Showing posts with label Baxter Arena. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Baxter Arena. Show all posts

Wednesday, April 11, 2018

Author Lee Child Reveals the Only Person Jack Reacher is Afraid Of...


The day finally arrived. 

As readers of this blog know, I am a big fan of Lee Child’s Jack Reacher book series. I own all of his published works, and just recently completed reading all books in the author’s repertoire. 

Readers have a friend in the University of Nebraska at Omaha. For the past three years, the university has hosted the Marion Marsh Brown Writers Lecture Series — bringing world-renowned authors to our city for a discussion of their life and work. 

This year’s featured author was Lee Child. 

The event is held at Baxter Arena, which allows the university ample capacity for the event. The tickets are free to the public (a terrific outreach opportunity for the University of Nebraska at Omaha). 

Child was introduced by Dr. Mike Hilt (Interim Dean of the College of Communications, Fine Arts and Media at UNO). My wife and I had Dr. Hilt as a professor years ago when we were journalism majors at the university in the 1990s. Hilt is a top-notch individual — and a fan of Child’s novels. Hilt also conducted a Q&A conversation with the author during the April 11 program. 

Lee Child is an entertaining speaker. I’ve watched a number of his “author talks” on YouTube over the years. 

Child never wanted to be a writer. He wanted to be an entertainer. He dreamed of being part of the Beatles when he was nine (a dream likely shared by a number of kids his age in Britain during that era). 

When Child found himself out of work at 39 (laid off from a job he loved with Granada TV), he decided to try his hand at writing novels. The television network gave him the equivalent of 7 months pay as part of his severance package — so that’s how long he gave himself to write a book. He said he sold the novel with a week to spare. That novel was “Killing Floor” — published in 1997. 


The author is an avid reader. He told the audience at Baxter Arena that he averages reading a book a day (two days if it is a particularly long book). He quipped that when he was a kid in the industrial heart of England, he’d have a book in one pocket, and a knife in the other. 

Child set “Killing Floor” in the United States because it gave his protagonist — Jack Reacher — room to roam. The author emigrated to the United States in 1998. 

Child joked that he did his research on the setting for “Killing Floor” by watching the movie “My Cousin Vinny,” figuring the movie’s Alabama setting was a close enough facsimile for Georgia. 

The author eschews outlines and hard research for his novels, instead preferring to let the creativity flow. “For a writer, your whole life is research,” he says. 

Sept. 1 is the start date for all of Child’s novels. It is a sentimental date for him because it is when he started writing his first novel. He believes in the principle that "the more disciplined you are as a writer, the luckier you get."

(He told our audience that he just finished his manuscript for novel #23 last Thursday).

Child doesn’t believe in protecting his main character. He feels it is a trap that victimizes novelists who write series fiction. As a result, he tries to keep the character of Jack Reacher at an “arms length” distance so readers will like him more.

Child told the audience that there is only one person Jack Reacher is afraid of, and that person is the author himself. 

Lee Child is tall, with fair skin and sandy brown hair — much like his protagonist, only without the bulk. 

He said he’s been asked at events why he’s so thin. He mused that his two favorite food groups are nicotine and caffeine. He estimates he drinks 36 mugs of coffee per day, and keeps three identical drip machines handy so he has a fresh brew ready to go. 

Child has set novels in Nebraska over the course of his 22 published tomes. His novel “Worth Dying For” was set exclusively in the state. He said he was a bit nervous about coming to the state because the “muscle” the bad guys hired in that novel were ex-Nebraska Cornhusker football players. 


The Marion Marsh Brown Writers Lecture Series is sponsored by the Paul Brown family. I have had the unique distinction of doing web design work for some of the businesses their family has been involved with over the years. It think it is terrific that family’s generosity has resulted in this series of author events. 

I’ll be excited to see what author is featured at next year’s event. For what it’s worth, I’d love to see Harlan Coben in Omaha at some point down the road...


Leading up to this event, I filled in the gaps of the Lee Child books I had yet to read. Here are the links to those reviews:








Tuesday, April 10, 2018

Book Review: “No Middle Name: The Complete Collected Jack Reacher Short Stories”


I made it. I got caught up with all of Lee Child’s published works as of yesterday…about 48 hours before the author is set to speak at the University of Nebraska at Omaha’s Baxter Arena. 

I was running on fumes. I read six of Child’s novels in the past two months. “No Middle Name” capped off the reading marathon. It is a collection featuring 12 short stories by the author. 

