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61 Hours (Jack Reacher, #14) 61 Hours by Lee Child
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61 Hours Quotes Showing 1-30 of 41
“I don't want to put the world to rights... I just don't like people who put the world to wrongs.”
Lee Child, 61 Hours
“Never forgive, never forget. Do it once and do it right. You reap what you sow. Plans go to hell as soon as the first shot is fired. Protect and serve. Never off duty.”
Lee Child, 61 Hours
“I'm not afraid of death. Death's afraid of me.”
Lee Child, 61 Hours
“To fill a small bag means selecting,and choosing, and evaluating. There's no logicial end to that process. Pretty soon I would have a big bag, and then two or three. A month later I'd be like the rest of you.”
Lee Child, 61 Hours
“Anecdotally his fitness reports rated him well above average in the classroom, excellent in the field, fluently bilingual in English and French, passable in Spanish, outstanding on all man-portable weaponry, and beyond outstanding at hand-to-hand combat. Susan knew what that last rating meant. Like having a running chainsaw thrown at you”
Lee Child, 61 Hours
“One day it seemed like a good idea, the next day it didn’t. That kind of thing happened all the time, way back when, because strategy was fluid. Or because nobody had the faintest idea what they were doing.”
Lee Child, 61 Hours
“He had no bag, which was strange. But overall it was vaguely reassuring to have such a man on board, especially after he had proved himself civilized and not in any way threatening. Threatening behavior from a man that size would have been unseemly. Good manners from a man that size were charming.”
Lee Child, 61 Hours
“He went with olive green, because it almost matched his borrowed coat, which was tan. He chose pants with flannel lining, a T-shirt a flannel shirt, and a sweater made of thick cotton. He added white underwear and a pair of black gloves and a khaki watch cap. Total damage was a hundred and thirty bucks. The store owner took a hundred and twenty cash. Four days wear, probably, at the rate of thirty dollars a day. Which added up to more than ten grand a year, just for clothes. Insane, some would say. But Reacher liked the deal. He knew that most folks spent much less than ten grand a year on clothes. They had a small number of good items that they kept in closets and laundered in basements. But the closets and basements were surrounded by houses, and houses cost a whole lot more than ten grand a year, to buy or rent, and to maintain and repair and insure.
So who was really nuts ?”
Lee Child, 61 Hours
“OK,” Reacher said. “It wasn’t a colonel. It was a one-star general.”
Lee Child, 61 Hours
“Holland asked, ‘You want to explain why I had to call for two ambulances?’
Reacher said, ‘Because I slipped.’
‘What?’
‘On the ice.’
‘That’s your story? You slipped and just kind of blundered into them?’
‘No, I slipped when I was hitting the big guy. It softened the blow. If I hadn’t slipped you wouldn’t be calling for two ambulances. You’d be calling for one ambulance and one coroner’s wagon.”
Lee Child, 61 Hours
“He was the youngest and newest member of a four-man team. Hence, low man on the totem pole. Except that calling a new guy the low man on the totem pole was completely ass-backward. Totem poles were what? Twenty, thirty feet high? Native Americans weren’t dumb. They put the most important guy at the bottom. At eye level. What important guy wanted to be twenty or thirty feet off the ground, where no one could see him? Like supermarkets. The eye-level shelf was reserved for the best stuff. The high-margin items. The big corporations hired experts to figure out stuff like that. Eye level was what it was all about. Thus the low man was really the high man, and the high man was really the low man. In a manner of speaking. A common misperception. A kind of linguistic inversion. Caleb Carter didn’t know how it had come about. Night watch was”
Lee Child, 61 Hours
“I took an oath. Same as you did. All enemies, foreign and domestic. Looks like I’ve got one of each here. Plato, and whoever his bent cop is.” “Your oath lapsed.” “It never lapses.”
Lee Child, 61 Hours
“empathy was the key. Understand their motives, their circumstances, their goals, their aims, their fears, their needs. Think like them. See what they see. Be them.”
Lee Child, 61 Hours
“He had many formal qualifications. He was rated expert on all small arms. He had won an inter-service thousand-yard rifle competition with a record score. Anecdotally his fitness reports rated him well above average in the classroom, excellent in the field, fluently bilingual in English and French, passable in Spanish, outstanding on all man-portable weaponry, and beyond outstanding at hand-to-hand combat. Susan knew what that last rating meant. Like having a running chain saw thrown at you.”
Lee Child, 61 Hours
“Five minutes to three in the afternoon. Exactly sixty-one hours before it happened. The lawyer drove in and parked in the empty lot. There was an inch of new snow on the ground, so he spent a minute fumbling in the foot well until his overshoes were secure. Then he got out and turned his collar up and walked to the visitors’ entrance. There was a bitter wind out of the north. It was thick with fat lazy flakes. There was a storm sixty miles away. The radio had been full of it. The”
Lee Child, 61 Hours
“She has a caller ID system,” Reacher said. “With coordinates. She’s probably watching this house right now, on Google Earth.” “But it’s dark.” “Don’t ask me how it works.” He”
Lee Child, 61 Hours
“Lowell’s an odd duck,” Peterson said. “He’s a loner. He reads books.”
Lee Child, 61 Hours
“Stealthy approaches were hard to make through thigh-high drifts.”
Lee Child, 61 Hours
“Infantry. That stuff matters over there.”
Lee Child, 61 Hours
“The gunsmoke whipped away in the wind and the sudden noise faded and the jet whine came back, low and steady.”
Lee Child, 61 Hours
“He always had been.”
Lee Child, 61 Hours
“once in a pocket, a solid mechanical thrill”
Lee Child, 61 Hours
“Peterson’s experience had been different.”
Lee Child, 61 Hours
“know”
Lee Child, 61 Hours
“Not really. I don’t want to put the world to rights. Maybe I should, but I don’t.” She said nothing. He said, “I just don’t like people who put the world to wrongs. Is that a phrase?”
Lee Child, 61 Hours
“They don’t need to feel pain. All they need to feel is conscious or unconscious.”
Lee Child, 61 Hours
“Nothing worthwhile was achieved without reflection and rumination. With reflection and rumination impulsive mistakes could be avoided, and bold strokes could be formulated.”
Lee Child, 61 Hours
“At a remote railroad stop on the prairie called”
Lee Child, 61 Hours
“He was no longer young, and not yet old. Mentally and physically he was up there on a broad plateau of common sense and maturity and peak capability. He was not behind schedule. He was not speeding. He was not drunk. He”
Lee Child, 61 Hours
“her”
Lee Child, 61 Hours

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