The question is - is it too action-packed? It's certainly exhausting to read about people who are tireless heroes who seem to function with virtually no sleep and almost no food or drink and who have also survived physical damage. In real life, many people can't even crawl to work if they catch a cold but maybe, at least in our heads, we aspire to be heroes. Most of us can't do it ourselves so we read about it because - who wants to read about lives as ordinary as our own?
The story involved 'great minds' including POTUS, the head of the FBI and the head of the US Military yet, sometimes, they overlooked the obvious for a few pages. However, Reacher saves the day. Again. He's dependable, logical, with a strong sense of 'right' and 'wrong'.
Good news - although there were still passionate scenes, they were not
clumsy (as they were in the first book) and there was still wanton
torture by the 'baddies' but the author was not so fixated on it. More
good news - there was an absence of unnecessary gratuitous swearing, the sign of a competent wordsmith.
Next week, it's on to the third Reacher book. I'll keep you posted.
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