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Summary
Summary
An extraordinary cutting-edge suspense novel from the master of international intrigue and #1 New York Times-bestselling author.
In Virginia, there is an agency bearing the bland name of Technical Operations Support Activity, or TOSA. Its one mission is to track, find, and kill those so dangerous to the United States that they are on a short document known as the Kill List. TOSA actually exists. So does the Kill List.
Added to it is a new name: a terrorist of frightening effectiveness called the Preacher, who radicalizes young Muslims abroad to carry out assassinations. Unfortunately for him, one of the kills is a retired Marine general, whose son is TOSA's top hunter of men.
He has spent the last six years at his job. He knows nothing about his target's name, face, or location. He realizes his search will take him to places where few could survive. But the Preacher has made it personal now. The hunt is on.
Author Notes
Frederick Forsyth was born in Ashford, England on August 25, 1938. At age seventeen, he decided he was ready to start experiencing life for himself, so he left school and traveled to Spain. While there he briefly attended the University of Granada before returning to England and joining the Royal Air Force. He served with the RAF from 1956 to 1958, earning his wings when he was just nineteen years old.
He left the RAF to become a reporter for the Eastern Daily Press, Reuters News Agency, and the British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC). While with the BBC, he was sent to Nigeria to cover an uprising in the Biafra region. As he learned more about the conflict, he became sympathetic to the rebel cause. He was pulled from Nigeria and reassigned to London when he reported this viewpoint. Furious, he resigned and returned to Nigeria as a freelance reporter, eventually writing The Biafra Story and later, Emeka, a biography of the rebel leader Chukwuemeka Odumegwu-Ojukwu.
Upon his return to England in 1970, Forsyth began writing fiction. His first novel, The Day of the Jackal, won an Edgar Allan Poe award from the Mystery Writers of America. His other works include The Odessa File, The Dogs of War, The Fourth Protocol, Devil's Alternative, The Negotiator, The Deceiver, The Fist of God, Icon, The Veteran, Avenger, The Afghan, The Cobra and The Fox.
(Bowker Author Biography)
Reviews (5)
Publisher's Weekly Review
This subpar war-on-terror thriller from Diamond Dagger Award-winner Forsyth, with its unknowable outcome, offers less suspense than his Edgar-winning debut, The Day of the Jackal, where the ending is never in doubt. A Muslim extremist, known only as the Preacher, is spreading the message of violent jihad via English-language videos, and his acolytes have begun targeting public officials in the U.S. and the U.K. The job of stopping him falls to Kit Carson, an ex-Marine now part of a super-secret agency in Virginia called Technical Operations Support Activity. Carson, who's known as the Tracker, assembles an assortment of allies straight out of a Mission Impossible script, including a reclusive teenager who's a master hacker employed to trace the Preacher. Some readers will wonder why Forsyth bothered to give Carson a personal incentive to complete the mission. Others will find a lack of memorable characters an obstacle to genuine engagement. Agent: Ed Victor, Ed Victor Literary Agency. (Aug.) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.
Booklist Review
A retired marine general is gunned down by an unknown assassin collateral damage, apparently, in an attack on a U.S. senator. The general's son, code-named the Tracker, is part of a top-secret government agency responsible for locating, and eliminating (without benefit of trial), people on the so-called kill list of enemies of the U.S. The Tracker knows almost nothing about the assassin, not even his name, but he is determined to find him, no matter the cost. Imagine Forsyth's The Day of the Jackal told almost entirely from the point of view of investigator Claude Lebel, and you'll have a pretty good idea of the author's approach here: this is a procedural told in a straightforward, reportorial style. Forsyth has always been a no-nonsense writer, eschewing flashy prose in favor of documentary realism, incorporating real-world elements into his stories (the Tracker and his adversary are made up, but the government agency is based in reality). No one writes them quite like Forsyth, and this more than meets his usual high standards.--Pitt, David Copyright 2010 Booklist
New York Review of Books Review
Law enforcers and government officials across England and America are being assassinated in broad daylight by Muslim radicals. Egging them on is Zulfiqar Ali Shah, aka The Preacher, a cyber-evangelist who exhorts them to murder a notable Westerner in their vicinity Hot on the orator's tail is Kit Carson, aka The Tracker, star bloodhound for TOSA, an intelligence agency of strenuously complex origins, and Roger Kendrick, aka Ariel, a teenage computer genius. Frederick Forsyth, aka pre-eminent writer of thrillers, once again demonstrates his predilection for headline-trawling; his latest includes disturbingly prescient intimations of the Lee Rigby murder. But the deployment of aliases, acronyms and technospeak reduces the reality of terrorism to the machinations of movies and video games. Action sequences are tipsy with testosterone (male comrades exchange "fervent man hugs"), but when it comes to character development, every expense is spared. Women, no surprise, get the short end of the stick: Carson's mother and wife are killed off by Chapter 2, and third-person feminine pronouns, when they surface with any frequency, refer to a fishing boat.
Kirkus Review
More than 40 years after he gave us the Jackal, Forsyth gives us the Preacher, a masked jihadi extremist whose videos are radicalizing Muslims in the U.S. and England into killing public officials, law enforcement officers and the like. The Preacher tops a special list of enemies marked for death by a covert U.S. government agency. The man assigned the kill is decorated former Marine general Christopher "Kit" Carson, aka The Tracker, a fluent speaker of Arabic who has experience eliminating al-Qaeda leaders. Carson has a personal investment in the operation: the Preacher was responsible for the death of his father. Having had his life saved by the Tracker several years ago in Afghanistan, the agency's director, "Gray Fox," has a special investment in him. When the government's best computer experts are unable to penetrate the Preacher's secret Internet protocol address, the Tracker recruits Roger Kendrick, an agoraphobic teenage computer whiz holed up in his room in Virginia. Drooling over the super-sophisticated equipment he's given, he quickly determines he is up against the Preacher's own computer expert, dubbed the Troll, and creates a cyber alter ego to penetrate the Preacher's fan base. From there, the kid is a few steps away from planting malware that will enable the Tracker to determine who the Preacher is and where he is basednot Pakistan, where a cohort of his operates, or Yemen, as was thought, but Somalia. Here, Forsyth is as methodicalat times as colorlessas his subjects. But he powers his plot with a clean efficiency, providing an absorbing account of the clockwork moves and split-second decisions required to close in on and dispatch the enemy. Strong descriptions of the settings add to the book's appeal. Inspired by an actual kill list, Forsyth's latest thriller is, like Day of the Jackal and The Odessa File, ready-made for the screen.]] Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Library Journal Review
Narrated adroitly by George Guidall, Forsyth's (The Day of the Jackal) latest tells the story of a son seeking to avenge his father's death. During an assassination attempt on a U.S. senator, retired marine general Alvin Carson is killed. The assassin is inspired by an Islamist clergyman known as the Preacher. Unfortunately for the Preacher, the marine's son, LTC Kit "The Tracker" Carson, is a member of the Technical Operations Support Activity whose job it is to track and kill enemies of the United States. Guidall gives a marvelous performance in the narration of this work. His deep, resonant voice effortlessly gives life to the text. His pacing is spot on, and he reads both description and dialog with the same skill. A very nice marriage of voice and text. Verdict Public libraries should purchase.-Michael T. Fein, Central Virginia Community Coll. Lib, Lynchburg (c) Copyright 2014. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.