The Dogs of War by Frederick Forsyth


The Dogs of War
Title : The Dogs of War
Author :
Rating :
ISBN : 0553268465
ISBN-10 : 9780553268461
Language : English
Format Type : Paperback
Number of Pages : 400
Publication : First published January 1, 1974

Note: Alternate-Cover for this ISBN can be found
here
.

In a remote corner of Zangara, a small republic in Africa, lies Crystal Mountain. At certain times of the day the mountain emits a strange glow. Only Sir James Manson knows why. The mountain contains ten billion dollars worth of the world's most valuable mineral, platinum.

Now the only question is, how to get hold of it. Sir James knows how. Invade the country with a band of savage, cold-blooded mercenaries. Topple the government and set up a puppet dictatorship. Unleash the dogs of war.


The Dogs of War Reviews


  • Checkman

    I spent fourteen years in the U.S. Army (1986-2000). Approximately seven years in the Army National Guard and Army Reserve and seven years in the Regular Army. I was eighteen when I enlisted in 1986 and I was all about the "action". I had obviously watched too many Arnold Schwarzenegger and Sylvester Stallone movies. By the time I separated from the Army in 2000 I had come to realize a few crucial things about the military and combat operations.

    1. Beans and bullets (logistics) are everything. The side that excels in running an effective logistical network might not "win" the conflict, but it will probably at least ensure that when it's time to pull out the troops they'll do it on their own terms. See Iraq (2003-2011).

    2. For every soldier whose mission is to engage in active combat operations against an opponent there are five (or more) soldiers and civilians whose job is to get that soldier (marine, airmen, sailor etc.)into the combat zone and keep that soldier supplied and cared for.

    3. Wars are expensive.In more ways than one.

    4. Combat operations consume vast amounts of resources. Money, lives, food, fuel, raw materials and so on. (See #3).

    5. The devil is in the details. Effective organization and planning is very very important. Without it you don't have a chance.

    6. A soldier's life is not a glamorous one.

    Mr. Forsyth does an excellent job of showing what goes into organizing a professional and effective military force and combat operation.It's a tedious and time consuming job. He shows that a one hour combat operation involving a few dozen soldiers entails several thousand hours of planning and training. The details that many have found to be tedious are part of war. How much the details of the International Arms Trade has changed over the past forty years I can't say. Obviously technology has changed. However, one thing that hasn't changed is the side that has the best chance of winning is the side that is the best equipped, organized and led. The Dogs of War isn't a Tom Clancy novel. It's a unsentimental look at a military operation. Albeit a mercenary operation.

    It might be a little dry, but then so is real life.

  • Chris Ingalls

    Oh, man. After almost 20 years of reading and enjoying Forsyth's globe-trotting espionage/mystery thrillers, I knew I was bound to come across a clunker, and this one's it.

    In a way, this book is similar to his deservedly acclaimed "Day of the Jackal" in that in concerns the plot and execution of a serious crime for political gain. While "Jackal" is about the assassination of French President Charles De Gaulle, "Dogs of War" concerns the attempted coup d'etat of a small, fictional African country in order for a British mining company to take advantage of the country's seemingly endless supply of platinum. In order to do this, the company hires mercenaries to invade the country and depose its dictator.

    Sounds like a great yarn, right? WRONG! Great idea for a story, horrible execution. First of all, Forsyth seems to have come across the problem that makes Tom Clancy's books so insufferable: endless, monotonous details about a the planning and execution of an operation. We get it, Freddie: you did your research. Now, how about some interesting characters and dialogue? How about some suspense, maybe?

    While "Day of the Jackal" went into great detail about certain aspects of planning for the operation, it was on a much smaller scale and therefore, much easier to take in. Here, it's torture. Also, "Jackal" told its story from the point of view of both the assassin and the police chasing him. It's a fantastic cat-and-mouse thriller. Here, there's nobody to root for. It's incredibly dull.

    The book does have it's rare moments, and I particularly enjoyed the twist ending. But other than that...meh.

