Home Books The Reacher Guy: A Biography of Lee Child

The Reacher Guy: A Biography of Lee Child

The Reacher Guy: A Biography of Lee Child

by Heather Martin

Pegasus Books ·2020 ·352 pages ·Biography
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About This Book

An exquisitely written and nuanced biography of an exceptional individual and writer who has created the # 1 international bestselling hero Jack Reacher, revered by dedicated and loyal readers worldwide. Lee Child has a great public he is gracious and generous with readers and fans. But Jim Grant is a reticent and very private man. This rags-to-riches literary and social biography is based principally on disarmingly frank personal conversations and correspondence with the author since 2016 and privileged access to archival materials. It consists almost entirely of original material, and is the nearest thing the world is likely to get to the autobiography he does not intend to write. There are a handful of great Lee Child/Reacher stories that have been recycled over and over again. They are so good that no one has bothered to look beyond them. This book revisits (and sometimes revises) those irresistible stories, but goes back further and digs deeper. The emphasis on chronology, accuracy and specificity is unprecedented. The Lee Child origin myth is much loved. But mostly it sees him springing fully formed from the brow of Granada Television. There are glancing references to Aston Villa and the schoolyard, but no one has examined the social and historical detail or looked closely at where Lee really came the people, places and period. This is the first time someone has described the Lee Child from peaceful obscurity in the Yorkshire Dales and Upstate New York to cult figure, no. 1 in America, rock star, celebrity and publishing institution through to backlash, the changing zeitgeist, and intimations of retirement. The analysis of the emotional power and significance of Lee's work in the final chapters—the themes of happiness, addiction, dependency, loneliness, and existential absurdity—and the first-hand retrospective accounts of his life and second-act career are all exclusive to this definitive biography.


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Reviews

"One of the more interesting strains of this book, though, is the extent to which both Lee Child and Jack Reacher are creations ..."

Dominic Maxwell· The Times (UK) Read review ↗ Maybe Someday

"In her first biography, based on personal correspondence with Child, Martin offers a variety of intriguing stories about her subject."

Kirkus Read review ↗ Maybe Someday

"Nor does Martin's hyperbolic estimation of the author, whom she compares at one point to both John Donne and Dylan Thomas."

Publishers Weekly Read review ↗ Maybe Someday

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