the Greatest Game motif and Blue Moon was a mess of takeoff on a Few Dollars more or its Japanese equivalent. The last good Reach plot was probably Night School. I hope if Andrew does continue the Reacher franchise that he will focus much more on plot going forward.

Here is where this book though lost me... I think that Lee/Andrew are struggling to find a way to make Reacher a woke male of sorts. And it doesn't fit. This is yet another Reacher book where he doesn't add a sexual conquest or two to the mix. Even when it is hinted at (briefly in the end) it is downplayed. Even the violence seems to come with a pulled punch. It is no longer natural. In the last book Blue Moon, Lee Child overdid it. That violence and death toll was so extreme that it almost became laughable. In this one, Andrew seems to be worrying way too much about justification and in making sure its proportional, i.e hit this guy so that he will only have limited damage, or this guy so he will be knocked out but not have amnesia, etc. Just unnecessary. The only time he allows Reacher to deal a full blow is near the end, when Reacher is confronting a Nazi -- which must make it OK in the Childs books. Again, a bad guy is a bad guy -- he should be dealing full blows every time. I didn't also like the shout out of either respect or admiration for Antifa, a domestic terror outfit. Why mention them at all? It was unnecessary, and again seems to indicate an effort by the Childs to make Reacher more woke and pleasing to the left. I really miss the Reacher books where politics were not so much a part of the narrative slant.

So -- is it better than Past Tense? yes. It is about as good as Blue Moon, which was meh. Unfortunately, this book like the past two are nowhere near as good as any of the best Reacher books.
21 people found this helpful
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Jack Reacher Joins the Cub Scouts

I realize that no two authors can have identical styles, abilities, and sensibilities. Wishfully thinking, though, I supposed that Lee Child (James Grant) could at least pass the character of Jack Reacher on to his own brother, Andrew Child (Andrew Grant) substantially intact. If this book, "The Sentinel", turns out to be representative of the new Reacher series, he failed.

This new Reacher, as many other reviews note, is far too bantering, noticeably less caustic and iconoclastic, and even intellectually plodding. At certain stages of the narrative, the new Reacher seems to make an effort to recover his former mental and physical prowess, going so far as to paraphrase action sequences and well-known Reacherisms from earlier books. Unfortunately, these moments are not sustained or in the end convincing. Reacher gets into scrapes, sure, and even punches some people - in one case, he throws a bad guy through an open car window and supposedly puts him out of action (?). Plausible? No. In short, the action sequences are no longer realistic or even entertaining. Reacher seems to go through the motions, but in the end comes off about as formidable as a testy Cub Scout. The "voice" and the character of Jack Reacher are simply different from that in the many earlier novels. This is decidedly not an improvement.

The other characters are almost indistinguishable - if you lose track of the dialog identifiers, for instance, you find that the "retired female FBI agent," the male FBI agent, and even the semi-protagonist computer guy are pretty much identical in tone and expression. One of the remarkable facets of Lee Child's earlier books was his ability to create intereresting characterizations in the "bit players." No such additional dimension in this book.

The two principal villains just don't work well - Speranski starts out well, nice and ominous, but then deteriorates into a voice on a cell phone. The other villain (spoiler) is transparently phony - and he turns out to be a sort of Nazi AND a Stalinist, rolled into one. There are a group of bumbling henchmen who are some kind of Russian hit squad, or Russian mafia, or maybe FBI undercover types - that all gets confused at times. Never is there any real sense of a threat to Reacher. The clincher is that the inevitable and completely obvious bent cop ends up on his behind with a two-faced portrait of your favorite dictator, take your choice, popped over his head - just like a screwball comedy from the 30s. No doubt there were little animated stars twirling around his soon to be aching brow. Where are Abbot and Costello when you need them?

Let's be fair - if this were a totally new book and character, it would likely be judged a readable mystery, action-adventure story - a good start, with recognizable potential. Sadly, it is not. It follows in the tracks of more than 20 novels - possibly the most entertaining and captivating hero of the last two decades. The character lead in "The Sentinel" is not that guy.

