Shopping on line can be easy, simple and save you lots of money. It can also take a lot of your time, frustrate you, and result in unwanted purchases. Now the same can be said for regular high street shopping, but with the vast opportunity presented by the Internet it will pay you to spend a few minutes reading this and understanding how to better optimize your Frederick Forsyth shopping experience:
1. Compare - without doubt the biggest advantage that the Frederick Forsyth offers shoppers today is the ability to compare thousands of Frederick Forsyth at a time. This is a great thing, but not necessarily all the time! Too much can be daunting at times so take advantage of the great comparison sites and where possible let them do the hard work for you.
2. Research - if it has been said it will be on the internet. Ignorance is no longer a justifiable reason for buying the wrong thing. Take the time to research in detail everything that you could possible want to know about
3. Testimonials - don't know anybody that has bought a Frederick Forsyth? Wrong! If the Frederick Forsyth is good the internet will let you know. Use the Internet as a friend and get testimonials before you buy.
4. Questions - Got a question about Frederick Forsyth then search the Forums, FAQ's, Blogs etc. Don't be afraid to ask .....
5. Reputation - Never heard of the company selling Frederick Forsyth? Don't worry, no reason why you should know every company in the world, but you know someone that does! Use the internet to find out what people are saying about Frederick Forsyth and build up a picture of their reputation for sales, returns, customer service, delivery etc.
6. Returns - still worried that even after all of the above your Frederick Forsyth wont be what you want? Check out the returns policy. There is so much competition now that someone, somewhere is bound to offer the terms that you are comfortable with.
7. Feedback - happy with your Frederick Forsyth then let people know, after all you are depending on others people input in your buying decision, so why not give a little back.
8. Security - check for the yellow padlock on the Frederick Forsyth site before you buy, and the s after http:/ /i.e. https:// = a secure site
9. Contact - got a question about Frederick Forsyth, or want to leave a comment then check out the sites contact page. Reputable companies have them and respond.
10. Payment - ready to pay for your Frederick Forsyth, then use your credit card or PayPal! Be aware of companies that don't accept them, there may be genuine reasons but given the huge amount of choice you have when buying online there is no reason at all not to buy via credit card or PayPal.
{{Infobox Writer| name = Frederick Forsyth| image =| imagesize = 200px| caption =| pseudonym =| birth_date = | birth_place =
Ashford, Kent, Kent,
England| period = 1969 - present| genre = [Crime fiction,
Thriller (genre)| subject =| movement =| debut_works =
The Biafra Story (1969)] (born August 25,
1938) is an
England author and occasional political commentator. He is best known for thrillers such as
The Day of the Jackal,
The Odessa File,
The Dogs of War (novel),
The Fist of God,
Icon (novel),
The Veteran,
Avenger (book) and recently
The Afghan.
Biography
Born in Ashford, Kent, Kent, Forsyth was educated at
Tonbridge School. He later attended University of Granada in Spain. He then became a reporter, and spent three and a half years working at a small newspaper before joining Reuters in 1961. In 1965, he joined the BBC and was assistant diplomatic correspondent. From July to September 1967, he covered the
Nigerian Civil War between
Biafra and Nigeria.
In 1968, he left the BBC amid allegations that his reporting of the Biafran War was biased towards the Biafran cause, and that he had falsified elements of his reports. He returned to Biafra as a freelancer. In 1969, he wrote a book about the Biafran War called
The Biafra Story.
Works
Forsyth decided to write a novel using similar research techniques to those used in journalism. His first full length novel,
The Day of the Jackal, was published in 1971 and became an international bestseller. It was later made into a
The Day of the Jackal (film). It also earned him the
Edgar Award for Best Novel. In this book, the
Organisation armée secrète hires an assassin to kill Charles de Gaulle.
