There is a certain satisfaction to one of Lee Child's Jack Reacher novels. As the reader you know, after the first two or so, that you are going to encounter some sort of unsavoury, unequal and violent scenario which impacts vulnerable ordinary people, and that Jack Reacher will come along and fix things by killing all the bad people and releasing the good people from whatever obligation they are trapped in. In Tripwire this pattern is barely altered, though Child has constructed a particularly odious bad guy in the form of the violent Victor "Hook" Hobie who enjoys violence, rape, torture and murder, but who has made himself very rich through loan sharking. Hobie entraps a businessman whose legitimate company is on the rocks as technological innovation has pushed his product to the margins. Hobie's greed destroys the company and allows him to physical trap the businessman and his far cleverer and able wife in a violent spiral. Having dispatched American Nazis in the previous book, this time its loan sharks. One can only hope Reacher continues to rip through the nasties of US capitalism for the rest of the series.
So that's the background. The plot hardly matters in some senses, because Jack Reacher gradually finds out what's going on as he investigates a seeminly unrelated issue passed on to him by his former military superior. Along the way, Reacher falls in love and appears to settle down with Jodie, his boss's adult daughter.
Before we dwell on the problematic aspects of that relationship. It's worth noting that Tripwire's main themes are surprisingly political. The basis to both Hobie's rise to power and Reacher's quest to fix a seemingly unrelated disappearance are rooted in the Vietnam War, or more specifically, the chaos engendered by the war, and the way that the US fought it. There's a deep cynicism within the novel, expressed through the military personal, about the way - Reacher thinks it was wrong. So do many of the military figures he encounters. More importantly, there's a sort of Ramboesque debate about whether or not the Vietnamese still have captured US troops imprisoned. The conclusion is that they don't, and there's no great conspiracy. But the very idea of this hangs over the novel and the characters. Is this representative of what America thinks today? Probably not, and probably not when the book was first published in the late 1990s. But it allows Child to portray Reacher not as a violent miltiary protagonist, but as the seeker of untruth, the helper and the supporter of the innocent that Child would prefer him to be. By making him a Military Policeman and not a combat veteran Child allows Reacher to be the hero the public wants, specifically knowing lots about guns, and not be tainted by US imperialisms failures.
But there's a problem with the central relationship in the book. Reacher knows Jodie as a child. She develops a crush on him. They are close, and when Reacher and Jodie finally get together as adults there is an implication that they have finally consumated something that was around in the past. The whole thing feels completely inappropriate, unnecessary and unpleasant to read. Oddly few people reviewing Tripwire seem to think this is inappropriate. I understand that Child drops the character in the next novel. It really undermined the book, the character and the series.
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