Make Me cover

Make Me

Jack Reacher • Book 20

4.02 Goodreads
(84.8K ratings)

Why You'll Love This

A town called Mother's Rest shouldn't bother anyone — but the harder Reacher pushes for a simple answer, the darker and stranger everything gets.

  • Great if you want: a thriller that goes somewhere genuinely disturbing and unexpected
  • The experience: slow build that accelerates into relentless, momentum-driven dread
  • The writing: Child strips prose to bone — terse, rhythmic, and engineered for tension
  • Skip if: the dark web storyline and grim subject matter are not for you

About This Book

A town called Mother's Rest sits in the middle of nowhere, surrounded by wheat fields and silence — and nobody wants to explain why it's named that. When Jack Reacher steps off a train out of pure curiosity, he stumbles into something much darker than a strange name: a missing investigator, a frightened partner, and a conspiracy that reaches from rural isolation into the most disturbing corners of the internet. The stakes escalate fast, but what keeps you turning pages isn't just the danger — it's the slow, creeping wrongness of it all, a dread that builds long before anything violent happens.

Lee Child writes Reacher with a spare, almost geometric precision — every sentence earns its place, every exchange reveals something. Make Me is particularly interesting because it pushes Reacher into territory that's genuinely unsettling, pairing his no-nonsense physicality against a threat that's shapeless and modern in ways he can't simply hit. The pacing is relentless without feeling rushed, and Child's stripped-down prose has a quiet confidence that rewards close reading. This one lingers.