His second novel,
The Odessa File, was published in 1972 and is about a reporter attempting to track down a certain ex-Nazi Schutzstaffel officer in modern Germany, whom he discovered via the diary of a Jewish Holocaust survivor that committed suicide early in the book, who was being shielded by the organization that protects ex-Nazis, called ODESSA. As it turns out, the reporter discovers that this same SS officer killed a German Army officer during World War II for striking him after refusing to let SS soldiers take the place of his own wounded men. This book was later made into a movie with the same name, starring
Jon Voight, but there were substantial adaptations. For example, the black Jaguar (car) auto with yellow streaks depicted in the story, itself a thrill designed to engross the reader, was replaced by a Mercedes-Benz.
In 1974, he wrote
The Dogs of War (novel), in which a British mining executive hires a group of mercenaries to overthrow the government of an
African country so that he can install a puppet regime that will allow him cheap access to its substantial mineral wealth.
The Shepherd was an illustrated novella published in 1975. It tells of a nightmare journey by a RAF pilot while flying home for Christmas in the late 1950s. His attempts to find a rational explanation for his eventual rescue prove as troublesome as his experience. Following this came
The Devil's Alternative in 1979, which was set in 1982. In this book, the
Soviet Union faces a disastrous grain harvest and Ukrainians freedom fighters. A Politburo faction fight ensues. In the end, a
Norway oil tanker built in
Japan, a Russian airliner hijacked to
West Berlin and various governments find themselves involved.
In 1982,
No Comebacks, a collection of ten
short stories, was published. Some of these stories had been written earlier. Many were set in the Republic of Ireland where Forsyth was living at the time. One of them,
There Are No Snakes In Ireland, won him a second Edgar Allan Poe Award, this time for best short story.
The Fourth Protocol was published in 1984 and involves renegade elements within the Soviet Union attempting to plant a nuclear bomb near an American
airbase in the UK, intending to influence the upcoming British elections and lead to the election of an anti-
NATO, anti-American, anti-nuclear, pro-soviet Labour Party (UK) government.
The Fourth Protocol was later filmed, starring Pierce Brosnan and
Michael Caine, in 1987. All the political content was removed from the film, which took a lot away from the original story.
Forsyth's tenth release came in 1989, when he wrote
The Negotiator (novel), in which the American President's son is kidnapped and one man's job is to negotiate his release.
Two years later, in 1991,
The Deceiver was published. It includes four separate short stories reviewing the career of British secret agent Sam McCready. At the start of the book, the Permanent Under-Secretary (PUS) of the Foreign and Commonwealth Office requires the Chief of the SIS to push Sam into early retirement. The four stories are presented to a grievance committee in an attempt to allow Sam to stay on active duty with the SIS.
In 1994, Forsyth published
The Fist of God, about the first
Gulf War. Next, in 1996, he published
Icon (novel), about the rise of fascists to power in post-Soviet Russia.
In 1999, Forsyth published
The Phantom of Manhattan, a sequel to
The Phantom of the Opera. It was intended as a departure from his usual genre; Forsyth's explanation was that "I had done mercenaries, assassins, Nazis, murders,
terrorists, special forces soldiers, fighter pilots, you name it, and I got to think, could I actually write about the
heart?" However, it did not achieve the same success as his other novels, and he subsequently returned to modern-day
thrillers.
In 2001,
The Veteran, another collection of short stories, was published followed by the
Avenger (book), published in September 2003, about a
Canadian billionaire who hires a Vietnam veteran to bring his grandson's killer to the US.
His latest book is the
The Afghan published in August
2006 is an indirect sequel to
The Fist of God. Set in the very near future, the threat of a catastrophic assault on the West, discovered on a senior al-Qaeda member's computer, compels the leaders of the U.S. and the U.K. to attempt a desperate gambit—to substitute a seasoned British operative, retired Col. Mike Martin, for an Afghan Taliban commander being held prisoner at Guantánamo Bay.
Style
Forsyth eschews psychological complexity in favour of meticulous plotting, based on detailed factual research. His books are full of information about the technical details of such subjects as money laundering, gun running and identity theft. His novels read like investigative journalism in fictional guise. His moral vision is a harsh one: the world is made up of predators and prey, and only the strong survive. The novels he wrote in the 1970s are often regarded as his best work.
