By
Jackie King
I
love books. Especially mysteries…all kinds of mysteries. I write cozies, but I read
anything that hits my fancy.
The
other day I was picking up some books and movies from the library, and
as I was walking out, one of Lee Child’s thrillers reached out and grabbed me.
The title was WORTH DYING FOR. Now, I’ve meant to read one of Child’s Reacher novels for a very long time, so
I added this book to the rest of the stack and checked out.
I
often over estimate myself, especially where time is involved and the book came
due much quicker than I thought possible. (Two weeks seems like such a long
time at the beginning…then passes so quickly.) I was disappointed about not
getting to know the famous 6’ 5”, 250 pound hero, and decided to see if I could
recheck the book. I stuck it in my car so I wouldn’t
forget.
I wanted to at least get a feel for Child’s writing, so snagged it to take into
a doctor’s appointment. I settled in for a long wait (as usual) and opened to
page one.
Wow!
Once I fell into the pages of WORTH DYING FOR, there was no turning back. The
pages turned themselves. I swear it! And for once in my life, the nurse came to
fetch me way before I was ready to go into the doctor.
*****
That
night was my turn to host our critique group. I read until the first writer
arrived, and then threw the book on my coffee table so I could read again as
soon as our work session ended. The writer who walked in the door, T.D. Hart, also
writes thrillers. She glanced at the book on her way past the coffee table.
“Everyone
is reading Lee Child, now,” she said.
“There’s
a good reason for that,” I answered. “This book is addictive. It has a riveting
plot, fascinating characters and a hero to die for.”
Being
both a reader and a writer, she stopped, looked at me quizzically, and waited
for more. So I gave her my slant, which was a bit different than most.
“In
this book, Reacher reminds me of the old fashioned Saturday afternoon cowboy
hero, who rides into town, gets involved in the town’s horrible problem,
inspires the terrified townsfolk, solves the dilemma with their help, and then
rides off into the sunset.
Of
course Reacher isn’t a cowboy, doesn’t have a horse, and in this novel, he
hitchhiked both into town and out of town. But WORTH DYING FOR left me with the
same satisfied feeling that justice had been done.
If
you haven’t read Lee Child, let me assure you, the experience is WORTH DYING
FOR.
Cheers,
Jackie
King
5 comments:
My husband and I both enjoy Lee Child's novels. Thanks for the good article, Jackie.
Hi Jean, Thanks for stopping by. I'm not surprised you like Lee Child. You have a brand new thriller-type historical mystery out yourself. NO ESCAPE: THE SWEETWATER TRAGEDY, set in Wyoming, is suspenseful, too.
Hugs,
Jackie
Readers:
If you have trouble leaving comments, go to our new MURDEROUS MUSINGS MYSTERY GROUP on Facebook. We'd love to have you join us there with your comments.
Cheers,
Jackie
#2 - Readers: Re: Muderous Musings Mystery Group on Facebook:
You have to join and wait to be approved (to keep out of the spammers), then you can leave comments. But please join, this is a great group of mystery writers.
Jackie
Thank you for the promo, Jackie. The check's in the mail. :-)
Post a Comment