    Forsyth wrote great novels before this one: "Day of the Jackal," "The Odessa File." He also wrote many great novels since: "The Negotiator," "The Deceiver," "The Fourth Protocol," "Icon," among others. Also, his short story collection, "No Comebacks," is definitely worth checking out. But he seemed to be sleepwalking through this one.

  • Jim

    It's been a lot of years since I last saw any part of the movie & more since I read it, but it aged very well. As usual, Forsyth takes us through a long, convoluted setup that is fascinating, very much the same structure as
    The Day of the Jackal. The epilogue explains a lot, but... well, I can't say without a huge spoiler. Motivations that don't make sense will, trust me.

    While most of my shelf choices are obvious, I put it on the mystery-thriller shelf because it has a lot of that in it. Who is doing what & why is often a question. Plus, there's a scene that would have made Luca Bragi (of
    The Godfather) proud.

    The setup of the novel is wonderful. There's nothing magical or easy about planning or staging this operation & the descriptions of the operations, people, & scenery read as if they were real. It's practically a text book for staging a revolution, just as
    The Day of the Jackal was for assassinations. (This last sentence was mine, but the Wikipedia articles for the book has almost the exact same sentence at the bottom. Great minds think alike.)

    I really liked the 1980 movie starring Christopher Walken & Tom Berenger,

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Dogs...
    but it isn't nearly as good as the novel because there were a few critical changes that sucked a lot of the juice out of it. If you're familiar with both (spoilers abound for both), I'd recommend reading the Wikipedia entries. Here's the one for the book

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Dogs...
    Compare the story to the one above for the movie. Huge difference that even Christopher Walken couldn't make up. CAT Shannon is SO much more interesting than Jamie Shannon.

    Very well read, although I didn't like the English voice at first. Davidson's voice & inflections really fit the story, though.

    4+ stars & highly recommended.

  • Martin Iguaran

    Una de las mejores novelas del autor, hay que leerla hoy en día teniendo en cuenta el contexto histórico de la Guerra Fría. Sin embargo, el rol de los mercenarios en África no ha cambiado mucho después de la caída de la Unión Soviética: siguen presentes en muchos países, para respaldar gobiernos dictatoriales, entrenar rebeldes, o proteger los intereses de empresas multinacionales. De modo que mucho de lo que se cuenta en la novela-los turbios intereses en los recursos naturales africanos, la brutalidad del tirano que llega al poder en una sociedad recientemente descolonizada sin ninguna práctica para el gobierno independiente-sigue en gran medida vigente.

  • Randal

    Sir James Manson, a scheming mining tycoon, hatches a plan to topple the government of a tiny African country in order to secure the mining rights to Crystal Mountain. This particular mountain contains an enormous deposit of platinum, and through a series of intricate plans involving Swiss banks and the manipulation of shares, Sir Manson plans to exploit the platinum find and make billions.
    To carry out the coup on corrupt Zangaran president Kimba, Sir Manson hires Cat Shannon, a ruthless mercenary, and a professional in the business of war.
    This book has a very interesting premise, and it begins well, with Cat Shannon and his cohorts defeated at the end of an unspecified African war. The atmosphere created in these first scenes really draws you in. Each of the mercenaries has their own unique personality, and the character of Shannon makes a likeable, interesting protagonist.
    After the first scene, the mercenaries make their way out of Africa and back to their various home bases. And here things begin to bog down. As many reviews have pointed out, the level of detail that goes into planning Manson's grand scheme is insanely meticulous and realistic (which means like real life, it's monotonous and tedious at times).

    Some of the pros of this book are:

    *Any of the scenes set in Africa.
    *The mercenaries themselves.
    *The characters of Shannon and Endean and Roux.
    *The attack on Zangaro (when it finally, at long last, happens)
    *The ending. Did not see it coming, and it ALMOST made all the lead up worth it.

    Some of the cons of the book:

    *There are not enough scenes in Africa! And way too many in places like Belgium and Switzerland (boring).
    *Pacing. Terribly slow.
    *Lack of action for significant portions of the book.
    *Very little war for a book with such a promising title.