Forsyth's novels typically show the ways in which spies, assassins, mercenaries, diplomats, business leaders and politicians go about their business behind-the-scenes; the sort of things that the average reader would not suspect while reading a simple headline. The Jackal does not just go and kill Charles de Gaulle: he does meticulous research on the man at the library of the British Museum; obtains papers for his false identities; goes around
Paris to find a good location for a sniper's nest; and buys and tests his weapons.
Also a subtle twist at the end of the novel can reveal that a lot more was going on than the reader initially suspected: Cat Shannon, the central figure of
The Dogs of War, turns out to having his own agenda all the time; Adam Munro of
The Devil's Alternative finds out that he was a pawn rather than a player of people in high places; in
The Odessa File, the reporter's motivation is revealed at the end, and a number of events in
Icon turn out to have been committed by people other than those who the reader had been led to believe.
Issues Raised by his Work
His research has caused headaches for governments. In
The Day of the Jackal, he describes a technique used by a would-be assassin to obtain a new
passport. The assassin visits a church, and looks for a tombstone of someone who was born nearly the same time he was, but
Infant mortality. He then obtains a birth certificate, which enables him to obtain a passport in that person's name - effectively
Identity theft. In the story, the government didn't cross check passport requests with the
Births, deaths and marriages registry. Unfortunately, this was actually government practice at the time, and Forsyth revealed this in his writings. In
The Deceiver, he describes how a British agent
bugging the coffin of a dead Provisional Irish Republican Army member. The microphone records the conversation of senior IRA members, who are using the funeral as a chance for a conference about
terrorism activities. Journalists pressed the British government to ask if this had ever been done, and the British government was forced to admit that indeed it had.
Intriguingly, Forsyth's novels have had echoes in reality in recent years. In 2004, a group of British-led alleged mercenaries were arrested in Zimbabwe allegedly en route to
Equatorial Guinea, where it was believed they intended to assist the country's opposition in overthrowing the government. In exchange for this assistance, the leaders of the group were allegedly offered lucrative mineral concessions in Equatorial Guinea. Media commentators immediately drew comparisons with the plot of Forsyth's novel
The Dogs of War, which had been written more than 30 years before, and also involved a coup attempt in Equatorial Guinea. One of those convicted of involvement in the coup was an ex-Special Air Service officer,
Simon Mann. Mann is a former associate of Lt. Col.
Tim Spicer, the chief executive of the British "
private military company" Aegis Defence Services, and for this reason the British government had sought advice from Spicer when they first received intelligence that a coup was being planned.
Spicer, in turn, has an interesting connection with Forsyth, in that the author is reportedly one of a small number of people who own shares in Spicer's company.
Furthermore, in
The Fist of God, set during the First Gulf War, a memorandum to the then United States Secretary of State
James Baker from the Pentagon strongly advises against any invasion of Iraq. The reasons for this are stated to be that without the strength of the police state under Saddam Hussein, fractures would begin to appear between 'three nations' of Iraq, leading to an undesirable and almost unmanagable situation for the American government. This is strikingly similar to the events which have taken place since the American-led
2003 Invasion of Iraq.
Public Life
Forsyth is a Eurosceptic Conservative Party (UK). In 2003, he was awarded the One of Us Award from the
Conservative Way Forward group for his services to the Conservative movement in Britain. He is also a patron of the
Young Britons' Foundation. In 2005, he came out in opposition to
Kenneth Clarke's candidacy for the leadership of Conservative Party (UK) leadership election, 2005, calling Clarke's record in government "unrivaled; a record of failure which at every level has never been matched". Instead, he endorsed and donated money to David Davis (British politician) campaign.
He is also a strong supporter of the
British monarchy. In his book "Icon" he actually recommended a constitutional monarchy as a solution to the Russian problems of the 90's.
He is an occasional radio broadcaster on political issues, and has also written for newspapers throughout his career, including, at present (2005- ), a weekly page in the
Daily Express.
In August 2006, Forsyth appeared on the ITV gameshow
Who Wants to Be a Millionaire? (UK game show) to raise funds for charity.
On 8 February 2007, Forsyth appeared on BBC's political panel show
Question Time (TV series). On it, he expressed scepticism on the climate change phenomena.
