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One Shot

One Shot

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Author: Lee Child
Publisher: Bantam Books Ltd
Category: Book

List Price: £7.99
Buy New: £0.01
You Save: £7.98 (100%)



New (44) Used (103) Collectible (3) from £0.01

Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars 38 reviews
Sales Rank: 1388

Media: Paperback
Pages: 512
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.6
Dimensions (in): 6.9 x 4.2 x 1.3

ISBN: 0553815865
EAN: 9780553815863
ASIN: 0553815865

Publication Date: April 3, 2006
Availability: Usually dispatched within 1-2 business days

Also Available In:

  • Hardcover - One Shot (Jack Reacher Novels)
  • Mass Market Paperback - One Shot (Jack Reacher)
  • Hardcover - One Shot
  • Paperback - One Shot
  • MP3 CD - One Shot (Jack Reacher Novels)
  • MP3 CD - One Shot (Jack Reacher Novels)
  • Audio CD - One Shot
  • Audio CD - One Shot
  • Hardcover - One Shot.
  • Hardcover - One Shot (Jack Reacher Novels)

Similar Items:

  • Persuader
  • The Enemy
  • Without Fail (A Jack Reacher novel)
  • The Visitor (A Jack Reacher Novel)
  • Echo Burning (A Jack Reacher Novel)

Editorial Reviews:

Amazon.co.uk Review
Lee Child's Jack Reacher thrillers always have remarkably inventive setups, and One Shot is true to form. A sniper, Barr, kills five people with six shots and leaves a clear trail of evidence; arrested, he asks for Reacher. When Reacher was a military policeman, politics stopped him pursuing Barr--he cannot understand why Barr would ask for him and Barr has been beaten in jail until he cannot remember himself. Yet, for Reacher, the loner who looks at things differently from civilians, the story does not add up--Barr should not have got himself caught, should not even have fired from where he did.

Child is a master of the perverse solution to the set of questions no-one ever asked in quite that way before, and the macho yet sensitive Reacher is one of the more interesting series characters in thrillers. One Shot is a smart set of puzzles which strings the reader along to false conclusions and a sense of real danger. It also, like its hero, has a heart. --Roz Kaveney


Customer Reviews:   Read 33 more reviews...

5 out of 5 stars Love Leo Tolstoy - but Lee Child is a new favourite   July 22, 2008
I picked up a copy of this book for free one day with a London newspaper. It sat on my shelf for weeks unread - probably partly because I had my own snobby preconceptions about Child. The adverts I'd seen for his books made them look like complete no-brainers all about muscle and guns. Then I read One Shot and it certainly will not be the last Lee Child I read.

He paces his books perfectly and Jack Reacher is one of the great crime-fighters - hard as nails but smart, sophisticated and very 21st century in his opinions and attitudes. Child takes you through Reacher's thoughts with the skill of a master. I loved One Shot, am now reading The Enemy, and already put Child up there with my two favourite crime/thriller writers: Ian Rankin and Ian Fleming.



4 out of 5 stars One read and you will be hooked   May 7, 2008
This book was real treat (especially as I got it as a freebee from the Evening standard). It is my first Jack Reacher book and won't be my last. This can be a stand-alone book, although I'm sure you will get more out of it if you have read the others.
What I liked about it is that the plot kept changing and evolving as it was told trough the eyes of Jack. A minor niggle - Every now and then I found Jack `a little too right or invincible all the time', but then if you accept that, then he is a believable character.
I'm not normally a sucker for freebee advertising, but I'm finding myself looking around for the rest of the series.




5 out of 5 stars My first Child novel   March 23, 2008
 1 out of 1 found this review helpful

One Shot is the first Lee Child novel I ever read. I'd gone into many stores before and picked up other titles The Enemy, Persuader, Tripwire & Die Trying. But, after reading back cover I would always think "nah, probably too much reading". Some months later I picked up a copy of One Shot in a book store and thought "maybe". The plot looked good so I went for it, and I was seriously impressed they way it was written. I loved the way Reacher just turns up in the town where the shootings happened, how he goes about dealing with people (the Russians, the girl & guys in the sports bar). And also how at the end after doing what he has to, Reacher just up's and leaves. No goodbyes or thanks for your help, he just takes off. bloody brilliant.


4 out of 5 stars Well crafted densely plotted thriller   March 3, 2008
It is some time since I last read a Jack Reacher thriller and obviously Lee Child's has improved over the years.

As always he grabs the reader from the first page, but has developed greater skill in drawing one into the story with finely observed detail and clever plotting and twists as Reacher does a complete U-turn in his assessment of the crime.

Although a thriller (action hero Reacher is perhaps sometimes a little too invincible) it is also a clever whodunit/howdunnit.

A fine achievement.



2 out of 5 stars Very disappointing   March 1, 2008
I read Lee Child's 'The Hard Way' and loved it, that was what made me buy this book. Sadly this one was not in the same league. It was readable but to be honest by the time I was halfway through I couldn't have cared less who was responsible for the shootings, the charachters were so dull that there weren't any at all that I was remotely bothered about. Jack Reacher too seems to be a somewhat ludicrous person, who can in reality live like that? How does he have the money to stay in hotels etc when he doesn't have a job? Maybe I missed something in the earlier books and he's a secret millionaire?