    Overall, I understand that the focus and emphasis is on realism here. But sometimes too much realism in writing is just downright boring. This may be the way that a real operation like this might be planned, but it reads boring. Add a little action and excitement, and don't spend 50 pages explaining to me how each and every single piece of equipment was bought and paid for. I wanted to read a thriller, not somebody's budget.

  • Bettie



    There was a film made - who knew - and starring, wait for it, Christopher Walken and we all love him since Mousehunt and that fab
    Fatboy Slim 'Weapon of Choice' video.

    Description: In a remote corner of Zangara, a small republic in Africa, lies Crystal Mountain. At certain times of the day the mountain emits a strange glow. Only Sir James Manson knows why. The mountain contains ten billion dollars worth of the world's most valuable mineral, platinum.

    Now the only question is, how to get hold of it. Sir James knows how. Invade the country with a band of savage, cold-blooded mercenaries. Topple the government and set up a puppet dictatorship. Unleash the dogs of war!



    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dyxBx...

  • Abubakar Mehdi

    I picked this book after reading about Forsyth and the way he does great amount of research before writing a book. Intrigued, I bought this book and was sorely disappointed. The story is basically about a modern day Francis Drake (or Robert Clive) called James Manson, who discovers that in order to extract copper worth 10 billion dollars from a distant african state, he'll have to overthrow the current President and replace him with a puppet of his choosing. All that, before the Russians learn about the whole affair. So he hires a group of mercenaries to execute this plan.
    Now, this is where the story was supposed to get exciting and thrilling, but well, it was anything but exciting. Hundreds of pages with long lugubrious descriptions of how Swiss banks work, how shell companies are used to back dubious activities and how mercenaries get their weapons and ammunitions. The dialogue is monotonous, characters lack dimension and the plot lacks the strength one expects from a spy-thriller. And frequent indulgence in pointless existential gibberish.

    A Total waste of time.

  • Werner

    In keeping with my usual practice for books I've only read in a Reader's Digest condensed version, I'm not presuming to review or rate this one. However, I do want to post an interesting background factoid. Zangara, the fictional African nation that serves as the setting here, was directly modeled on the real-life country of Equatorial Guinea, which Forsyth visited just before writing the book, and psychotic President Kimba is a fictionalized version of E.G.'s first president, Macias Nguema, whose dictatorial reign of terror (1969-79) was ended by his overthrow and execution. The country is still a hotbed of tyranny, paranoia and corruption --and The Dogs of War is still a banned book there. :-(

  • John Farebrother

    Of all Forsyth's novels, his first two are for me by far the best, and also the most authentic. Here he combines his skills as a master story-teller with an intimate knowledge of the esoteric and closed world of mercenaries, and of Africa. It is clear that his research for this novel went far beyond a desk study. Readers of his non-fiction work
    Biafra Story will know that he is no stranger to Africa. All in all, a ripping yarn.

  • Christopher Saunders

    Frederick Forsyth's The Dogs of War details the shady world of corporate imperialism and mercenaries, in quasi-documentary fashion. When a British mining magnate discovers that the destitute African nation of Zangaro contains rich platinum reserves, he commissions a crack team of mercenaries to topple the pro-Soviet dictator and install a compliant puppet. Unfortunately, mercenary leader Cat Shannon turns out to have morals and a mind of his own. As The Day of the Jackal compellingly chronicles the work of a professional killer, The Dogs of War reconstructs mercenary chicanery: the double-dealing of corporations who view people, and indeed whole countries as playthings, strong-arming mining concessions, bribing politicians and setting up shell corporations, then hiring armed goons when all else fails. And the mercenaries themselves, a grab-bag of professional soldiers, burned-out criminals and unrepentant ideologues (including ex-Nazis and French fascists) barely able to function without a machine gun in hand. So meticulous is Forsyth's portrait, indeed, that it got him in trouble for his connections to a failed coup in Equatorial Guinea which supposedly doubled as "research." The book avoids being a dry catalogue of misdeeds by Forsyth's reportorial insight: he's fully aware that Third World nations are destroyed by such skullduggery, having witnessed firsthand Western double-dealing in the Nigerian Civil War, and uses Shannon (an improbably moral mercenary) as a mouthpiece for his contempt for unaccountable tribunes of "civilization." No one will mistake Dogs for a progressive tract, but Forsyth's cynicism feels more honest than similar adventure stories, which revel in blood-and-thunder action over moral quandaries (even if the book digresses with a half-baked romantic subplot and a vendetta by one of Shannon's rivals). The final chapter details Shannon's mission, meticulously executed yet still a near-run thing, as Shannon finds a way to carry out his job while keeping his own principles intact. Adapted into a good, if not overly faithful movie with Christopher Walken and Tom Berenger in 1980.