Bibliography
{| border="2" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" style="margin: 1em 1em 1em 0; background: #f9f9f9; border: 1px #aaa solid; border-collapse: collapse; font-size: 95%;"|- bgcolor="#CCCCCC" align="center"! Year !! Title !! Notes|-|1969 ||
The Biafra Story ] |||-|1972 ||
The Odessa File ] |||-|1975 ||
The Shepherd ] |||-|1982 ||
Emeka ] || Short story collection|-|1984 ||
The Fourth Protocol ] |||-|1991 ||
The Deceiver ] |||-|1994 ||
The Fist of God ] |||-|1999 ||
The Phantom of Manhattan ] || Short story collection|-|2003 ||
Avenger (book) |||-|2006 ||
The Afghan |||}
See also
- List of bestselling novels in the United States
External links
-
- The Unofficial Frederick Forsyth Homepage
- 1984 audio interview with Frederick Forsyth by Don Swaim of CBS Radio - RealAudio at Wired for Books.org
- The Unofficial Frederick Forsyth Polish Website
- "They Take The Mind, and What Emerges is Just Tapioca Pudding": interview with F. Forsyth.
{{Infobox Writer| name = Frederick Forsyth| image =| imagesize = 200px| caption =| pseudonym =| birth_date = | birth_place = Ashford, Kent, Kent,
England| period = 1969 - present| genre = [Crime fiction,
Thriller (genre)| subject =| movement =| debut_works =
The Biafra Story (1969)] (born
August 25, 1938) is an England author and occasional political commentator. He is best known for thrillers such as
The Day of the Jackal,
The Odessa File,
The Dogs of War (novel),
The Fist of God,
Icon (novel),
The Veteran,
Avenger (book) and recently
The Afghan.
Biography
Born in
Ashford, Kent, Kent, Forsyth was educated at Tonbridge School. He later attended University of Granada in Spain. He then became a reporter, and spent three and a half years working at a small newspaper before joining
Reuters in 1961. In 1965, he joined the
BBC and was assistant diplomatic correspondent. From July to September 1967, he covered the
Nigerian Civil War between
Biafra and
Nigeria.
In 1968, he left the BBC amid allegations that his reporting of the Biafran War was biased towards the Biafran cause, and that he had falsified elements of his reports. He returned to Biafra as a freelancer. In 1969, he wrote a book about the Biafran War called
The Biafra Story.
Works
Forsyth decided to write a novel using similar research techniques to those used in journalism. His first full length novel,
The Day of the Jackal, was published in 1971 and became an international bestseller. It was later made into a The Day of the Jackal (film). It also earned him the Edgar Award for Best Novel. In this book, the
Organisation armée secrète hires an assassin to kill
Charles de Gaulle.
His second novel,
The Odessa File, was published in 1972 and is about a reporter attempting to track down a certain ex-Nazi Schutzstaffel officer in modern Germany, whom he discovered via the diary of a Jewish Holocaust survivor that committed suicide early in the book, who was being shielded by the organization that protects ex-Nazis, called ODESSA. As it turns out, the reporter discovers that this same SS officer killed a German Army officer during World War II for striking him after refusing to let SS soldiers take the place of his own wounded men. This book was later made into a movie with the same name, starring Jon Voight, but there were substantial adaptations. For example, the black Jaguar (car) auto with yellow streaks depicted in the story, itself a thrill designed to engross the reader, was replaced by a
Mercedes-Benz.
In 1974, he wrote
The Dogs of War (novel), in which a British mining executive hires a group of mercenaries to overthrow the government of an African country so that he can install a puppet regime that will allow him cheap access to its substantial mineral wealth.
The Shepherd was an illustrated
novella published in 1975. It tells of a nightmare journey by a RAF pilot while flying home for Christmas in the late 1950s. His attempts to find a rational explanation for his eventual rescue prove as troublesome as his experience. Following this came
The Devil's Alternative in 1979, which was set in 1982. In this book, the
Soviet Union faces a disastrous grain harvest and Ukrainians freedom fighters. A Politburo faction fight ensues. In the end, a
Norway oil tanker built in Japan, a Russian airliner hijacked to
West Berlin and various governments find themselves involved.
