
“Civilized men are more discourteous than savages because they know they can be impolite without having their skulls split, as a general thing.” -Robert E. Reece would never forget that they were out there.

Those men and women on the front lines provided the blanket of freedom that allowed Reece and Katie to enjoy this evening by the lake. There was only the now the flow of the process. As with anything in life, the best do the basics exceptionally well. Stance, grip, shoulder, anchor, peep, pull, and finish, Reece thought, reviewing the basics. Reece chuckled as he poured the steaming liquid into an enameled mug painted with the Black Rifle Coffee Company’s logo.Īrrow, target, string, archer as one being, one natural system.

This erosion of rights, however incremental, is the slow death of freedom.”

“The consolidation of power at the federal level in the guise of public safety is a national trend and should be guarded against at all costs. “There is no hunting like the hunting of man, and those who have hunted armed men long enough and liked it, never care for anything else thereafter.” -Ernest Hemingway (For reference, here are The Terminal List and True Believer reviews.) Quotes and highlights from Savage Son It’s tense, fast-paced, and will have you rooting on Reece once again as the hero, even with his trepidation about whether the “good guys” are really all that good. The new villain is unlike any other I can remember, sick and twisted in a unique way.Ĭarr once again-yet in an all new way-creates a maelstrom of intrigue, deception, and action. Reece is quickly ambushed, and takes off on a wild adventure with reporter and love interest Katie Buranek, with Reece again on the hunt for the bad guys.īut this time, there’s a twist: Reece isn’t just the hunter, he’s the hunted.Ī maniacal son of a Russian KGB agent, with a nasty murder streak, wants to hunt Reece for sport-as he has many others.

The story opens with Reece relaxing and recovering from brain surgery in remote Montana. Savage Son, the third book in Jack Carr’s Terminal Thriller series featuring retired Navy SEAL James Reece, is a book about hunting.