I’m not sure of the genesis of every story in the novel. I know that some of them were released as digital exclusives. Others likely appeared in various collections and anthologies over the years.

Short story collections can be something of a mixed bag. This collection is no exception. 

Be that as it may, there are some fun moments in “No Middle Name.”

For me, the most interesting moments came in the stories “Second Son” and “High Heat.” Both tales focus on Child’s protagonist Jack Reacher when he was still a teenager (back in the 1970s). 

“Second Son” finds Reacher living with his family (mom, dad, and brother Joe) on a military base in the Philippines in 1974. “High Heat” finds Reacher wandering the streets of New York City during the 1977 blackout. 

Each story gives us insight into the early days of Jack Reacher — back when he was an Army brat, prior to his time as a military policeman, and before his noble crusade as an unwitting vigilante. 

There is a certain charm in reading stories that take place before the advent of cellphones and computer technology. I think it would be fascinating for Child to craft a full novel focusing on Reacher in that era.

The other two stories in the collection that stood out were “James Penny’s New Identity” and “Not a Drill.” 

In “James Penny’s New Identity,” Reacher is something of a supporting character (when I first started reading it, I wasn’t sure if it involved Reacher at all). The story focuses on a Vietnam veteran (Penny) who finds himself suddenly laid off from his plant job in Laney, California. It is June. Penny suffers from what sounds like PTSD.

Frustrated, Penny burns down his home (a constant reminder of the wife who divorced him) and keeps the only thing that means something to him — a shiny, red Pontiac Firebird. 

He decides to take his severance pay — along with his Firebird — and hit the road. Unfortunately, Laney is located in the Mojave Desert and has a ramshackle volunteer fire department. As a result, Penny’s act of frustration results in fire destroying two of his neighbor’s homes. 

That makes Penny a wanted man, and leads to all sorts of trouble for the disillusioned vet. 

“Not a Drill” finds “present day” Reacher roaming around Maine. He decides to hitchhike his way to the northern end of I-95. Reacher “had a collector’s instinct when it came to places.” Since he had spent much of his life along the Interstate, he wanted to see the northern terminus before Canada. 

When he arrives, he hitches his way back south with two girls and a guy in a decrepit minivan.  The friends are headed to Naismith, Maine — where the forest is untouched by human hands. Two of the crew are planning to spend a few days hiking through a trail in the virgin forest. The other girl (Helen) is set to take the minivan to an adjacent town and pick them up. 

Reacher tags along to Naismith — a small dot on the map with musty cabins, kayak rental on the adjacent lake, and a diner. 

But there is trouble afoot. A mystery lurks in the woods...

As I mentioned earlier, short story collections can be something of a mixed bag. Sometimes the trimmed down tales can feel rushed and unfulfilling. There are a couple of those instances (in my opinion) in “No Middle Name,” but that is a minor quibble. 

There are also two Christmas-based stories in “No Middle Name” (“Maybe They Have a Tradition” and “No Room at the Motel”), and the final story in the collection (“The Picture of the Lonely Diner”) is inspired by Edward Hopper’s painting Nighthawks.

It is a nice feeling to have Lee Child's books crossed off my to do list. There are so many authors I enjoy reading. As time progresses, you find yourself collecting the books, wondering if there is any hope of ever making it through them all. 

As much as you want to gain the bigger picture in a fictional character’s arc — and the arc of a writer’s career — it is the little moments that you live for as a reader. I’m talking about descriptive passages that set the scene and evoke an emotion. 

This is epitomized by a passage in Child’s short story “High Heat.” Reacher heads into a New York City coffee shop, looking for refreshment and an escape from the triple digit temperatures:

“An air conditioner over the coffee shop’s door was running so hard it was trembling and rattling, but it wasn’t making much difference to the temperature of the air. The girls were together in a booth of four, with tall soda glasses full of Coke and melting ice. Two of them were blondes and one was a brunette. All of them had long smooth limbs and perfect white teeth.” 

Those moments are where Lee Child is at his best...


Tomorrow night (April 11) is Lee Child’s appearance at UNO’s Baxter Arena. Expect a full write up this week...!

P.S. — I just noticed there is a new Lee Child digital short story on Amazon (“I Heard a Romantic Story”) published earlier this year. I guess that means I’m not “fully” caught up. I’ll have to catch that story when it shows up in print down the road. 


