“The Jackal. A tall, blond Englishman with opaque, gray eyes. A killer at the top of his profession. A man unknown to any secret service in the world. An assassin with a contract to kill the world's most heavily guarded man. One man with a rifle who can change the course of history. One man whose mission is so secretive not even his employers know his name. And as the minutes count down to the final act of execution, it seems that there is no power on earth that can stop the Jackal.”
While the book follows a fictional assassin hired to kill President Charles de Gaulle, it looks inspired by multiple attempts on de Gaulle’s life. As portrayed in the book, the would-be killers are from the Organisation de l'Armée Secrète (OAS), a far-right paramilitary group determined to prevent Algeria from gaining independence from France. The OAS was no harmless group of disgruntled citizens. Many were battle-hardened former French military officers who had fought in the Algerian War. For them, Algeria wasn’t just another piece of French real estate. It was a part of France itself. Jean-Marie Bastien-Thiry, is mentioned in the opening pages of the book, was a real person, a French Air Force lieutenant colonel and avid supporter of the OAS, who led one of the plots. The plan was simple. Ambush de Gaulle’s car on a quiet suburban road outside Paris and kill him in a hail of bullets. While De Gaulle survived the attack, Bastien-Thiry was arrested, tried, and executed for his attempt on the president’s life. In fact, he was the last person to face a firing squad in France for a political crime. So Forsyth’s fictional tale, he seemly drew heavily on the real-life motivations of the OAS and the real history of the time period (I could also not fail to recognize other aspect is the book: it’s set between the fall of 1962 into 1963 and one can’t also draw parallels the Kennedy assassination in November of 1963).
It’s a well researched novel, I’ll give Forsyth that. It’s basically a historical novel that uses real people and incidents and wraps a police procedural around it. The first half is extremely detailed on how our unnamed assassin sets his plan. At times, it gets bogged down in too much detail, but this is a book released fifty years ago when attentions spans were longer. Today, a novel like this would’ve trimmed a good deal to make the pacing faster, even though then, as today, we all know how the book will end (see more below). It’s a technically and proficient tale, despite some gaps in logic – mostly being that out all the intelligence this man has, his ability to change course when needed, he failed to understand that human error. One thing he discounted was the one thing that got all the worlds police involved in finding him.
To note, the book has interesting origins. Forsyth wrote it in less than six weeks –the first two months of 1970- but had difficulty getting anyone to accept his unsolicited novel. Four publishing houses rejected it between February and September because their editors believed a fictional account of the OAS hiring a British assassin in 1963 to kill Charles de Gaulle would not be commercially successful, given the fact that he had never been shot and, when the book was written, de Gaulle was in fact still alive and retired from public life (de Gaulle would die in November of 1970). A small print run was finally ordered and the book was released in June 1971. Though never formally reviewed, the book found it success through word of mouth and this got the interest of the American publisher Viking, who released the book in late summer 1971. A film version followed in 1973 to great success. A reimaged modern version of the book was adapted for TV via British Sky TV and the American streamer Peacock. Its first 10-episode season was released in 2024. A second season is tentative for late 2026 release.






