Fermer les détails sur les cookies

Ce site utilise des témoins. En apprendre plus à propos des témoins.

OverDrive désire utiliser des fichiers témoins pour stocker des informations sur votre ordinateur afin d'améliorer votre expérience sur notre site Web. Un des fichiers témoins que nous utilisons est très important pour certains aspects du fonctionnement du site, et il a déjà été stocké. Vous pouvez supprimer ou bloquer tous les fichiers témoins de ce site, mais ceci pourrait affecter certaines caractéristiques ou services du site. Afin d'en apprendre plus sur les fichiers témoins que nous utilisons et comment les supprimer, cliquez ici pour lire notre politique de confidentialité.

Si vous ne désirez pas continuer, veuillez appuyer ici afin de quitter le site.

Cachez l'avis

  Nav. principale
Night School
Couverture de Night School
Night School
de Lee Child
Emprunter Emprunter
#1 NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLER • The incomparable hero of Jack Reacher: Never Go Back takes readers to school in his most explosive novel yet. After eleven straight global #1 bestsellers, discover the thrillers that The New York Times calls “utterly addictive.”
It’s 1996, and Reacher is still in the army. In the morning they give him a medal, and in the afternoon they send him back to school. That night he’s off the grid. Out of sight, out of mind.
Two other men are in the classroom—an FBI agent and a CIA analyst. Each is a first-rate operator, each is fresh off a big win, and each is wondering what the hell they are doing there.
Then they find out: A Jihadist sleeper cell in Hamburg, Germany, has received an unexpected visitor—a Saudi courier, seeking safe haven while waiting to rendezvous with persons unknown. A CIA asset, undercover inside the cell, has overheard the courier whisper a chilling message: The American wants a hundred million dollars.”
For what? And who from? Reacher and his two new friends are told to find the American. Reacher recruits the best soldier he has ever worked with: Sergeant Frances Neagley. Their mission heats up in more ways than one, while always keeping their eyes on the prize: If they don’t get their man, the world will suffer an epic act of terrorism.
From Langley to Hamburg, Jalalabad to Kiev, Night School moves like a bullet through a treacherous landscape of double crosses, faked identities, and new and terrible enemies, as Reacher maneuvers inside the game and outside the law.
Praise for Night School
“The prose is crisp and clean, and the fighting is realistic. . . . This latest installment has all the classic ingredients: a great setting (Hamburg), a good villain, and a mystery that draws you in efficiently, escalates unpredictably, and has a satisfying resolution.”The New Yorker
 
“Another timely tour de force . . . The taut thriller is textbook [Lee] Child: fast-paced and topical with a ‘ripped from the headlines’ feel.”—Minneapolis Star-Tribune
 
“As gripping as ever.”The Florida Times-Union
Praise for #1 bestselling author Lee Child and his Jack Reacher series
“Reacher [is] one of this century’s most original, tantalizing pop-fiction heroes.”—The Washington Post
#1 NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLER • The incomparable hero of Jack Reacher: Never Go Back takes readers to school in his most explosive novel yet. After eleven straight global #1 bestsellers, discover the thrillers that The New York Times calls “utterly addictive.”
It’s 1996, and Reacher is still in the army. In the morning they give him a medal, and in the afternoon they send him back to school. That night he’s off the grid. Out of sight, out of mind.
Two other men are in the classroom—an FBI agent and a CIA analyst. Each is a first-rate operator, each is fresh off a big win, and each is wondering what the hell they are doing there.
Then they find out: A Jihadist sleeper cell in Hamburg, Germany, has received an unexpected visitor—a Saudi courier, seeking safe haven while waiting to rendezvous with persons unknown. A CIA asset, undercover inside the cell, has overheard the courier whisper a chilling message: The American wants a hundred million dollars.”
For what? And who from? Reacher and his two new friends are told to find the American. Reacher recruits the best soldier he has ever worked with: Sergeant Frances Neagley. Their mission heats up in more ways than one, while always keeping their eyes on the prize: If they don’t get their man, the world will suffer an epic act of terrorism.
From Langley to Hamburg, Jalalabad to Kiev, Night School moves like a bullet through a treacherous landscape of double crosses, faked identities, and new and terrible enemies, as Reacher maneuvers inside the game and outside the law.
Praise for Night School
“The prose is crisp and clean, and the fighting is realistic. . . . This latest installment has all the classic ingredients: a great setting (Hamburg), a good villain, and a mystery that draws you in efficiently, escalates unpredictably, and has a satisfying resolution.”The New Yorker
 