Friday, April 6, 2018

MercyMe Concert... and My Lifelong Love of Christian Music


I’ve had this blog roughly 18 months now, and one thing I haven’t really discussed in any sort of depth is music. 

Most people have certain musical genres they enjoy. Those genres can give the world a sneak peek into who you are. No matter what type you favor, music can give insight into the soul — and transport you back to a time and place that other art forms simply can’t match.

I’ll admit I have eclectic musical tastes. I grew up as part of the “Star Wars Generation” in the late 70s and early 80s. As a result, I love the classical stylings of John Williams and his contemporaries. I wore out many cassettes listening to movie soundtracks as a kid. 

I also enjoy pop, rock, R&B, country, and a whole host of other genres. I’m the person in the buffet line that chooses a little of this, and a little of that. 

The one genre that has been the most prevalent in my life is “contemporary Christian music.” I don’t know if they even use that label for it anymore. But that’s what it was called in my youth. I even had a subscription to CCM Magazine (which stood for Contemporary Christian Music Magazine) back in the 1980s — it is like Rolling Stone for Christian music fans. 

My brother got me into the music. He worked for a large Christian bookstore chain for many years — from part-time employee to handling advertising at the corporate headquarters. The first album he gave me was “Meltdown” by an artist named Steve Taylor. The second was Amy Grant’s “Unguarded” album. 

The first concert I saw was Amy Grant. It was 1985 at the Nebraska State Fair. 

Over the years I have seen many Christian artists in concert. Dozens of shows. I have experienced the creativity these artists have to offer in massive arena productions, and I have listened to these artists perform intimate acoustic sets in church sanctuaries.  

To understand how my wife Bridget and I ended up together in 1990, you have to understand our love of Christian music. It was one of the shared interests we had at that young age. Something out of the norm for teenagers at the time. It was how I knew the girl was someone I wanted to spend my time with... 

As a result, it is a special occasion when we have the opportunity to see one of our favorite artists live. 

We had one of those opportunities last night when we got to see MercyMe (with guests Tenth Avenue North and Tim Timmons) at Baxter Arena as part of the "Lifer" tour.

It is the third concert we have seen at our favorite hockey arena (since Baxter Arena opened in 2015). The previous shows were Newsboys (another favorite Christian artist) and Boston (a terrific guitar-laden-70s-era rock show). 

We’ve seen MercyMe in concert four times. The last time was several years ago in Council Bluffs at the Mid America Center.

The band’s mix of uptempo pop songs and power ballads have proven a popular combination in Christian music. Their breakthrough hit was the introspective ballad “I Can Only Imagine” — which is said to be the bestselling Christian song of all time. 

Hard to believe that song was released almost two decades ago. Many of my friends have seen the new movie about MercyMe founder Bart Millard called “I Can Only Imagine” (I have yet to see the film, but expect a full review on this blog when I do). 



MercyMe’s show at Baxter Arena was enjoyable. The set featured a mix of new and old songs. I will admit that I haven’t followed MercyMe as closely as I did in the early 2000s. My favorite songs come from the band’s first four studio albums. Those songs — which are still favorites today — were largely addressed in a retrospective medley during the show. 

The group’s encore number was “I Can Only Imagine” — a staple at all the MercyMe shows I’ve attended. Here is a video I took of that song's performance: 



Opening acts Tim Timmons and Tenth Avenue North were also fun. I wasn’t familiar with Tim Timmons, but I’ve heard a number of Tenth Avenue North songs on K-LOVE and KGBI. 

Timmons — along with his acoustic guitar — played a set of songs to open things up. 

Tenth Avenue North lead singer Mike Donehey was born in Omaha. He was the most energetic performer of the night — walking out into the crowd, posing for selfies, and walking precariously along the covered hockey dasher boards in the arena. 



(That's him standing on a seat in the middle of the crowd in the above photo.)

Donehey talked about how the band had to scale back a few years ago as family took priority in their lives. Tenth Avenue North reduced the amount of time they toured — which meant less revenue coming into the operation. As a result, he wasn’t sure if the band would survive. 

Donehey expressed his gratitude that the band has continued to make ends meet. His gratitude was evident in the band’s fun, interactive pop set that had the audience moving. 

Depending on the artist, the “shelf life” for contemporary Christian songs isn’t always as long as their secular counterparts. Which means concerts aren’t necessarily “greatest hit retrospectives” — such as the Garth Brooks and Bon Jovi concerts I’ve attended. Instead, Christian acts often focus on more recent hits. 