  • Andy

    There's very little action in terms of the "war" in the title, but this is nevertheless an entertaining read. It's a clever satire on world politics, and is unfortunately still relevant.

  • Pablo Donetch

    Me costó terminar, mucho, mucho.
    "Los perros de ..." cuenta la historia de Cat Shannon, un mercenario, contratado por un multimillonario inglés para tomar el control de un país africano en el que se encuentra la "montaña de cristal", una reserva de platino invaluable. El 70% del libro cuenta los preparativos de la misión que Shannon lidera, lo que lo hace extremadamente árido. Una sucesión infinita y, a muchos ratos, intolerable de nombres, datos y marañas de cómo conseguir armas de contrabando y armar un ejército pequeño.
    Es una aspecto que no me gusta mucho de la literatura inglesa, esa afición de presentarte miles de lugares recónditos y personajes como si fueran familiares tuyos de toda la vida. Puede ser mi flojera o mi dislexia, pero no me agrada nada.
    El final es inesperado, obviamente, decente, pero nada espectacular. Evíte leerla si puede.

  • Barry Medlin

    A good read, but for me not as good as his first two.

  • Alan Tomkins-Raney

    Started off with a smartly crafted set up and plot development, then devolved into hundreds of pages of minutely detailed descriptions of how to fund and supply mercenaries: multiple secret European bank accounts, chartering of shell companies, intricate webs of money transfers, arms purchases and smuggling, unfiform purchasing. This could be interesting and informative if explained and summarized in a few chapters, but this actually comprised the bulk of the story over hundreds of pages, told day by day in what I felt was excessively unnecessary detail. It became tedious. The first couple and last couple chapters were exciting and action packed, and there was a satisfactory plot twist at the end, but the bulk of the book was a bit of a chore.

  • Silvana

    Cry 'Havoc' and let slip the Dogs of War!
    The idea is interesting, to have mercenaries to conduct a coup in a small (fictitious) country in West Africa. However, Forsyth spent too much time explaining the process in preparing the action. Well, might be useful if one wants to do the same thing in the 70s though. I felt kinda bored reading the middle part of this book. Couldn't care less about all of the business arrangements and Bond-esque love affair. Thank goodness, the last chapter was exciting enough. Interesting twist too.
    In conclusion, I definitely prefer this book than its two predecessors, The Day of the Jackal and the Odessa File.

  • Muriel

    Do not read this book. At least 200 pages' worth of logistics, money transfers, budgeting, letter writing, postage rates, telephone calls, and issuing of shares. I almost gave up with less than 100 pages to go because it was so infuriatingly boring. I eventually skipped to the end and managed to finish.

  • Xabi1990

    mercenarios

  • Charlie Hasler

    Not the best of Forsyth I have read. A good yarn but no Odessa File or Day of the Jackal.

  • Dan Sihota

    Until I recently read The Day of the Jackal, I had never really been interested in reading anything by Frederick Forsyth, but after I finished The Day of the Jackal, a book I really enjoyed, I decided to read another Forsyth novel, this time I decided to read The Dogs of War.

    A few years ago I saw a film on TV called, The Dogs of War, and despite its well-known cast, which included Christopher Walken and Tom Berenger, the film didn't leave much of a lasting impression, at best, I would describe it as being "okay". The film is about a group of mainly American mercenaries hired to remove an African dictator from power in a fictional country, and a great deal of time is devoted to the action scenes. At the time, I didn't know this film was actually based on a novel, but when I saw this book on a list of works by Forsyth, I knew which book I wanted to read next, and I can honestly say that I wasn't disappointed.

