"Reacher is a five star general"
In 1989, twenty-nine years old military police officer
Major Jack Reacher is reassigned from Panama to Fort Bird,
North Carolina. When he arrives at his new duty station,
he finds many other MPs transferred there, but thinks
little of it. On January 1, 1990 just past midnight, Reacher, as the MP
duty officer doing graveyard receives a call that a two-
star General Officer on his way to a conference was found
murdered in a run down motel while apparently having sex
with someone other than his spouse. Not long afterward,
the general's wife is killed. Two more people also die.
Reacher investigates the homicides ignoring the brass that
tries to persuade him to stop. He believes the link is
the conference if he can only find a copy of the agenda
before his superiors charge him with insubordination or
the killer targets him next. The backdrop of the fall of the Berlin Wall and expected
force reduction of military personal with the end of the
Reagan era contrast with the news that the hero's mother
is dying from cancer in Paris; together they provide a
deep backdrop to the tale. Though still a loner, Reacher
willingly takes on the service to uncover the identity of
the killer. That personality trait is superb when he is
an independent operator, but seems more like misconduct
and insubordination within the Army chain of command,
which does not allow for independent aces seeking justice
outside the military. Yet his lone ranger investigation
also meets the values expected of a soldier. Reacher is a
five star general. Harriet Klausner
Reviewed by Harriet Klausner
Posted April 24, 2004
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