If you haven’t been to a Christian concert, it is a unique experience. In addition to the music, you will typically hear testimony from the artists, and there will often be speakers from groups like Compassion International and World Vision (child sponsorship ministries working to hook pledges for charitable work in Third World nations). 

Many of these artists started off in churches — some as youth or worship pastors. As a result, the feel of a show is sometimes more akin to a church service at the more modern churches. Videoboards will typically feature lyrics, so attendees unfamiliar with the tunes can sing along.

It is definitely a unique vibe. 

Over the past three decades I have put together a collection of around 300 albums by various Christian artists. Some of the artists continue on today. Others have become mere footnotes in history. 

One thing remains constant. The music is filled with messages of hope, pain, loss, understanding, and redemption. Many of these songs have been important to me during my life.

While Christian music might be a genre that sits off the beaten path, it is part of my path... an important accompaniment to have had along the way... 




Sunday, April 1, 2018

Book Review: “The Midnight Line” By Lee Child


I’m getting close. I’ve almost read every published work by Lee Child. 

“The Midnight Line” is the final novel in Child’s Jack Reacher series that I had yet to complete. It is also his newest (he's published 22 Reacher novels in total). 

The only work I have yet to read is “No Middle Name,” which is a short story collection by the author. I'll be checking it out shortly. 


Not that being all caught up is a requirement. I’ve attended a number of author events without being up-to-date on their entire catalog. But I always feel like I haven’t done my homework in those instances. 

This time, I decided things would be different. I figured the looming deadline of Lee Child’s appearance would be solid motivation to plow through the unread novels. More a personal goal than anything else. 

“The Midnight Line” finds Jack Reacher on a bus, headed out of Milwaukee. As is the case with Reacher, he is traveling to “destination unknown” — going wherever the spirit moves him. 

During a comfort stop in Wisconsin, Reacher happens upon a pawn shop. He sees a 2005 West Point class ring in the window — with a black stone... a small ring in diameter.

His curiosity is piqued. Reacher himself is a graduate of West Point, and his intuition tells him that the commitment and sacrifice that goes into attending a service academy isn’t something you take lightly. He can’t shed his former life as a military police officer, and wonders why the ring ended up in hock. 

Reacher questions the pawn shop owner, who directs him to a man at a biker bar named Jimmy Rat. Jimmy and his crew bring in items to sell from South Dakota (via Minnesota). They never move enough merchandise to draw the attention of the Feds. 

Reacher learns from Rat (through our protagonist’s trademark brand of fisticuff persuasion) that their supplier is a man named Arthur Scorpio. Scorpio is a small-time crook who works out of a laundromat in Rapid City, South Dakota. 

Our vigilant hero can’t let go of the burr in his brain. So he hitchhikes his way across the highways and byways to find Scorpio, and see if he can dig up more information on the ring’s original owner. 

In Rapid City, Reacher meets a police detective named Gloria Nakamura. She is surveilling and investigating Scorpio. He also stumbles upon an Illinois P.I. — who drives a black Toyota Land Cruiser — who is showing an interest in the shady laundromat owner.

Reacher eventually gets an audience with Arthur Scorpio, and information gleaned leads him to Mule Crossing, Wyoming. That is where Reacher starts peeling away layers in his investigation, and where the main narrative in “The Midnight Line” takes place...

(I visted Wyoming last summer, and this pic I took just feels like something from a Jack Reacher book...)


The novel itself has an interesting setup, and Child is at home writing about wide-open spaces in the American landscape. 

Child typically treats socio-political issues with kid gloves in his novels. That said, the author diverts from that a bit in “The Midnight Line,” and takes on a very topical crisis impacting the health of millions in the United States today. 

As is the case with any Reacher story, there are some good nuggets throughout. The character loves greasy spoons, and it is mentioned that Reacher’s go-to breakfast is “coffee plus a short stack of pancakes with eggs, bacon, and maple syrup.”

The novel itself works. Child has a knack for mixing things up from book to book. While “The Midnight Line” lacks some of the nail-biting scenes found in the author’s best work, it is an interesting tale. 

Reacher has never been a particularly introspective or wistful character, but his hunt for the owner of the abandoned class ring shows another dimension of the man. As Det. Nakamura says of Reacher, it is “a matter of military honor. Like a moral obligation. Verging on the sentimental...”

