The Hunt for Jack Reacher Series #12
If you couldn't put down Vince Flynn's Mitch Rapp, Lee Child's Jack Reacher, Tom Clancy's Jack Ryan, Brad Thor's Scot Harvath, or David Baldacci's Will Robie, fans of Bradley Wright believe you won't be able to put down the addictive Alexander King. And owning the presidential candidate with a clear path to the White House gets him all the. Have there been other candidates to play Jack Reacher? Are the comedic elements in the film Jack Reacher evident in the novels on which it was based?
FBI Special Agent Kim Otto picks up where Lee Child leaves off in the Hunt for Jack Reacher.
Lee Child Gives Diane Capri Two Thumbs Up! 🌟🌟🌟🌟🌟 'Full of thrills and tension, but smart and human, too. Kim Otto is a great, great character – I love her.'
FBI Special Agent Kim Otto is back and this time it's personal.
Otto receives a kidnapper's cryptic message in the middle of the night. The Hunt for Jack Reacher turns personal when the victims have a tenuous connection to Jack Reacher.
And a stronger connection to her.
Alone, carrying nothing but the stuff in her pockets, Otto attempts to find the hostages and quickly becomes embroiled in an ongoing turf war.
Innocent preppers are caught in the fallout as ruthless cartels battling for American drug dollars seek to devastate the community and destroy the people who live there.
After Otto is attacked and nearly killed, she accepts that she needs a partner she can rely on to finish the mission. But viable candidates are thin on the ground.
The best man for the job is Jack Reacher, and he owes her. Problem is, Reacher is always in the wind. She can't afford to wait.
Otto is forced to execute a daring rescue mission to bring down the cartel's leader and save the innocent preppers at Glen Haven commune.
Will she die trying? And what about Reacher?
The Hunt for Jack Reacher series enthralls fans of John Grisham, Lee Child, and more:
'Diane writes like the maestro of the jigsaw puzzle. Sit back in your favorite easy chair, pour a glass of crisp white wine, and enter her devilishly clever world.' —David Hagberg, New York Times Bestselling Author of Kirk McGarvey Thrillers
'Expertise shines on every page.' —Margaret Maron, Edgar, Anthony, Agatha and Macavity Award Winning MWA Past President and MWA Grand Master 2013
Readers Love the Hunt for Jack Reacher Series and Diane Capri:
'I ‘stumbled' on this title and was attracted to it as I am a Jack Reacher fan. Loved the story and the author's writing style. Couldn't wait for more so I purchased [Raw Justice] and want more Jennifer Lane — please?! Fatal Distraction is also on my Kindle to read list!'
'I have been a Reacher fan for years and was excited when I heard of Diane Capri's take on ‘Finding Reacher'. ‘Don't Know Jack' is a good companion to Child's Reacher books and recaptures the flavor of the Reacher mystique. I am waiting anxiously for the next book in the series and the next and the next, and so on.'
'All Child fans should give it a try!'
Award-Winning, New York Times and USA Today Bestselling Author DIANE CAPRI does it again in another blockbuster Hunt for Jack Reacher Series Novel
Click on the links below to buy Prepper Jack or download a sample:
Buy the eBook: Apple Books
Buy the eBook: Amazon
Buy the Paperback, Hardcover, Large Print: Amazon
Buy the eBook: Nook
Buy the eBook: Kobo
Award-Winning, New York Times and USA Today Bestselling Author DIANE CAPRI does it again in another blockbuster Hunt for Jack Reacher Series Novel
Click on the links below to buy Prepper Jack or download a sample:
Buy the eBook: Apple Books
Buy the eBook: Amazon
Buy the Paperback, Hardcover, Large Print: Amazon
Buy the eBook: Nook
Buy the eBook: Kobo
Buy the eBook: Google Play
Buy the Paperback, Hardcover, Large Print: BookDepository
Buy the Audiobook:Audible
Buy the Audiobook: Amazon
🌟🌟🌟🌟🌟'Make some coffee. You'll read all night.' Lee Child, #1 New York Times Bestselling Author of Jack Reacher Thrillers
Publication Order of The Revolution Trilogy Books
The British Are Coming: The War for America, Lexington to Princeton, 1775-1777 | (2019) | Amazon.de | Amazon.com |
Publication Order of World War II Liberation Trilogy Books
An Army at Dawn: The War in North Africa, 1942-1943 | (2002) | Amazon.de | Amazon.com |
The Day of Battle: The War in Sicily and Italy, 1943-1944 | (2007) | Amazon.de | Amazon.com |
The Guns at Last Light: The War in Western Europe, 1944-1945 | (2013) | Amazon.de | Amazon.com |
Publication Order of Non-Fiction Books
The Long Gray Line: The American Journey of West Point's Class of 1966 | (1989) | Amazon.de | Amazon.com |
Crusade: The Untold Story of the Persian Gulf War | (1993) | Amazon.de | Amazon.com |
In The Company of Soldiers: A Chronicle of Combat In Iraq | (2004) | Amazon.de | Amazon.com |
Where Valor Rests: Arlington National Cemetery | (2007) | Amazon.de | Amazon.com |
On War: The Best Military Histories | (2013) | Amazon.de | Amazon.com |
D-Day: The Invasion of Normandy, 1944 | (2014) | Amazon.de | Amazon.com |
Battle of the Bulge | (2015) | Amazon.de | Amazon.com |
Rick Atkinson
Rick Atkinson was born November 16, 1952 in Munich, Germany to Margaret and Larry Atkinson, a US Army officer, and as a result, he grew up on different military bases around the world. After he turned down an appointment to West Point, he attended East Carolina University on a full scholarship, graduating in 1974 with a bachelor of arts degree in English. Rick received a master of arts degree in English literature and language in 1975 from the University of Chicago.
