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Lee Child Speaks Up for Jack Reacher at the Coolidge PDF Print E-mail
Jun 02, 2010 at 12:00 AM

Thurs. June 3 

 Lee Child just published “61 Hours,” the 14th novel in his best-selling thriller series featuring iconoclastic loner and ex-Army MP Jack Reacher Tall, tough and tenacious, Reacher has extraordinary weaponry and hand-to-hand combat skills.
    He has no job, no home and few possessions. But he finds himself thrust into numerous situations where he must confront evil of all stripes. 
    Reacher was bounced out of the military for bending some rules, exacting his oLee Childwn sort of justice when he discovered the Army and the country had been betrayed by higher-ups.
     How much of Reacher is Child?
    “A lot really,” the British-born writer says on the phone from his Manhattan, where he’s lived since 1998. “That’s the key to serious writing and serious reading as much as it’s wish fulfillment for the writer and reader. The writer has the absolute luxury of saying, ‘This is what I would do if I could get away with it.’”
   Before he took the pen name, Lee Child - who reads at Coolidge Corner Theatre Thursday June 3 at 6 was James Grant. He worked for Britain’s Grenada Television from 1977-1995 and had a hand in some of the best mini-series, “Brideshead Revisited” and “Prime Suspect.” Then, he was sacked.
    “I was a presentation director,” Child says, “like an air traffic controller for the network. And I was a union organizer for the last couple of years. I was blacklisted, essentially, and unemployable. I thought, ‘What’s the nearest thing I could do to that kind of mass-market entertainment?’ It didn’t seem that huge a leap to writing this kind of book. And I had no other avenue to explore really.”
    Good call, it turned out. Worldwide, Child, 55, has sold more than 40 million books. 
    In “61 Hours,” Reacher deals with a nasty, little Mexican drug lord called Plato, who’s got his hooks in some folks in a small South Dakota town. That town happens to contain a huge, secret underground military bunker. It’s stuffed with valuables and tons of methamphetamine left over from World War II, when the government used to supply fighters with the drug.
    Reacher’s rootlessness makes for unique creative opportunities, Child said. “It’s completely unrestricted, very flexible. He can do anything and be anywhere. For me, it's really about a total luxury. I think, ‘All right, where s he going to be now?’ It can be a completely new region and pitch of adventure. It could be glossy with government and the FBI and all that or it could be a really small town. It’s a question of dumping him down in a situation and seeing what he does with it.”
   Recently Esquire writer David Granger – a new Reacher fan – read all the books, loved them, and termed Reacher a “misanthrope.’
    “I think misanthrope is a little strong,” Child said, “because it requires active dislike. I think Reacher largely is indifferent in theory. If he meets you he’ll like you or not like you, but the decision that comes is in the light of experience.”
    Reacher may wage a fight for justice, but he has no overarching goals.
    “It’s not much he goes out seeking justice,” Child said. “He will just go about his business and if injustice presents itself then he is involuntarily offended. He just lives one day at a time.”
   Asked to assess his own temperament, Child said, “I’m not a depressed person. But I’m not starry-eyed about the world. The world is a pretty rotten place. I’m gloomy rather than depressed.”

Tickets: $5 (at Brookline Booksmith). Starts at 6.
(This is an expanded version of a story that was in the Boston Herald, Sunday and is on-line at www.bostonherald.com.)

290 Harvard St., Brookline, 617-734-2500 www.coolidge.org (sponsored by Brookline Booksmith,  617-566-6660.


Jim Sullivan Boston Arts and Entertainment graphic