Reacher’s motivation in “The Midnight Line” is perfectly summed up by something a truck driver tells him on his journey across South Dakota:

“My wife would say you feel guilty about something. She reads books. She thinks about things.” 


If you’d like to see Lee Child at UNO on April 11th, you can visit this link to learn more details about the event, and find ticket information. The event is free. 


Friday, March 23, 2018

Book Review: “Night School” By Lee Child


I’ve read a lot of Jack Reacher books this year. 

A little over a month ago, I made it my mission to read all the remaining Lee Child novels I had yet to complete. I have completed and reviewed four of the six I have remaining. In this review, I tackle the fifth on my list — “Night School.”

As was the case with my review of “The Enemy” a few days ago, “Night School” finds Reacher in another “prequel” story set in the 1990s. 

It was sort of serendipitous that I happened to read these books back-to-back. “Night School” was published in 2016 — 12 years after “The Enemy.”

Both novels feature Reacher during his tenure as a military police officer. Both involve stories centered on the changing face of the military in the European theater. 

“Night School” takes place in 1996, and starts off with Reacher receiving a medal for his service in The Balkans. Our independent-minded MP isn’t one for accolades. He is an individual focused on his duty — and doing the right thing in the cause of justice. 

Others apparently admire that quality, and Reacher is soon ordered to report to a corporate office park in McLean, Virginia — a place called Educational Solutions Incorporated. Reacher, along with two men named Waterman and White (from the FBI and CIA, respectively), find themselves under the purview of the NSA. 

They are tasked with solving a puzzle for the intelligence agency. An Iranian informant, who lives in an apartment with three Saudis in Hamburg, Germany, believes he has uncovered a secret plot that could pose a threat to the United States. 

An unexpected messenger from the Middle East has visited the apartment — a courier on a mission unrelated to the informant and his roommates.

The informant overhears a conversation between the messenger and one of the Saudis. Apparently, the messenger was in Hamburg to be told something (not to deliver a message). An “opening statement,” in a manner of speaking. 

The statement the messenger received was this: “The American wants a hundred million dollars.”

Warning klaxons sound throughout the intelligence community. Reacher and Co. need to find out what the message means, and who is involved. 

Reacher ropes Sgt. Frances Neagley into the investigation (a character who has appeared in a number of Reacher novels, including “Without Fail,” which I reviewed in February). In fairly short order, the pair leaves the office park and heads to Hamburg to hunt down clues (because, as Reacher puts it, “[The NSA] said we’d get anything we want.”)

“Night School” finds Reacher in a race against time as he and the team try to track down the rogue American — and learn what is being sold for $100 million. 

Typically, Lee Child structures his stories where the narrative stays firmly with Reacher — whether he is telling the story using a first person narrative, or a third person narrative. 

He’ll often offer glimpses of an antagonist in the story (peeks around the corner), but those moments are typically short and mysterious. He rarely reveals too much.

In “Night School,” Child bounces around between various characters — using an approach that is more multi-threaded in nature. It's something you see in a number of espionage thrillers. 

That structure can reveal too much information to the reader. Too many glimpses into the antagonist’s activities make “Night School” less of a mystery, and more of a thriller. 

This appears to be conscious decision on the part of Child for the novel. In this interview from March 2016, Child reveals details about his yet-to-be-titled novel (“Night School,” which was published later in the year):


Child says, “For the new book [“Night School’] I’m making it less novelistic and ... more like a movie. Not in the sense that it is a screenplay disguised as a novel ... I’m trying to induce the same feeling in the reader’s mind that they would have if they were watching a movie. In other words the speed, the flow … and critically, certain conventions in movies that manage exposition slightly differently.” 

I can tell the difference. I’ve been working on writing my own novel the past couple of years, and Lee Child is one of the authors I like to study — in terms of pacing, dialogue structure, and exposition. 

“Night School” ultimately works as a thriller, but Child’s change in style makes the engrossing process of Reacher solving a mystery much less compelling than other entries in the series. 

Yet there are still moments where we see Child at his best. For instance, this passage where Reacher is getting a shave at a Hamburg barber shop illustrates the author’s terrific prose:

“[The shave] turned out to be a luxurious experience. The water was warm, and the lather was creamy. The steel was perfect. It hissed through, on a molecular level.”