In 1982,
No Comebacks, a collection of ten short stories, was published. Some of these stories had been written earlier. Many were set in the
Republic of Ireland where Forsyth was living at the time. One of them,
There Are No Snakes In Ireland, won him a second Edgar Allan Poe Award, this time for best short story.
The Fourth Protocol was published in 1984 and involves renegade elements within the Soviet Union attempting to plant a nuclear bomb near an American airbase in the UK, intending to influence the upcoming
British elections and lead to the election of an anti-NATO, anti-American, anti-nuclear, pro-soviet
Labour Party (UK) government.
The Fourth Protocol was later filmed, starring
Pierce Brosnan and Michael Caine, in 1987. All the political content was removed from the film, which took a lot away from the original story.
Forsyth's tenth release came in 1989, when he wrote
The Negotiator (novel), in which the American President's son is kidnapped and one man's job is to negotiate his release.
Two years later, in 1991,
The Deceiver was published. It includes four separate short stories reviewing the career of British secret agent Sam McCready. At the start of the book, the Permanent Under-Secretary (PUS) of the Foreign and Commonwealth Office requires the Chief of the SIS to push Sam into early retirement. The four stories are presented to a grievance committee in an attempt to allow Sam to stay on active duty with the SIS.
In 1994, Forsyth published
The Fist of God, about the first
Gulf War. Next, in 1996, he published
Icon (novel), about the rise of
fascists to power in post-Soviet Russia.
In 1999, Forsyth published
The Phantom of Manhattan, a sequel to
The Phantom of the Opera. It was intended as a departure from his usual genre; Forsyth's explanation was that "I had done
mercenaries, assassins,
Nazis,
murders,
terrorists, special forces soldiers, fighter pilots, you name it, and I got to think, could I actually write about the
heart?" However, it did not achieve the same success as his other novels, and he subsequently returned to modern-day thrillers.
In 2001,
The Veteran, another collection of short stories, was published followed by the
Avenger (book), published in September 2003, about a Canadian
billionaire who hires a Vietnam veteran to bring his grandson's killer to the US.
His latest book is the
The Afghan published in August 2006 is an indirect sequel to
The Fist of God. Set in the very near future, the threat of a catastrophic assault on the West, discovered on a senior al-Qaeda member's computer, compels the leaders of the U.S. and the U.K. to attempt a desperate gambit—to substitute a seasoned British operative, retired Col. Mike Martin, for an Afghan Taliban commander being held prisoner at Guantánamo Bay.
Style
Forsyth eschews psychological complexity in favour of meticulous plotting, based on detailed factual research. His books are full of information about the technical details of such subjects as money laundering, gun running and identity theft. His novels read like
investigative journalism in fictional guise. His moral vision is a harsh one: the world is made up of predators and prey, and only the strong survive. The novels he wrote in the 1970s are often regarded as his best work.
Forsyth's novels typically show the ways in which spies, assassins, mercenaries, diplomats, business leaders and politicians go about their business behind-the-scenes; the sort of things that the average reader would not suspect while reading a simple headline. The Jackal does not just go and kill Charles de Gaulle: he does meticulous research on the man at the library of the
British Museum; obtains papers for his false identities; goes around Paris to find a good location for a sniper's nest; and buys and tests his weapons.
Also a subtle twist at the end of the novel can reveal that a lot more was going on than the reader initially suspected: Cat Shannon, the central figure of
The Dogs of War, turns out to having his own agenda all the time; Adam Munro of
The Devil's Alternative finds out that he was a pawn rather than a player of people in high places; in
The Odessa File, the reporter's motivation is revealed at the end, and a number of events in
Icon turn out to have been committed by people other than those who the reader had been led to believe.