“Another timely tour de force . . . The taut thriller is textbook [Lee] Child: fast-paced and topical with a ‘ripped from the headlines’ feel.”—Minneapolis Star-Tribune
 
“As gripping as ever.”The Florida Times-Union
Praise for #1 bestselling author Lee Child and his Jack Reacher series
“Reacher [is] one of this century’s most original, tantalizing pop-fiction heroes.”—The Washington Post
Formats disponibles-
  • OverDrive Read
  • EPUB eBook
Langues:-
Copies-
  • Disponible:
    1
  • Copies de la bibliothèque:
    1
Niveaux-
  • Niveau ATOS:
  • Lexile Measure:
  • Niveau d'intérêt:
  • Difficulté du texte:


Extraits-
  • From the book Chapter 1

    In the morning they gave Reacher a medal, and in the afternoon they sent him back to school. The medal was another Legion of Merit. His second. It was a handsome item, enameled in white, with a ribbon halfway between purple and red. Army Regulation 600-­8-­22 authorized its award for exceptionally meritorious conduct in the performance of outstanding services to the United States in a key position of responsibility. Which was a bar Reacher felt he had cleared, technically. But he figured the real reason he was getting it was the same reason he had gotten it before. It was a transaction. A contractual token. Take the bauble and keep your mouth shut about what we asked you to do for it. Which Reacher would have anyway. It was nothing to boast about. The Balkans, some police work, a search for two local men with wartime secrets to keep, both soon identified, and located, and visited, and shot in the head. All part of the peace process. Interests were served, and the region calmed down a little. Two weeks of his life. Four rounds expended. No big deal.

    Army Regulation 600-­8-­22 was surprisingly vague about exactly how medals should be handed out. It said only that decorations were to be presented with an appropriate air of formality and with fitting ceremony. Which usually meant a large room with gilt furniture and a bunch of flags. And an officer senior in rank to the recipient. Reacher was a major, with twelve years in, but other awards were being given out that morning, including three to a trio of colonels and two to a pair of one-­star generals, so the big cheese on deck was a three-­star from the Pentagon, who Reacher knew from many years before, when the guy had been a CID battalion commander working out of Fort Myer. A thinker. Certainly enough of a thinker to figure out why an MP major was getting a Legion of Merit. He had a look in his eye. Part wry, and part seal-­the-­deal serious. Take the bauble and keep your mouth shut. Maybe in the past the guy had done the same thing himself. Maybe more than once. He had a whole fruit salad of ribbons on the left chest of his Class-­A coat. Including two Legions of Merit.

    The appropriately formal room was deep inside Fort Belvoir in Virginia. Which was close to the Pentagon, which was convenient for the three-­star. Convenient for Reacher too, because it was about equally close to Rock Creek, where he had been marking time since he got back. Not so convenient for the other officers, who had flown in from Germany.

    There was some milling around, and some small talk, and some shaking of hands, and then everyone went quiet and lined up and stood to attention, and salutes were exchanged, and medals were variously pinned or draped on, and then there was more milling around and small talk and shaking of hands. Reacher edged toward the door, keen to get out, but the three-­star caught him before he made it. The guy shook his hand and kept hold of his elbow, and said, “I hear you’re getting new orders.”

    Reacher said, “No one told me. Not yet. Where did you hear that?”

    “My top sergeant. They all talk to each other. U.S. Army NCOs have the world’s most efficient grapevine. It always amazes me.”

    “Where do they say I’m going?”

    “They don’t know for sure. But not far. Within driving distance, anyway. Apparently the motor pool got a requisition.”

    “When am I supposed to find out?”

    “Sometime today.”

    “Thank you,” Reacher said. “Good to know.”