If you are interested in seeing Lee Child in person — and live in the Omaha area — I highly recommend attending the Marion Marsh Brown Writers Lecture Series at the University of Nebraska at Omaha’s Baxter Arena on April 11. The event is free, so you have nothing to lose.



Previous post: Movie Review: "Game Night" 

Wednesday, February 28, 2018

Book Review: "Persuader" By Lee Child


“I don’t really care about the little guy. I just hate the big guy. I hate big smug people who think they can get away with things.” — Jack Reacher in “Persuader”

I’ve said it before and I’ll say it again... Lee Child doesn’t write the same book twice. 

That’s what keeps his Jack Reacher series so fresh, interesting, and readable. 

The past month I have been working to fill in the gaps and read all of Child’s novels. In that effort, I spent the past week reading his 2003 novel “Persuader.” 

I only have three novels to go — 2004’s “The Enemy,” and Lee Child’s most recent efforts published in 2016 and 2017. 

It’s going to feel unusual being all caught up. I love books — bookstores are deadly to my wallet — and I am in the midst of reading a number of series. I wanted to go into Lee Child’s April 11 appearance at UNO’s Baxter Arena ready, like a student who has carefully prepared for an examination. As such, I thought it’d be fun to have read all of his novels.

“Persuader” is one of Child’s most enjoyable Jack Reacher tomes. I’m kind of sorry I hadn’t read it earlier. The novel served up a heaping dose of action, clever twists, and an ample supply of “bad assery.”

“Persuader” starts off with a bang. On the opening pages of the novel, we find Jack Reacher on a college campus, next to a brown panel van parked outside a music store. He is about to kill a police officer with a Colt Anaconda — a huge, stainless steel revolver. 

Reacher is the vigilante hero of 22 novels — a former military policeman who wanders the globe on his own time and dime. 

To say the opening passages of “Persauder” are startling is an understatement. Not only does Reacher gun down the cop ("an accident," as he puts it), he thwarts the kidnap attempt of a college student named Richard Beck.

Before we know it, Reacher has eluded law enforcement, switched vehicles, and returned the boy to his familial home in Abbot, Maine — a stone mansion ensconced along the Atlantic Ocean. 

But all is not as it seems, and we soon find out that Reacher is working for the DEA, attempting to infiltrate the Beck family compound, rescue another undercover operative (Teresa Daniel), and locate a “ghost” from his past (who appears to be doing business with Richard Beck’s father). 

The “ghost” in question is a former military intelligence operative named Francis Quinn. Reacher is wandering the streets of Boston when he randomly runs into a man he believes to be Quinn — a man who had been shot in the head and presumed dead 10 years earlier. 

Reacher starts dialing old phone numbers from his MP days and asks a Warrant Officer named Powell to run the man’s license plate for him. That move alerts the DEA — Agents Susan Duffy and Steven Eliot approach the unwary Reacher in Boston as he attempts another run-in with Quinn. 

As the “knight errant” in Lee Child’s novels, Reacher is willing to help out the DEA. Reacher has an unquenchable thirst to learn about Lazarus rising from the dead. Quinn is presumed to be working with a Maine rug importer named Zachary Beck — and the feds don’t believe Beck is on the up-and-up. 

“Persuader” is told using the first person narrative, and Child uses that structure to good effect as he ratchets up the suspense throughout the novel. Everything is told through Reacher’s point of view — the reader finds out when Reacher finds out. 

As the novel progresses, there are two concurrent stories going on — the investigation of Zachary Beck’s business dealings in Maine, and “flashbacks” to an investigation of Francis Quinn during Reacher’s tenure as a military police officer. 

While “Persauder” doesn’t tread any new ground for Lee Child, the pacing is brisk compared to the three preceding entries in the Jack Reacher series (“Running Blind,” “Echo Burning,” and “Without Fail”). It feels like a kindred spirt with the novels to follow. 

Reacher also has more of an edge in this novel.

A clever “Easter Egg” in the novel (if you want to call it that) is the title of the novel — “Persuader” — which is a clue in and of itself. 

A quote that keeps coming up in “Persauder” is “bloody wars and dread diseases” — a phrase apparently uttered during toasts by the British Army in India during the Raj. It meant that a casualty further up the chain of command was the only way to get ahead. 

The sentiment plays out in both the novel’s main storyline and flashback passages. To be sure, the events that play out in both threads are bloody and full of dread. 

