61 Hours (Jack Reacher, No. 14)
Jack Reacher is back.
The countdown has begun. Get ready for the most exciting 61 hours of your life. #1 New York Times bestselling author Lee Child’s latest thriller is a ticking time bomb of suspense that builds electric tension on every page.
Sixty-one hours. Not a minute to spare.
A tour bus crashes in a savage snowstorm and lands Jack Reacher in the middle of a deadly confrontation. In nearby Bolton, South Dakota, one brave woman is standing up for justice in a small town threatened by sinister forces. If she’s going to live long enough to testify, she’ll need help. Because a killer is coming to Bolton, a coldly proficient assassin who never misses.
Reacher’s original plan was to keep on moving. But the next 61 hours will change everything. The secrets are deadlier and his enemies are stronger than he could have guessed—but so is the woman whose life he’ll risk his own to save.
In 61 Hours, Lee Child has written a showdown thriller with an explosive ending that readers will talk about for a long time to come.
From the Hardcover edition.Lee Child on 61 Hours
Every book starts with a grab-bag of ideas. I sat down to write 61 Hours with six things on my mind. First was the title…it just popped into my head and stayed there (and I knew I wanted the 61 to be written in figures, not words, so if you’re the kind of reader who arranges your shelves alphabetically–I apologize!)
Second, I knew it would once again feature Jack Reacher…over the last 13 books he’s built up such enthusiasm and loyalty among readers I knew I’d be crazy not to keep on reporting his adventures.
Thirdly, I knew I wanted very, very cold weather. My fifth book, Echo Burning, was set in the west of Texas in a heat wave, and the extreme temperature was seen as a real character in the story, so I wanted to try the same thing again, but this time at the opposite end of the thermometer. I was a little nervous at first, because one of my early writer heroes was Alistair MacLean, who wrote cold weather so well. But most of his cold stories were set up on the polar ice cap, or above the Arctic Circle, and I knew Reacher would have no reason to go there. In the end I chose South Dakota in the depths of winter as a location, and I’ll know I’ve succeeded if you shiver over every page.
Fourth, fifth, and sixth, I had three names to work with–winners of your-name-as-a-character charity auction lots. A gentleman named Mark Salter helped out with autism research and asked for his mother’s name to be in the book–Mrs. Janet Salter; and then for two separate literacy projects, a man named Andrew Peterson won an auction, and the man who won the other wanted his wife’s name included–Susan Turner. All three winners made very generous donations to the various charities, so I decided it was only fair to make all three into important, central characters.
The only problem was…Mr. Turner asked that the character named after his wife have a romantic entanglement with Reacher. Read 61 Hours to see if he got his wish!

Lee Child is going downhill. This book is a good read, but not great as his previous books were. Pretty obvious who the secret bad guy was.
Well, we’re getting two Reacher books this year, which sounds good. But this one has all the signs of a book written–and edited–too rapidly. I’ve read and reread all of the books many times, and this is the first one in which I figured out the mystery long before Reacher did. That’s not a boast–it’s a testimony to Lee Child getting careless. What a strange experience it is to watch Reacher, who is way smarter than I am, stumbling to catch up with what was obvious! Plus, Reacher’s in-game failure doesn’t make him seem ‘human’ or ‘vulnerable’–it makes him seem stupid. Anyway, who wants a vulnerable Reacher? Lee, take your time, give us another novel in which Reacher not only kicks a bunch of ass, but also tortures his great brain to find out what is going on.61 Hours: A Reacher Novel (Jack Reacher Novels)
Like all of Lee Child “Reacher” books, 61 Hours is a well written suspensful thriller that is hard to put down until it is finished. I have thoroughly enjoyed each of Child’s previous “Reacher” thrillers and 61 Hours was no different. Keep up the good work Lee Child and reward us with many more “Reacher” thrillers.
I fail to understand how the Kindle price can be more than the printed version.