    Often, when a book is made into a film, especially when it's backed by Hollywood, a great deal of the original source material is changed so much so that the final result bears little resemblance to the original book. In this case, this is also true of what happened when The Dogs of War was adapted into a film. Two major differences are that in the film the main characters are mainly Americans, while in the book they are from a number of different European backgrounds. The second major difference is that in the book a great deal of time is spent describing the planning of the military action, while very little time is devoted to the action itself. I accept that if the film-makers had attempted to make a more faithful adaptation of the book few Hollywood studios would have agreed to it, fearing that most American audiences wouldn't be interested in a film where most of the characters weren't Americans. Also, I'm not sure if many people would have been interested in a film where so much time was spent on planning. The reason why I have highlighted these two differences is that, in my opinion, these aspects of the story make this book such a great read.

    Forsyth's incredible attention to detail, describing the backgrounds of the characters and the motivations for their actions; and the detailed planning involved in a military operation, how the mercenaries obtain all the different equipment they need from different sources and the lengths everyone has to go to in order to cover their tracks; all helps give the story a more "realistic" feel. Although the story is about toppling a dictator in a fictional country, I can't help wondering how much of it is based on real events. It seems highly plausible that such military operations have been planned, or carried out, in a manner very similar to that described in this book. Despite the fact that this book was written a number of years ago and many things have changed since, especially the use of technology, privately financed wars continue to take place today making this such a relevant topic. Whilst it may not be possible to carry out a military operation in a similar manner today, what I do think is still true is the level of difficulty involved, and overcoming such difficulties still requires a great deal of money and involvement of people in positions of power, this would help explain many ongoing conflicts around the world.

    Despite the title of the book, as well its main theme, this is not a book full of senseless violence, I highly recommend this book to anyone who enjoys a good read.

  • Robert

    Well-written and boring.

    Pat Shannon, a mercenary between jobs, contracts to employ of bunch of his mercenary friends to displace the insane dictator of a small African country with valuable mineral deposits. His employer is bankrolling him in order to install a puppet government that will give him a sweetheart deal on the mining. To do so, he must not only recruit the men and acquire the weapons, ammunition, and transportation, but he must also smuggle them all in and out of countries of origin and transit and arrive in total surprise. Along the way, he must cope with those from his past who really don't love him, as well as treacherous arms dealers.

    This book was probably a handy how-to-do-it smuggler's guide when it was originally published. But it is now just a collection of impressive but useless detail. The plot is very thin and the outcome predictable in almost every respect.

    Normally, I'm a Forsyth fan.

  • Blair Hodgkinson

    Frederick Forsyth achieves here for mercenaries and international intrigue what he previously did for political assassination. The author expertly builds tension as he takes a simple premise of coup d'état in a small African nation and completely lays out the underlying motivations of the many participants and traces every thread of necessary effort required to achieve such an enterprise from the hiring of mercenaries to the purchase of arms and materiel. All of this by-the-numbers should be boring, but in the skillful descriptions of Frederick Forsyth they become almost beautiful studies for their own sake, never flagging in their ability to fascinate. The story has a nice twist in the final two chapters that make the payoff all the more worthwhile for the reader.

  • David Lucero

    Read this book after watching the movie again and thought it was a well-written story about mercenaries fighting in Africa. Saw the movie recently and it's still worth seeing as well as reading the book. I enjoy reading books that were made into movies and see how closely the film follows the book.

    In Africa a dictator decides not to play ball with powerful mining companies under the control of European investors. The companies hire a merc to visit the nation and create a plan to topple the regime.

    It's an action-packed novel with good suspense and drama. Written during a time when snappy dialogue was equally important as action. Thrillers of today could read this book for good research on how to write a book of this genre.

  • Olethros

    -Mientras el autor comenzaba a encontrar su rumbo tampoco se equivocaba en exceso.-

    Género. Novela.

