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Bottom line (up here at the top): Reacher stories are pretty good, too. Not better, not worse, just different. Lee Child gets to play around, experiment a bit. When he's having fun, the reader does too. There's no doubt about that. It's a collection of twelve stories, four of which I'd already read, either as Kindle singles or as paperback extras. But I had fun re-reading them.
Random notes:
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In one 43-page story,
Reacher doesn't even show up until eight pages from the end.
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As always, ultra-Dickensian coincidence plays a major role in the yarns
where Reacher is out of the Army, just wandering around the world. He
always somehow seems to fall into the middle of some skulduggery,
conspiracy, or mystery. (Just one exception, and it's kind of sweet.
I'll let you find it.)
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A couple of stories involve Young Reacher, one as a thirteen-year-old with his
Marine family in
Okinawa, one as a sixteen-year-old in New York. Even back then,
recognizably Reacher.
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In one story, there are major characters named Aaron, Bush, Cook, and
Delaney. In another: Alice, Briony, Christine, and Darwen. Reacher
remarks on the latter coincidence. I don't mind this sort of thing that
much, but it took me out of the stories a bit, wondering
why Lee Child
did that.
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Reacher beats the crap out of one or more deserving characters in many
of the stories. And displays his super-Sherlockian powers of observation
and deduction in many too. I didn't keep careful track of how many of
each, though, sorry.