Set in the Reacher Universe by permission of Lee ChildMeet Jack Reacher’s genetic duplicate. And the assassins determined to track him down… Rock Wahlman: Forty-one years old, United States Navy Master at Arms, E-8, retired.Grew up in an orphanage, recently discovered that he is the product of a human cloning experiment, an exact genetic duplicate of a former Army officer named Jack Reacher.Now … duplicate of a former Army officer named Jack Reacher.
Now someone wants all evidence of the experiment to be erased, which means that someone wants Wahlman to be erased.
He’s on the run, desperate to survive, desperate to learn the truth about why all this is happening…
This discounted collection includes:
Dead Ringer
Moving Target
No Escape
This compilation is 70,000 words, approximately 314 pages.
Note: While the name Jack Reacher and some of the supporting characters and story situations are used with author Lee Child’s permission, the Jack Reacher character remains offstage in The Jack Reacher Experiment thrillers.
Also by Jude Hardin
The Nicholas Colt series:
AMERICAN P.I.
LADY 52
POCKET-47
CROSSCUT
SNUFF TAG 9
RATTLED (Short story)
KEY DEATH
BLOOD TATTOO
SYCAMORE BLUFF
THE JACK REACHER FILES: FUGITIVE
THE JACK REACHER FILES: VELOCITY (Short story)
THE BLOOD NOTEBOOKS
Note: Although published at a later date, the events in AMERICAN P.I. and LADY 52 precede those in Jude Hardin’s debut thriller POCKET-47. All of the books listed work as stand-alone thrillers, depending on reader preference. Nicholas Colt also appears in several short stories, including the one titled RATTLED and the one titled RACKED.
The Jack Reacher Files standalone titles:
CHOKE
HOSTAGE
THE GIRL FROM THE WRONG SIDE OF CORDIAL
Other standalone titles:
FUSED
A THIN RIBBON OF SMOKE
Praise for Jude Hardin’s Thrillers:
POCKET-47 sucked me in and held me enthralled. Author Jude Hardin keeps the pace frantic, the thrills non-stop, but best of all is his hero, the wonderfully ironic Nicholas Colt. This is a character I’m eager to follow through many adventures to come.
—Tess Gerritsen, New York Times bestselling author of DIE AGAIN: A RIZZOLI & ISLES NOVEL
The best PI debut I’ve read in years, fit to share shelf space with the best of Ross Macdonald, Sue Grafton, and Robert B. Parker. POCKET-47 is so hot you may burn your hands reading. Highly recommended.
—J.A. Konrath, author of the Jack Daniels mysteries
Hardin gets everything right in his powerhouse thriller debut, which introduces rock star–turned–PI Nicholas Colt.
—Publishers Weekly on POCKET-47
KEY DEATH is an exhilarating thriller that punches way above its weight. It hits you hard and fast with crackling suspense, hair-raising twists and stunning revelations. Word of advice: don’t start on this one unless you’re prepared to stay up all night.
—John Ling, author of THE BLASPHEMER
Colt is a physical, no-holds-barred PI, reminiscent of Robert B. Parker’s Spenser and Lee Child’s Jack Reacher, and his debut is action-packed. With a hefty toll of dead bodies, some described in cringe-inducing detail, this is crime fiction at its rawest. Hard-boiled connoisseurs should make Colt’s acquaintance now.
—Booklist on POCKET-47
With CROSSCUT, Jude Hardin takes the PI novel and psychological suspense to a new, unrestrained level. Fast, fierce, and relentless.
—David Morrell, New York Times bestselling creator of Rambomore
A good read. I like anything about Jack Reacher.
was a good read,
I’m a Reacher fan!!!
Lee Child might have penned it himself. The Reacher-like character seems to possess not only the physical stature but also the proclivity for action his progenitor himself might have done. Good read, entertaining beginning to end. Highly recommend it for Reacher followers.
A good spin-of on Jack Reacher.
Very good
Only issue I had was the jump in years for the hero to 2098. Just doesn’t seem that the jump in book 2 was well explained. Loved the action though.
Reacher had background for his skills. This guy doesn’t really. He just whips out the old MacGuyver skill pack and takes care of business, perhaps a bit too successfully. He’s too good at making friends when he needs them and being oblivious to people he should be watching. I guess my gripe is that he’s inconsistent, and only partially developed. Oh, and unlike Reacher, I wasn’t invested enough to care if he lived, even after three books. Sorry. It wasn’t terrible, but it could have been so much better.
Interesting
Didn’t capture the Reacher persona.