    Lo que nos cuenta. Shannon y su grupo de mercenarios pierden en un conflicto en África Occidental, pero siguen en el negocio. Cuando un empresario descubre que en cierto país africano hay reservas de platino de un enorme valor, y como dicha nación está en la órbita soviética, decide orquestar un golpe de estado que sirva a sus intereses, decisión que le llevará a conocer a Shannon.

    ¿Quiere saber más de este libro, sin spoilers? Visite:


    http://librosdeolethros.blogspot.com....

  • Mike (the Paladin)

    Interesting if dated book. I was even then fascinated by the subject matter..mercenary soldiers. I know that many will disagree, but I've never held the opinion that they are universally "evil". This is an interesting story, it hasn't stayed with me as much as say, The Day of the Jackal, but Forsyth is still one of the best ever writers of suspense, thriller, and techno thriller.

  • Joseph Spuckler

    Step by step manual for taking over a West African country for the mineral rights. 1970s soldiers of fortune novel

  • Joe Kraus

    I knew of Forsyth – it was hard not to know of him if you spent any time in a commercial bookstore in the 1980s or 1990s – but I had come to think of him as a lesser John Le Carre or a precursor to Robert Ludlum, someone who interrogated the nature of spy work. I thought, that is, that I’d get a spy thriller with something of a conscience.

    From a distance, I suppose that it what we get here, though I admit that the conscience is less troubled than I’d like. In execution, though – emphasis on execution – this is a procedural. Instead of a police procedural, though, it’s more of a coup procedural. It lets us see what it might take for a determined handful of men (always men, of course) to overthrow a government and turn themselves into billionaires along the way.

    At its best, it gives us glimpses into the arcane world of soldiers for hire, something I understand Forsyth knew more about than most people. Even then, though, it moves slowly. There’s a deliberateness to this that dates it. I think I enjoyed some of the lingering scenes, the fixing of bank accounts and arranging for illegal sales of arms, but I think I did so as much from nostalgia as from immediate appreciation. In other words, I don’t think this would find the same receptive audience if it came out today. There’s simply not enough adrenaline.

    The more I read here, the more troubled that Forsyth’s perspective made me. He does criticize the nature of this coup; Manson, the industrialist who decides to remake the political map of the world for his own gain, comes across as a clear bad guy. If you read charitably, Forsyth does condemn a system so open to manipulation.

    At the same time, though, he admires his mercenary protagonists. He likes them so much that he even dedicates the novel to the men he knew who are now lying in their unmarked graves. Shannon is a kind of fatigues-wearing James Bond. He’s always cool, whether he’s sweet-talking a woman or charging a fortified position.

    Over time, the amorality of all that begins to tell. [SPOILER:] It must mean something that, at the very end, Shannon betrays Manson, killing the man he’d handpicked to take over the country and sell him platinum ore at pennies on the hundred dollar value, but what? Shannon has still overthrown a government – and killed the existing president – and he’s left the African nation destabilized and weakened. It’s likely thousands or tens of thousands will die, but he doesn’t care enough even to contemplate the matter.

    Through it all, Shannon is simply too cool, too untroubled by the larger world. He decides at one point that he wants more info on Manson. So, what does he do? He calls up a friend who’s dating a model and gets the friend to introduce him to Manson’s 19-year-old fashion model daughter. Manson’s daughter falls for him immediately – he’ll show her his scars if she’ll show him hers – and she’s ready to leave Daddy and all his wealth to follow him into jungle combat. (He discards her, by the way.) The idea is both insulting and absurd. I kept imagining some international criminal who, with a single phone call, found a way to date Tiffany Trump.

    So, while the structure of this is interesting, and while it’s set up to critique the world it simultaneously glorifies, it’s hard to forgive it for its unrepentant sexism and its dehumanizing view of the African pawns of their game.

    This is so far short of the ethical aims of Le Carre that I’m troubled to use them in the same sentence.