Child is a master at making the mundane feel compelling. “Persuader” illustrates once again why Jack Reacher — facing long odds — is one of the smartest sleuths in fiction today. He has the intellect of Sherlock Holmes mixed with the toughness of John McClane in “Die Hard.” 

If you are interested, you might consider checking out Lee Child at UNO’s Baxter Arena on April 11. I’ve watched a number of interviews with the author on YouTube, including this event where he is “in conversation” with author Stephen King in Cambridge, MA:


Lee Child is fascinating to listen to, and tells a number of interesting tales about his life. 

Click here to learn more about the event at UNO’s Baxter Arena on April 11 — the event is open to the public and tickets are free. 

>> If you enjoyed my review of Lee Child’s “Persuader,” be sure to follow me on Twitter/X – @TheJonCrunch 

Related posts on author Lee Child and Jack Reacher: 












Monday, January 29, 2018

2018 Skate With The Mavs (Includes Locker Room Tour Pics)


The last time I went to a Skate With The Mavs event was December 2013 at the CenturyLink Center Omaha. I decided to go again this year with Bridget (and our nieces and nephews) because — for some odd reason — I hadn’t yet seen the University of Nebraska at Omaha Hockey team’s lockerroom at Baxter Arena (I did see it during the construction phase, when it was just cement and exposed beams, but the finished product has eluded me). 

We like to take our nieces and nephews when UNO holds the event — an event that allows young fans a chance to skate with the hockey players, learn more about the program, and have a snack afterward.

The adults in attendance aren't allowed to skate, or go onto the ice. I can't ice skate anyway... and don't believe God meant for man to balance on a 1/8-inch metal blade... but I digress...

When we arrived at Baxter Arena on Jan. 28, we checked the kids in at the registration table, and got them wristbands. They had commemorative posters and fidget spinners on hand as giveaways for attendees. 


Baxter Arena staff runs “Skate With The Mavs” in shifts — all participants get to skate with the team on the main ice sheet and tour the lockerroom.

We were in the group that skated first. Here is my youngest niece moving around the ice — her method is a cross between skating, running, and an arthritic 80-year-old hobbling along with a walker:


The good news is that Maverick Forward Tyler Vesel gave her some pointers, showing her how to "push off" with her skate:


As I said earlier, parents weren't allowed on the ice. Here is a pic of me, my wife Bridget, and my brother-in-law Neil (the guy with the stocking cap and bulging biceps) looking on in the stands:


After skating with the team for about 30 minutes, our crew set the skates aside and waited in line for a tour of the team locker room. UNO Captain Joel Messner led us on our journey into the cavernous regions underneath Baxter Arena. 


It is a really nice setup for the team. In my humble opinion, this facility is superior to the team's previous locker rooms at the CenturyLink Center (2003-2015) and Civic Auditorium (1997-2003). 


A new addition this season are signs featuring inspirational quotes designed to motivate and cement the objectives UNO Hockey Head Coach Mike Gabinet hopes to instill in the program going forward.




Gabinet is an incredibly positive individual. Being around him for any length of time shows why the players have nothing but praise for his hiring in 2017. As Bridget said afterwards, he "just makes you want to be a better person." 

UNO Hockey Blue Line Club President Roger Humphries was sitting behind us at the hockey game on Jan. 27. He mentioned that the BLC donated the money for the new signage. 

The team locker room includes a workout area (with bicycles and weights):


There is an area where the trainers can work on players, and a hot and a cold hot tub to help in the rehab of injuries:



And... there is an extensive "workshop" where the equipment manager can attend to all the wounded skates, helmets, gloves, and pads the players wear in the arena of battle:


I grabbed a selfie with Coach Gabinet. Bridget and I haven’t missed a home hockey game since the program began in 1997. It’s hard to believe Gabby — who used to be a defenseman for the Mavericks in the early 2000s — is old enough to be a head coach. His youthful appearance makes me feel old, and his physique makes me feel that I should retire the potato chips in favor of broccoli spears:

 
After the event, attendees were able to grab a dish of custard from Freddy’s and sprinkle on toppings:


Having been around since the UNO Hockey program’s inception, I believe that opportunities for fans to interact with the players and coaching staff are incredibly important — for both the players and the fans. 

Not only do these moments give fans the chance to meet the team they loyally cheer on each season, they also give players the opportunity to get to know who they are playing for. 

I just wish there were more opportunities for fans — of all ages — to participate in these sorts of events — events that add a flavor "beyond the game" that is integral in building a fanbase deep-rooted with the program.