Recommended only for the really hard-nosed Reacher fans. The action comes after a spectacular start with difficulty in transition - one can lose track of all the rooms, corridors and doors through which Reacher moved, and the constant repetition of the same processes always tiring the gentle reader quickly. A proven at Lee Child means the tension building coming but here again to use: When and how the hero gets the girl Reacher time to bed? She graces initially short, but is then but quite satisfied with the further course of events. A number of other skills of the hero are again designed to activate or re: Jack Reacher has a kind of inner clock that goes down to the minute and it can use as an alarm clock (it remains unclear, however, how he changes from winter and DST mastered). He puts his opponents (usually somewhat lowbrow Hillbillies) on nose incapacitated, and most has amazed even his arms on the back by kick in the genitals or headbutt me that he alone in the voice of his female caller on the telephone whose bust and cup size can capture pretty much. This gives Reacher's remark "I liked her voice" in relation to his partner a slightly spicy-cryptic meaning.
The depiction of endless car rides on deserted roads through West Virginia increased the voltage is not necessarily, especially since much repeated and longer serves as page filler here. The discovery of the conspiracy, which Reacher is with his partner on the track does not come, really surprising as in many other novels of the series, and then the tension also keeps in bounds here. For the German-speaking readers with school English knowledge there is no problem to capture the action arise because much is either already known or predictable. Difficulties are at most the frequent use of slang in the dialogues. For the unshakable Reacher fan who does not expect any further development of his hero, and no complex characterizations and tangles, "Never Go Back" is a useful reading that can shorten eg boring train rides.