    The three-­star let go of his elbow,...
Au sujet de l’auteur-
  • Lee Child is the author of twenty New York Times bestselling Jack Reacher thrillers, eleven of which have reached the #1 position. All have been optioned for major motion pictures—including Jack Reacher (based on One Shot) and Jack Reacher: Never Go Back. Foreign rights in the Reacher series have sold in one hundred territories. A native of England and a former television director, Lee Child lives in New York City.
Critiques-
  • Publisher's Weekly

    Starred review from August 8, 2016
    Set in 1996, bestseller Child’s splendid 21st Jack Reacher novel (after 2015’s Make Me) delves into his hero’s U.S. Army past. Right after Reacher is commended for a mission in the Balkans, he’s immediately sent “back to school.” It turns out that school means a vital and secret mission: a sleeper cell in Hamburg, Germany, has learned of an American traitor with something to sell to Islamic terrorists for $100 million. Alfred Ratcliffe, the U.S. president’s National Security Adviser, tells Reacher and his fellow students—two seasoned agents from the CIA and the FBI—“we have enemies everywhere” and gives Reacher’s team its orders: “Your job is to find that American.” It’s no spoiler to say that Reacher handles the heavy lifting on-site in Hamburg, though he’s ably assisted by two former military police colleagues, Frances Neagley and Manuel Orozco. The premise of the pre-9/11 plot is both compelling and disconcerting, and Child applies his trademark eye for detail to make the whole endeavor surprisingly and thrillingly credible. Agent: Darley Anderson, Darley Anderson Literary.

  • Kirkus

    Jack Reacher finds himself involved in a race to stop a major terrorist operation.The Reacher series has had several entries set during its hero's time as an Army investigator. This outing is situated between the 1993 bombing of the World Trade Center and the turn of the millennium, in a time of fear that the coming of Y2K might bring chaos. In other words, a time when the public still considered terrorism only a faint possibility for the United States. Reacher is part of a trio of government experts trying to track down an American who appears to have sold something to Middle Eastern radicals operating out of Hamburg. The novel tries to work up suspense by highlighting how unknowingly close Reacher and his quarry are operating to each other, but the missed connections and the way the action jumps from the U.S. to Europe impedes any momentum. That's not the whole problem, though. The novel contains descriptions of torture which are incidental to the plot and sour the rest of the book. And the shift here to terrorism, as opposed to the individual crime and corporate machinations that provided the villains in most of the series' other entries, doesn't sit right. Reacher novels are terrific pop entertainments. But they don't possess the weight or moral seriousness that allowed books by Eric Ambler, Geoffrey Household, and John le Carre to plausibly confront the dangers and moral dilemmas of their day. For the first time in 20 books, the man-mountain Reacher, and the story around him, moves like a lug. COPYRIGHT(1) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

  • Booklist

    Starred review from August 1, 2016
    The premise of Child's celebrated Jack Reacher series may be the best in the business: off-the-grid, ex-military guyhave toothbrush will travelwanders about, stumbling into messes and cleaning them up. But how do you keep it going without those random messes beginning to seem contrived? By flashing back to Reacher when he was on the grid and in the army. This time it's 1997, and our boy, still in the MPs, is sent to night school along with two other students, one FBI, one CIA, and charged with following not the money but the whisper of the money, as when chatter picks up a Saudi courier saying, The American wants a hundred million dollars. What American? What's the money for? It's off to Germany to find out. In chapters that alternate between Reacher's point of view and that of the elusive American himself, we come to understand the frightening scope of an audacious scheme that stretches back to the Cold War.There's not as much headbanging here as usual, but there is an extra serving of Holmesian ratiocination, as Jack shows his deductive side, as does a German police detective who can exercise the old gray matter with the best of them. There's also something out of the ordinary for Child: an in-depth portrait of the bad guy, who is very bad, indeed, but in a pathetic, almost sympathetic way, as when we see him at the end, his master plan in tatters (no spoiler therethis is a Reacher novel), staring blankly with open-mouthed incredulity at the unlikely ways the world can crush a person. We share that incredulity, but with Child's equally unlikely ability to keep his formula fresh, not only with well-timed backstory, but also with a touch of lyricism where we least expect it.HIGH-DEMAND BACKSTORY: What's longer: a presidential campaign or a Jack Reacher publicity campaign? The would-be prexies win but not by much, as this novel's five-month national consumer-advertising effort proves.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2016, American Library Association.)

