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The Day of The Jackal

The Day of the Jackal
FrederickForsyth TheDayOfTheJackal.jpg
1971 UK 1st Edition dustjacket (spine & front)
Author Frederick Forsyth
Country United Kingdom
Language English
Genre Spy, Thriller, Historical novel
Publisher Hutchinson & Co (UK)
Viking Press (US)
Publication date
7 June 1971 (UK)
6 August 1971 (US)
Media type Print (hardback & paperback)
Pages 358 pp (first edition, UK)
380 pp (first edition, US)
ISBN (first edition, hardback)
OCLC 213704
823/.9/14
LC Class PZ4.F7349 Day3 PR6056.O699

The Day of the Jackal (1971) is a thriller novel by English writer Frederick Forsyth about a professional assassin who is contracted by the OAS, a French dissident paramilitary organisation, to kill Charles de Gaulle, the President of France.

The novel received admiring reviews and praise when first published in 1971, and it received a 1972 Best Novel Edgar Award from the Mystery Writers of America. The novel remains popular, and in 2003 it was listed on the BBC's survey The Big Read.

The OAS did exist as described in the novel, and the book opens with an accurate depiction of the attempt on de Gaulle's life led by Jean-Marie Bastien-Thiry, but the subsequent plot is fiction.

The book begins in 1962 with the (historical) failed attempt on de Gaulle's life planned by Col. Jean-Marie Bastien-Thiry in the Paris suburb of Petit-Clamart: Operation Charlotte Corday. Following the arrest of Bastien-Thiry and other conspirators, the French security forces wage a short but extremely vicious "underground" war with the terrorists of the OAS, a militant right-wing group who have labelled de Gaulle a traitor to France after his grant of independence to Algeria.

The French secret service, particularly its covert operations directorate (the "Action Service"), is remarkably effective in infiltrating the terrorist organisation with their own informants, allowing them to capture and neutralise the terrorists' chief of operations, Antoine Argoud. The failure of the Petit-Clamart assassination, and a subsequent attempt at the École Militaire, compounded by Bastien-Thiry's eventual execution by firing squad, likewise demoralise the antagonists.


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