Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
[12] Lee Child's endorsement of Under the Dome appears on the cover of at least one edition of the book. [citation needed] Similarly, The Jack Reacher Cases, a series of thus far 11 books, by Dan Ames, mentions Reacher's name on many occasions, but the character does not appear in person.
Lee Child began writing Tripwire in spring 1997. [4] The book was published on 15 June 1999 in the United Kingdom [1] and the American publication followed on 28 June of the same year. [2] The reason for the opening of the book taking place in Key West was a vacation Child spent there in 1996. [4]
Bad Luck and Trouble is the eleventh book in the Jack Reacher series written by Lee Child. [1] [2] It was published in 2007, and written in the third person. The title is derived from the song lyrics by singer Albert King "Born Under a Bad Sign". The book was adapted into season two of the Reacher television series on Amazon Prime Video. [3]
Nothing to Lose is the twelfth book in the Jack Reacher series written by Lee Child. [1] It was published in the UK by Bantam Press on 24 March 2008 and in the US by Delacorte in 3 June 2008. It is written in the third person.
Season 2 was based on the 11th book in Child’s series, Bad Luck and Trouble, and Santora has revealed that Season 3 will be an adaptation of the 7th book, which is titled Persuader.
Persuader is the seventh book in the Jack Reacher series written by Lee Child. [1] It is written in the first person. According to an Instagram post from Alan Ritchson posted on 24 January 2024, this book will be adapted into season 3 of the Reacher television series on Amazon Prime Video.
A Wanted Man is the seventeenth book in the Jack Reacher series written by Lee Child. It was published on 30 August 2012 in the United Kingdom, [1] Australia and New Zealand [2] and on 11 September 2012 in the USA and Canada. [1] A Wanted Man won the "Crime Book of the Year" award by the National Book Awards. [3]
Gone Tomorrow has the switchback plotting and frictionless prose that are Child's trademarks. Unlike most of the series, though, it's narrated by Reacher himself. His lone-wolf habits and brusque, technophobic decodings of the world are always a pleasure, though how he maintains fighting fitness on a diet of pancakes, bacon and coffee is one of the world's great mysteries.