  • Library Journal

    Starred review from September 1, 2016

    Child's latest Jack Reacher novel (after Make Me) is a prequel set in 1996. Reacher, age 35, is a military policeman fresh off a successful mission that earned him his second Legion of Merit medal for outstanding service. Expecting new orders in line with his excellent performance record, our protagonist is instead told he is going back to school, and that career development is a wonderful thing. Teamed with an FBI agent and a CIA analyst, Reacher quickly learns their classroom assignment is actually an emergency covert task force. Offices are set up, staff gathered, and intelligence revealed. A CIA asset, undercover inside a jihadist sleeper cell in Germany, has heard that "the American wants a hundred million dollars," but no one knows for what. Reacher and Sgt. Frances Neagley travel to Hamburg to work with the city's bumbling yet crafty police chief to identify and find the mysterious American. Reacher and Neagley investigate without the technology and Internet tools available in later novels, and the Y2K problem is a looming threat. VERDICT This way- back novel, with its old-school investigating, street-smart tactics, and classic Reacher attitude, is an edge-of-your-seat book readers won't want to put down. [See Prepub Alert, 5/16/16.]--Susan Carr, Edwardsville P.L., IL

    Copyright 2016 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

  • Library Journal

    June 15, 2016

    Reacher returns after last year's No. 1 New York Times best-selling Make Me, in time for the October 2016 release of the film Jack Reacher: Never Go Back. In this 1996-set prequel, we revisit Reacher's army days, though he's not in uniform; the narrative opens, "In the morning they gave Reacher a medal, and in the afternoon they sent him back to school."

    Copyright 2016 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

  • Library Journal

    September 1, 2016

    Child's latest Jack Reacher novel (after Make Me) is a prequel set in 1996. Reacher, age 35, is a military policeman fresh off a successful mission that earned him his second Legion of Merit medal for outstanding service. Expecting new orders in line with his excellent performance record, our protagonist is instead told he is going back to school, and that career development is a wonderful thing. Teamed with an FBI agent and a CIA analyst, Reacher quickly learns their classroom assignment is actually an emergency covert task force. Offices are set up, staff gathered, and intelligence revealed. A CIA asset, undercover inside a jihadist sleeper cell in Germany, has heard that "the American wants a hundred million dollars," but no one knows for what. Reacher and Sgt. Frances Neagley travel to Hamburg to work with the city's bumbling yet crafty police chief to identify and find the mysterious American. Reacher and Neagley investigate without the technology and Internet tools available in later novels, and the Y2K problem is a looming threat. VERDICT This way- back novel, with its old-school investigating, street-smart tactics, and classic Reacher attitude, is an edge-of-your-seat book readers won't want to put down. [See Prepub Alert, 5/16/16.]--Susan Carr, Edwardsville P.L., IL

    Copyright 2016 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

  • Kirkus

    September 1, 2016
    Jack Reacher finds himself involved in a race to stop a major terrorist operation.The Reacher series has had several entries set during its hero's time as an Army investigator. This outing is situated between the 1993 bombing of the World Trade Center and the turn of the millennium, in a time of fear that the coming of Y2K might bring chaos. In other words, a time when the public still considered terrorism only a faint possibility for the United States. Reacher is part of a trio of government experts trying to track down an American who appears to have sold something to Middle Eastern radicals operating out of Hamburg. The novel tries to work up suspense by highlighting how unknowingly close Reacher and his quarry are operating to each other, but the missed connections and the way the action jumps from the U.S. to Europe impedes any momentum. That's not the whole problem, though. The novel contains descriptions of torture which are incidental to the plot and sour the rest of the book. And the shift here to terrorism, as opposed to the individual crime and corporate machinations that provided the villains in most of the series' other entries, doesn't sit right. Reacher novels are terrific pop entertainments. But they don't possess the weight or moral seriousness that allowed books by Eric Ambler, Geoffrey Household, and John le Carre to plausibly confront the dangers and moral dilemmas of their day. For the first time in 20 books, the man-mountain Reacher, and the story around him, moves like a lug.

    COPYRIGHT(2016) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

Informations sur le titre+
  • Éditeur
    Random House Publishing Group
  • OverDrive Read
    Date de publication:
  • EPUB eBook
    Date de publication:
Informations relatives aux droits numériques+
  • La protection des droits d'auteur (DRM) exigée par l'éditeur peut s'appliquer à ce titre afin d'en limiter ou d'en interdire la copie ou l'impression. Il est interdit de partager les fichiers ou de les redistribuer. Vos droits d'accès à ce matériel expireront à la fin de la période d'emprunt. Veuillez consulter l'avis important à propos du matériel protégé par droits d'auteur pour les conditions qui s'appliquent à ce contenu.