I did finish the book, and even began it again in an attempt to give it a truly fair shake. I only reached about chapter seven before I gave it up. I may buy the next iteration, if there is one, hoping for some improvement, but I am not optimistic about the chances.
21 people found this helpful
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Still Have My Doubts

I am a HUGE Jack Reacher fan, and have read and reread the books many times, so I eagerly raced through this when it arrived today. It's very hard to take over a long-running series - the only one I've seen that works is the one by Tony Hillerman's daughter. The writing is, just, "different", and the character seems somehow "off." For one thing, this Reacher talks a LOT, and the paragraphs are much longer. There is little physical description of people other than hair color or weight. When Reacher is removing the clothing of a Russian woman, he refers to her body as "it", instead of "her". It also seems a bit desperate in trying to be timely, what with neo-nazis, antifa, voting fraud, etc. Also people are motivated by threats to their wife - no, their mother - whatever. I was just waiting for a threat to harm Hunter Biden's puppy! I'll hang in there, and hope the next book is better. It might be best to go back in time, and write one about Jack in Panama, or at West Point, or his first assignment. I love this character and want him to continue.
19 people found this helpful
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Not the Reacher from the past

I own and have read every book in the Jack Reacher series. I was really anxious to get my copy of "The Sentinel".
Got it a couple days ago and will finish it today. Won't be purchasing anymore in the series. Lee Child's brother obviously wrote most of it. Definitely not what I had expected. Trying way too hard to be funny and it doesn't work.
19 people found this helpful
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Not the Reacher I have come to admire and look forward to.

Like many devoted fans I have read all in this series. This one does not measure up in any way. This extremely detailed and long-winded tale found me breezing over some of the inane details that I do not recall in other Reacher books. This effort was quite obviously not produced by Lee Child. Reacher is painfully out of his element in this story that focuses on technology and has him doing things that Reacher would never do. Reacher almost fades into the background and wallows in the absurd level of unnecessary detail. Feels like he is moving through quicksand and the reading becomes quite discouraging. Rarely am I happy to see a Reacher book end but this effort is the exception. Unfortunately, it seems like the author and publisher have put profit above quality. I may buy one more Reacher book but another one like this will be my last. Very disappointed loyal reader.
17 people found this helpful
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Two Authors Working Together Are Better Than One -- Right?

No, not, nope, not in this case. I have always been a Jack Reacher fan, at least until Tom Cruise bought the film rights and attempted to fit a short "pretty boy" actor into a convincing tall, burly and stoic ex-MP. That kind of ruined it for me. But I could avoid the movies and simply let my mind be perfectly happy going with Lee Child's literary descriptions of Reacher's physical and mental capabilities.

But now Jack Reacher has become yet again a different man as fleshed out by Andrew (Grant) Child's character interpretation. It's always dangerous when a successful author with a great franchise takes on a second author as a writing partner. This has become more common in the publishing industry and the results that I have seen so far have been disappointing. Perhaps the lure of making more money trumps the pride of ending a successful series with finesse.

Reacher has become quicker to utilize his physical talents, almost to the point of showing off. In fact some of the action scenes, which come quickly and much more often, have turned more into Superman taking on multiple criminals without so much as an ounce of fear. No one is that good -- unless it's a comic book character. It also seems that Reacher is now much more brutal when delivering punishment, going past what is required to show us how superior he is.

The plot of this novel is also "over the top" and has so much always going on that it takes a long time to unwind the story when it finally ends. The word "overwritten" comes to mind, being so much more complicated than Lee Child's solo efforts. Andrew had to justify his input into the story somehow. Unfortunately it doesn't work for me. This is by far the worst of the Jack Reacher novels.
17 people found this helpful
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Terrible!

I read the first few chapters and gave up on it. As other reviewers are saying it is not the Jack Reacher I have read all these years. I hate I wasted good money on it.
16 people found this helpful
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Missing the real Reacher!

I've read all the Reacher books/short stories by Lee Child. This book is a combination of Lee and Andrew Child. In my opinion I felt Reacher was a bland,washed out character who was more of a minor character in this book. This book was greatly lacking in all the Reacher traits that make Reacher Reacher and the reason we read these books. Sadly this book fell well short of being a Jack Reacher novel worth reading.
13 people found this helpful