  • Sean McCoy

    I'd put down Forsyth's masterpiece, The Day of the Jackal, very quickly, many years ago, because I wasn't able to parse through the extreme level of detail buried within the first few pages. In short, it just didn't move very fast.

    I picked up The Dogs of War because I'd heard the premise, that of a gang of mercenaries attempting to topple an African dictatorship in order to establish a puppet government that will sell platinum to a British mining magnate at absurdly low prices, and I thought it sounded fun as hell.

    I've been better about reading this year than I was when I first tried that Jackal, and to good effect, because the first hundred pages of Dogs really drags, for me. I found myself questioning every detail, unwilling to trust in Forsyth's judgement about what really needed to be included in order to tell a good story.

    This book is about planning and details. And it is very much worth the opening hundred pages of explanation. Near the end of the book, details that I thought were superfluous or gratuitous at the beginning came into stark focus as entirely necessary and a surge of excitement went through me as I realized I had been in good hands all along.

    The problem with most thrillers I read, is that there is so much eye-rolling going on, I have a hard time keeping my eyes moving from line to line. Single men take on entire armies, hacking solves everything, and everyone's so busy flying by the seat of their pants that they forget to plan. Those aren't problems so much as its a problem that there never seem to be consequences to those actions.

    The Dogs of War really highlights planning in all of its glory. It sounds boring, but if you want to know how mercenaries actually (spoiler: I don't know at all that this is true) plan an execute missions, then this is the book for you. It doesn't even matter to me that it's accurate, though I've heard it is, so much as it matters to me that it is plausible and tries to be accurate and lives up to its own internal logic.

    I've picked up Day of the Jackal again and I can't wait to read it too.

  • Arun Divakar

    The whole of this novel is a very exhaustive plan as to how to mount and execute a small military operation. While the overall slice of military action is a small one, the outcome of this operation is one that is meant to have huge economic advantages. A corrupt and crumbling African republic, a huge pile of unmined platinum, corporate greed and a ruthlessly inventive mercenary group form the key players of the story. While the three act structure of the story itself appeared a tad too idealistic and cliché, the book shines through with the amount of detail that is shed on the planning of the military operation. Forsyth’s pen misses no details and leaves no stone unturned as to how effectively one needs to plan the logistical side of a mercenary op. It is like watching a solid and cost effective structure take place step by step and brick by brick.

    A bit of reading about history will tell you that the ones who usually wins the wars are the ones who have a better control over their logistical systems. Strategy, tactics, firepower and luck can help you win battles but the wars are almost always won by those who know how to handle their supplies, ammunition and personnel. More important than all this, they do know how to get these constituent elements from one location to another too. The story is an illustration of this fact wherein the key player, Shannon spends almost 80% of the story planning for a military action that would take roughly half a day to complete. The specifics of the op are rather immaterial here since that would give away a little too much of the plot. As in real life, the planning is entirely slow moving and painstaking while the action when it comes is bloody, brutal and gets over pretty quick.

    Recommended if you like a practical and grounded view of how a special forces op might be set up. The surrounding detail on the geopolitical landscape etc. are very dated now and yet the specifics still stand out.

  • Vijai

    “I will hurt you for this. I don't know how yet, but give me time. A day will come when you think yourself safe and happy, and suddenly your joy will turn to ashes in your mouth, and you'll know the debt is paid.”
    - George R.R. Martin as Tyrion Lannister.

    Revenge is such. Not the spontaneous display of anger and bravado as movies would have you believe. Smart ones know better. You turn that sourness and pain into a slow burning fuel. You plan, put things together, caress the details into place and cajole those you plan to use as your weapon. Because. Because it needs to work, the plan. To see your revenge exacted is the ultimate goal of a seething heart. Too much emotion invested in it to let it go waste with foolhardy behavior. You plan, check, execute, check again because when the appointed hour comes, the enemy has to go down, hard.

    That is the gist of my review for this book. Please don't get bored because of the slow pace. This is how every successful operation becomes one, because of meticulous planning. This is how the masters do it. Let Forsyth talk to you about it. Of course, there is always the twist but you would be remiss in your duties as an action thriller fan if you pick this one up for just that.