Issues Raised by his Work
His research has caused headaches for governments. In
The Day of the Jackal, he describes a technique used by a would-be assassin to obtain a new passport. The assassin visits a church, and looks for a
tombstone of someone who was born nearly the same time he was, but Infant mortality. He then obtains a birth certificate, which enables him to obtain a passport in that person's name - effectively Identity theft. In the story, the government didn't cross check passport requests with the
Births, deaths and marriages registry. Unfortunately, this was actually government practice at the time, and Forsyth revealed this in his writings. In
The Deceiver, he describes how a British agent bugging the coffin of a dead
Provisional Irish Republican Army member. The
microphone records the conversation of senior IRA members, who are using the funeral as a chance for a conference about
terrorism activities. Journalists pressed the British government to ask if this had ever been done, and the British government was forced to admit that indeed it had.
Intriguingly, Forsyth's novels have had echoes in reality in recent years. In 2004, a group of British-led alleged mercenaries were arrested in Zimbabwe allegedly en route to Equatorial Guinea, where it was believed they intended to assist the country's opposition in overthrowing the government. In exchange for this assistance, the leaders of the group were allegedly offered lucrative mineral concessions in Equatorial Guinea. Media commentators immediately drew comparisons with the plot of Forsyth's novel
The Dogs of War, which had been written more than 30 years before, and also involved a coup attempt in Equatorial Guinea. One of those convicted of involvement in the coup was an ex-
Special Air Service officer,
Simon Mann. Mann is a former associate of Lt. Col.
Tim Spicer, the chief executive of the British "
private military company" Aegis Defence Services, and for this reason the British government had sought advice from Spicer when they first received intelligence that a coup was being planned.
Spicer, in turn, has an interesting connection with Forsyth, in that the author is reportedly one of a small number of people who own shares in Spicer's company.
Furthermore, in
The Fist of God, set during the
First Gulf War, a memorandum to the then United States Secretary of State James Baker from the Pentagon strongly advises against any invasion of Iraq. The reasons for this are stated to be that without the strength of the police state under
Saddam Hussein, fractures would begin to appear between 'three nations' of Iraq, leading to an undesirable and almost unmanagable situation for the American government. This is strikingly similar to the events which have taken place since the American-led 2003 Invasion of Iraq.
Public Life
Forsyth is a
Eurosceptic Conservative Party (UK). In 2003, he was awarded the One of Us Award from the
Conservative Way Forward group for his services to the Conservative movement in Britain. He is also a patron of the Young Britons' Foundation. In 2005, he came out in opposition to
Kenneth Clarke's candidacy for the leadership of Conservative Party (UK) leadership election, 2005, calling Clarke's record in government "unrivaled; a record of failure which at every level has never been matched". Instead, he endorsed and donated money to
David Davis (British politician) campaign.
He is also a strong supporter of the British monarchy. In his book "Icon" he actually recommended a constitutional monarchy as a solution to the Russian problems of the 90's.
He is an occasional radio broadcaster on political issues, and has also written for newspapers throughout his career, including, at present (2005- ), a weekly page in the Daily Express.
In August 2006, Forsyth appeared on the ITV gameshow
Who Wants to Be a Millionaire? (UK game show) to raise funds for charity.
On 8 February 2007, Forsyth appeared on BBC's political panel show
Question Time (TV series). On it, he expressed scepticism on the climate change phenomena.
Bibliography
{| border="2" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" style="margin: 1em 1em 1em 0; background: #f9f9f9; border: 1px #aaa solid; border-collapse: collapse; font-size: 95%;"|- bgcolor="#CCCCCC" align="center"! Year !! Title !! Notes|-|1969 ||
The Biafra Story ] |||-|1972 ||
The Odessa File ] |||-|1975 ||
The Shepherd ] |||-|1982 ||
Emeka ] || Short story collection|-|1984 ||
The Fourth Protocol ] |||-|1991 ||
The Deceiver ] |||-|1994 ||
The Fist of God ] |||-|1999 ||
The Phantom of Manhattan ] || Short story collection|-|2003 ||
Avenger (book) |||-|2006 ||
The Afghan |||}
See also
External links
-
- The Unofficial Frederick Forsyth Homepage
- 1984 audio interview with Frederick Forsyth by Don Swaim of CBS Radio - RealAudio at Wired for Books.org
- The Unofficial Frederick Forsyth Polish Website
- "They Take The Mind, and What Emerges is Just Tapioca Pudding": interview with F. Forsyth.