Chapter One
Suicide bombers are easy to spot. They give out all kinds of telltale
signs. Mostly because they're nervous. By definition they're
all first-timers.
Israeli counterintelligence wrote the defensive playbook. They
told us what to look for. They used pragmatic observation and
psychological insight and came up with a list of behavioral
indicators. I learned the list from an Israeli army captain twenty
years ago. He swore by it. Therefore I swore by it too, because at
the time I was on three weeks' detached duty mostly about a
yard from his shoulder, in Israel itself, in Jerusalem, on the West
Bank, in Lebanon, sometimes in Syria, sometimes in Jordan, on
buses, in stores, on crowded sidewalks. I kept my eyes moving
and my mind running free down the bullet points.
Twenty years later I still know the list. And my eyes still move.
Pure habit. From another bunch of guys I learned another
mantra: Look, don't see, listen, don't hear. The more you
engage, the longer you survive.
The list is twelve points long if you're looking at a male suspect.
Eleven, if you're looking at a woman. The difference is a fresh
shave. Male bombers take off their beards. It helps them blend
in. Makes them less suspicious. The result is paler skin on the
lower half of the face. No recent exposure to the sun.
But I wasn't interested in shaves.
I was working on the eleven-point list.
I was looking at a woman.
I was riding the subway, in New York City. The 6 train, the
Lexington Avenue local, heading uptown, two o'clock in the
morning. I had gotten on at Bleecker Street from the south end
of the platform into a car that was empty except for five people.
Subway cars feel small and intimate when they're full. When
they're empty they feel vast and cavernous and lonely. At night
their lights feel hotter and brighter, even though they're the
same lights they use in the day. They're all the lights there are. I
was sprawled on a two-person bench north of the end doors on
the track side of the car. The other five passengers were all south
of me on the long bench seats, in profile, side on, far from each
other, staring blankly across the width of the car, three on the
left and two on the right.
I could see a police notice advising me: If you see something,
say something.
New York City. Two in the morning. A subway car heading uptown. Jack Reacher, plus five other passengers. Four are okay. The fifth isn't. No law enforcement officer will ever forget the list of behaviors that indicate a suicide bomber going into action, and for Reacher—a military cop for 13 years—the fifth passenger is scoring 11 for 11 on the list. In the next few seconds, he will make a choice—and trigger an electrifying chain of events with links to a Reagan-era shadow war in the mountains of Afghanistan.
Marking the eagerly awaited return of tough-as-nails ex-MP Jack Reacher, Gone Tomorrow is an addictively cinematic thrill ride that slams through one hairpin surprise after another. The 13th book in Lee Child’s bestselling series, it follows Reacher as he gets sucked into a decades-old conspiracy that’s tied to today’s War on Terror. Now, on the trail of a beautiful woman with a fantastic story to tell and a former Delta Force soldier running for office, he’s in deep, trying to unearth a secret that both the feds and al-Qaeda are willing to kill for. The odds are stacked, and even in a city of eight million, Reacher has nowhere to hide. And that’s just the way he likes it….
Hardcover: 400 pages
Publisher: Delacorte Press/Div. of Random House ( May 19, 2009 )
Item #: 68-3387
ISBN: 9780385340571
Product Dimensions: 5.5 x 8.25 x 0.95 inches
Product Weight: 15.0 ounces

I've never read a book that grabs your attention then drops it then grabs it then drops it again. This book was overly "descriptive" in the beginning but I stuck with it and was glad I did until it lost me again for another few pages. It was back and forth like this throughout the book. I don't mind taking a few pages/chapters to get into the story but usually once I'm grabbed I'm soaking it up for the duration. This was just off and on. The ending left me wishing for something better.
Reviewer: Rachel
I love Lee Child's work, I have read them all. However, Reacher is just this side of Superman in all he can do and in figuring things out. In this one, it extreme. Nobody can do what he does, plan like he does, figure things out like he does. In spite of this,it is a 5 star book!
Reviewer: Darrell P
A little bit of everything in his novel. It had humor, some graphic violence, good story line, interesting character development, and a story that kept you going. The last 100 pages I couldn't help but want to get to see where he was going with it. It was worth staying up late to finish the book. You'll enjoy this one.
Reviewer: william A
I have read all of his books now, and I think they are all great. I haven't been disappointed in any of them. I hope he has another one available very soon! His books and Vince Flynn's are at the top of my list.
Reviewer: Jeannie
Jack is my favorite hero, he is sexy and smart.
I have read every one of Child's books and can hardly wait for a new one.
The plots are always good and I just can't put it down until it is finished. Come on Lee get busy on another one.
Reviewer: Montanalady