Status bar:

Vous avez atteint votre limite d'emprunt.

Accédez à votre page Emprunts pour gérer vos titres.

Close

Vous avez déjà emprunté ce titre.

Vous souhaitez accéder à votre page Emprunts?

Close

Limite de recommandations atteinte.

Vous avez atteint le nombre maximal de titres que vous pouvez recommander pour l'instant. Vous pouvez recommander jusqu'à 0 titres tous les 0 jours.

Close

Connectez-vous pour recommander ce titre.

Recommandez à votre bibliothèque qu'elle ajoute ce titre à la collection numérique.

Close

Plus de détails

Close
Close

Disponibilité limitée

La disponibilité peut changer durant le mois selon le budget de la bibliothèque.

est disponible pendant jours.

Une fois que la lecture débute, vous avez heures pour visionner le titre.

Close

Permission

Close

Le format OverDrive de ce livre électronique comporte ne narration professionnelle qui joue pendant que vous lisez dans votre navigateur. Apprenez-en plus ici.

Close

Réservations

Nombre total de retenues:


Close

Accès restreint

Certaines options de formatage ont été désactivées. Il est possible que vous voyiez d'autres options de téléchargement en dehors de ce réseau.

Close

Bahreïn, Égypte, Hong Kong, Iraq, Israël, Jordanie, Koweït, Liban, Mauritanie, Maroc, Oman, Palestine, Qatar, Arabie saoudite, Soudan, République arabe syrienne, Tunisie, Turquie, Émirats arabes unis, et le Yémen

Close

Vous avez atteint votre limite de commandes à la bibliothèque pour les titres numériques.

Pour faire de la place à plus d'emprunts, vous pouvez retourner des titres à partir de votre page Emprunts.

Close

Limite d'emprunts atteinte

Vous avez emprunté et rendu un nombre excessif d'articles sur votre compte pendant une courte période de temps. Essayez de nouveau dans quelques jours.

Si vous n'arrivez toujours pas à emprunter des titres au bout de 7 jours, veuillez contacter le service de support.

Close

Vous avez déjà emprunté ce titre. Pour y accéder, revenez à votre page Emprunts.

Close

Ce titre n'est pas disponible pour votre type de carte. Si vous pensez qu'il s'agit d'une erreur contactez le service de support.

Close

Une erreur inattendue s'est produite.

Si ce problème persiste, veuillez contacter le service de support.

Close

Close

Remarque: Barnes & Noble® peut changer cette liste d'appareils à tout moment.

Close
Achetez maintenant
et aidez votre bibliothèque à GAGNER !
Night School
Night School
Lee Child
Choisissez un des détaillants ci-dessous pour acheter ce titre.
Une part de cet achat est destinée à soutenir votre bibliothèque.
Close
Close

Il ne reste plus d'exemplaire de cette parution. Veuillez essayer d'emprunter ce titre de nouveau lorsque la prochaine parution sera disponible.

Close
Barnes & Noble Sign In |   Se connecter

Sur la prochaine page, on vous demandera de vous connecter à votre compte de bibliothèque.

Si c'est la première fois que vous sélectionnez « Envoyer à mon NOOK », vous serez redirigé sur une page de Barnes & Noble pour vous connecter à (ou créer) votre compte NOOK. Vous devriez n'avoir qu'à vous connecter une seule fois à votre compte NOOK afin de le relier à votre compte de bibliothèque. Après cette étape unique, les publications périodiques seront automatiquement envoyées à votre compte NOOK lorsque vous sélectionnez « Envoyer à mon NOOK ».

La première fois que vous sélectionnez « Send to NOOK » (Envoyer à mon NOOK), vous serez redirigé sur la page de Barnes & Nobles pour vous connecter à (ou créer) votre compte NOOK. Vous devriez n'avoir qu'à vous connecter une seule fois à votre compte NOOK afin de le relier à votre compte de bibliothèque. Après cette étape unique, les publications périodiques seront automatiquement envoyées à votre compte NOOK lorsque vous sélectionnez « Send to NOOK » (Envoyer à mon NOOK).

Vous pouvez lire des publications périodiques sur n'importe quelle tablette NOOK ou dans l'application de lecture NOOK gratuite pour iOS, Android ou Windows 8.

Accepter pour continuerAnnuler