A sequel to the terrific <i>61 Hours</i> (try to read it first)... one of the <b>great storytellers</b> of the thriller genre
The Times
His is an ironclad storytelling ethos, a <b>gift for narrative</b> that <b>grips </b>like the proverbial vice... Reacher, as ever, is sui generis - a violent force for good set down by the author to eliminate evil and move on. But what counts is Child's ability to keep the reader turning the pages. <b>If anyone can put down Worth Dying For after the first few pages, then they shouldn't really be reading thrillers at all</b>
Independent
As a warrior who lacks a car, credit card, phone or weapon of his own, and has no continuing human ties or home, he is even more of a lone, denuded <b>outsider</b> than Lisbeth <b>Salander</b>, the heroine of Stieg Larsson's Millennium trilogy. Both are <b>avengers</b> who play on our atavistic instincts: when we cheer their <b>lethal</b> justice - if we do - we're acknowledging the pull of a primitive hatred that demands death and can't wait, <b>scornful</b> of the protracted pussyfooting of the law
The Sunday Times
<b>Worth</b> queuing up for
Sun
<b>Explosive</b> as ever
Daily Mirror