SEAL behind ‘The Terminal List’: The critics hate me but I’m proof non-woke books sell best

· New York Post

When Navy SEAL-turned-bestselling-author Jack Carr sits down to write, he’s doing it for the troops who served their country “downrange” with him — not for the publishing world’s elite.

But an audience the publishing world thought was niche has made him a bestseller.

His “The Terminal List” series made its debut in 2018, became an almost instant fixture in the bestseller lists — and now its Amazon Prime adaptation is not only being renewed for a second season starring Chris Pratt, it is being given a prequel too.

Critics called “The Terminal List” an “unhinged rightwing revenge fantasy,” but it was the fourth most streamed show on Amazon last year and has a 95% audience approval score on Rotten Tomatoes.

None of that comes as a surprise to Carr. But he says it does come as a surprise to the traditional publishing industry which he says has overlooked his audience: people who want fast-paced, all-American heroes.

Jack Carr (right) makes no bones about the un-wokeness of his “Terminal List” and its main character, Lt. Commander James Reece, played by Chris Pratt — saying that reaching people in real America is the reason for the books’ success. @TerminalListPV/X
Amazon has newly announced a second season and a prequel for “The Terminal List,” with Lt. Commander James Reece played by Chris Pratt. The prequel will focus on Ben Edwards, played by Taylor Kitsch. AP

“When we go specifically to the question of why my books are selling when the genre is in decline right now, overall I think it’s new readers,” he told The Post.

“People are asking me how my sales are skyrocketing when the rest of the genre, even established authors, are in decline?

“In direct messages, emails, social media comments, and book signings people say things like, ‘I haven’t read a book since the sixth grade or I’ve never been a reader until I picked up your books.’  

“These people are interested in a lot of the same things I am, whether it’s history or tactics or strategy or gear, but at the base level the story has to be the best it can possibly be and it has to be authentic.”

The thriller sector has been in long-term decline but Carr’s books, including “Only the Dead” are major hits — to the delight of publishers Simon & Schuster — because they are written for his comrades-in-arms, he says. @jackcarrusa/Instagram
The prequel to “The Terminal List” will star Taylor Kitsch. The original show’s Rotten Tomatoes rating of 95% is far removed from the drubbing mainstream critics gave it. @jackcarrusa/X

His “The Terminal List” hero is the blood-soaked Lt. Commander James Reece (Jason Bourne with a twist of John Rambo), played by Pratt in the show. The seventh book in the series, “Red Sky Mourning,” will be published next year.

Carr, 47, channels his own experience, from 20 years in SEAL Teams (Two, Five and Seven) and an assignment with the CIA in Iraq in 2006, to breathe life into the pages of his novels.

An enlisted SEAL sniper, he eventually became an officer commanding a special operations Task Unit in southern Iraq countering Iranian-backed forces during the U.S. drawdown. 

He also fought in Mosul, Najaf, Baghdad and Ramadi, and across Afghanistan, risking his life on sniper and direct-action missions. He retired as a lieutenant commander in 2016. 

Carr was an enlisted sniper in the Navy SEALS who was commissioned in the elite unit and served in Iraq and Afghanistan. Jack Carr/Facebook
Carr served in three SEAL teams, deployed with other operators to both Iraq and Afghanistan. he was ambushed in Baghdad and says his books are drawn from real-life experience — which is why they are bestsellers. Jack Carr/Facebook

“We made the show for those who went to war,” Carr said from his home in Park City, UT, calling serving and former troops “tough critics.”

“We’ll hear from guys in Delta Force or the Seal teams that’ll text us and say, good job, I’ve never seen someone do this kind of work in a film before.

“So when they put their feet up at the end of the day and watch Chris Pratt bring James Reece to life, they recognize that we put in the effort to explore the mindset of a modern day warrior.”

Carr’s special operations background is key to setting him apart from other writers in his thriller genre. Lee Child, the creator of “Jack Reacher,” was a British TV executive and the current writer of the “Jason Bourne” series, Brian Freeman, was a PR executive.   

His experience in Afghanistan — he was photographed in Kabul in front of graffiti which included Kiplings “The Young British Soldier” can now be found in “The Terminal List’s” dedication to military accuracy. Jack Carr/Facebook
As well as military deployments, Carr had a tour of duty as a CIA operative. He posts photos of his time serving his country but is careful to obscure faces of people in Afghanistan who could still be targeted for knowing him. Jack Carr/Facebook

But, he said, his authenticity is what people want — and shows why Hollywood is not making hits.

“When Amazon and Simon & Schuster see the numbers and the trajectory they’re noticing that it is very different from any other property that they have. And they’re very happy that it’s happening,” he said.

“I think they [studio execs] are trying to figure it out, but they live in New York and Los Angeles and they have a hard time figuring out that terrain in between.

“And you’ll hear people talk about how they make movies for each other and really not for the masses, which is why the masses are always disappointed in what Hollywood produces in many cases. 

“They knew that it hit something that they don’t usually hit in Hollywood. And that is really the people between New York and Los Angeles. 

Carr (second left) hit the red carpet with the stars of “The Terminal List,” Chris Pratt (third from right) and Taylor Kitsch (right) and shorunner David DiGilio (left), Jared Shaw (third from left), a fellow SEAL who appears in the show, and (second from right) director Antione Fuqua. Getty Images for Prime Video

“We’re making it for that person who went down range over the last 20 years. We’re making it for them. They know that we put in the effort to make a show for them, whether it’s the mindset of a modern day warrior or how he’s handling the weapons systems.”

In “The Terminal List,” James Reece, a revenge-focused SEAL sniper, employs the tactics and weapons Carr knows from his service to ruthlessly hunt down those behind a government conspiracy that has claimed the lives of friends and families.

“I don’t have to imagine what that was like to press the trigger as a sniper or what it was like to be ambushed,” Carr said.

“When Amazon and Simon & Schuster see the numbers and the trajectory they’re noticing that it is very different from any other property that they have. And they’re very happy that it’s happeningm” Carr said. Jack Carr/Facebook

“I just remember what it was like to be ambushed in Baghdad or press the trigger in Najaf. I take those feelings and emotions and apply them directly to a fictional narrative. There are no filters between those feelings and what I write on the page.

“The emotions feel raw and real and primal because they come from a real place. All my heart and soul goes into every word.”