Without Fail
- ISBN13: 9780515144314
- Condition: NEW
- Notes: Brand New from Publisher. No Remainder Mark.
Product Description
A covert group of assassins has the Vice President of the United States in their sights. They’ve planned well. There’s just one thing they didn’t plan on: Jack Reacher.Amazon.com Review
What better way to test the security surrounding a U.S. vice president-elect than to hire someone skilled in the killing arts to penetrate his protection? Assassination strategy, though, is only part of the assignment facing Jack Reacher in Without Fail. This restive, blunt-edged ex-military cop must also determine whether recent threats against VP-to-be Senator Brook Armstrong are legitimate or are primarily intended to embarrass the perfectionist head of Armstrong’s new Secret Service detail, M.E. Froelic…
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The only reason I don’t give this work 5 stars is because Child made a cardinal mistake in describing one weapon used by the killers. Anyone who knows pistols knows that GLOCKS do not have external safeties.
Rating: 4 / 5
This book is action packed and has entertainment galore, for men mostly, but for women also who like James Bond type stories of hidden assassins and detailed descriptions of weapons and ammo. A plot has been set to assassinate the Vice-President elect of the United States. The why is answered at the end of the story, but only one Secret Service man is aware of the plot. Someone has infiltrated that elite group, and now there’s only one man in the entire world who can capture the would-be assassin. Jack Reacher, brother of Joe Reacher, a former Secret Service Agent now deceased (although we never find out how Joe died), is an “outsider”, hired to play the role of an assassin, to find the loopholes and the errors in the Secret Service’s plans to protect the Vice President-elect Brook Armstrong. Jack Reacher does a great job, but why and who wants to asassinate Armstrong?Is there a secret in his past? It’s time to find out. Good plot, well developed characters, action packed, but just not my kind of book. Perhaps you will enjoy it better.
Rating: 2 / 5
I am a disappointed Reacher fan. I enjoyed all of the previous Reacher novels and they were one of the four or five books I bought in hardcover because I couldn’t wait to read them.
Without Fail failed with me. Too slow moving. Dozens of pages watching videotapes (might as well be paint drying). Chapter One was good old Reacher material. Then it died.
Too much espionage and psychological stuff, not enough action.
Try a new author who knows how to give you what you want. Try Double Dealing.
Rating: 1 / 5
Going to a civilian to “red team” an operation? A female MP NCO whose specialty is neck breaking? Loading a pistol’s magazine one-handed? (That I’d like to see.) All Reacher is lacking is a cape and X-Ray vision. (Added after finishing the book.) “On the click.” Reacher is dead. The condition of the magazine spring has nothing to do with firing the first round once it has been chambered.
Rating: 1 / 5
I have to admit that this book starts off well and does a terrific job of sustaining its momentum throughout the first 80% of the book. Then something goes terribly wrong.
The author hands over the writing of the book to a million monkeys pecking away at a million typewriters…
Child resolves his mystery with the lamest excuse for wanting to kill a Vice-President ever. It would be like me getting caught knocking over your mailbox when I was a kid and carrying a grudge for thirty years and then deciding to kill your kids for it.
It’s just that implausible. Readers deserve better and both Child and his editor deserve to be smacked around for the last 20% of the book.
Rating: 1 / 5