In 1975, while he was visiting his parents for Christmas at Fort Riley, Kansas, he found a job at The Morning Sun as a newspaper reporter in Pittsburg, Kansas, covering local government, crime, and other topics in southeast Kansas.
Then in April of 1977, he joined The Kansas City Times' Staff, working nights in suburban Johnson County, Kansas before he moved to the city desk and later serving as a national reporter; by 1981 he had joined the newspaper's bureau in Washington, D. C.
He was hired as a reporter on The Washington Post's national staff in November of 1983. He wrote about the 1984 presidential election, defense issues, and covered Rep. Geraldine Ferraro (the first female vice presidential candidate from a major party), and national topics.
Rick left the newspaper world in the year 1999 in order to write about World War Ii, a consuming interest that started with his birth in Germany and was rekindled during his three year tour in Berlin.
On two separate occasions, he rejoined the Post, first in 2003 when he accompanied General David Petraeus and the 101st Airborne Division during the Iraq invasion. The other time was in 2007 when he made trips to both Afghanistan and Iraq while he was writing 'Left of Boom', which was an investigative series about roadside bombs in modern warfare, for which he won the Gerald R. Ford for Distinguished Reporting on National Defense.
Rick has won two Pulitzer Prizes, one in 1982 for National Reporting and the other in 2003 for History. In 1999, a Pulitzer Prize was awarded to The Post for articles on shootings by the District of Columbia police department. He has also won a George Polk Award for national reporting, a Morton Mintz Award for Investigative Reporting, and the Pritzker Military Library Literature Award for Lifetime Achievement in Military Writing.
Rick is married to Jane Ann Chestnut from Lawrence, Kansas who is a clinician and researcher at the National Institutes of Health, and they have two grown kids. One is named Sarah, who is a colorectal surgeon and physician at the University of Washington Medical Center, and Rush, who works as a criminal trial attorney for the Justice Department.
Rick's first book, called 'The Long Gray Line: The American Journey of West Point's Class of 1966', was released in the year 1989. His work is from the historical, military history, and non-fiction genres.
Jack Reacher Candidates
'An Army at Dawn: The War in North Africa, 1942-1943' is the first book in the 'World War II Liberation' trilogy, released in 2002. The destruction of the Third Reich and the liberation of Europe is a tale of enduring triumph and bravery, about miscalculation and calamity. No modern reader can understand the ultimately victory of the Allied powers without having a grasp of the great drama which unfolded in North Africa from 1942 and 1943. This first year of the Allied war truly was a pivotal moment in US history, and is the moment that America began acting like a great power.
Starting with the daring amphibious invasion in late 1942, this follows the British and American armies while they battle the French in Morocco and Algeria, then take the Italians and Germans on in Tunisia. With each battle, an inexperienced and occasionally badly led army slowly becomes a superb fighting force. Central to this story are the extraordinary yet fallible commanders that come to dominate this battlefield: Patton, Rommel, Eisenhower, Bradley, and Montgomery.
Jack Reacher 1 Full Movie
'The Day of Battle: The War in Sicily and Italy, 1943-1944' is the second book in the 'World War II Liberation' trilogy, released in 2007. The Italian campaign's outcome wasn't ever certain. In fact, Churchill, Roosevelt, and their military advisers engaged in a heated debate about whether the invasion of the supposed soft underbelly of Europe was even a good idea.
However, once it's under way, the commitment to liberate Italy from the Nazis never once wavered, despite the painfully high cost. The battles at Anzio, Salerno, and Monte Cassino were especially deadly and difficult, but while the months go by, the Allied forces continue driving the Germans up the Italian peninsula. American soldiers and officers, led by Lieutenant General Mark Clark (who is one of the war's most complicated and controversial commanders) become more and more proficient and determined. With Rome's liberation in June of ‘44, total victory at last starts to seem inevitable.
'The Guns at Last Light: The War in Western Europe, 1944-1945' is the third book in the 'World War II Liberation' trilogy, released in 2013. At a staggering cost, the US and its allies liberated Europe and defeated Hitler, which is the twentieth century's unrivaled epic. This is the most dramatic story of all: the titanic battle for Western Europe.
D-Day marks the start of the last campaign of the European war, and Rick's riveting accounting of this bold gamble sets the tone for the masterly narrative which follows. The gruesome battle in Normandy, the disaster that wound up being Operation Market Garden, the liberation of Paris, that terrible Battle of the Bulge, and lastly, the thrust to the Third Reich's heart. All of these historic events and more are brought to life with a lot of new material as well as a mesmerizing group of characters.
Rick tells this story from the point of view of the participants at each level, from generals and presidents to the war weary lieutenants and horrified teen riflemen. Once Germany finally surrenders, we comprehend anew both the devastating cost of this global fight and the gigantic efforts to win the Allied victory.