Forsyth was born in
Ashford, Kent, on 25 August 1938, and was educated at
Tonbridge School, a private
boarding and day school in the market town of
Tonbridge, Kent.
Military and journalism Before becoming a journalist, Forsyth completed his
National Service in the
Royal Air Force as a pilot, for which he flew the
de Havilland Vampire. He was commissioned with the rank of
acting pilot officer on 28 August 1956, becoming substantive in that rank one year later. After completing his full-time national service, he was transferred to the
Royal Auxiliary Air Force on 30 October 1958 with the rank of
flying officer. He joined
Reuters in 1961 and in 1965 the
BBC, for which he served as an assistant diplomatic correspondent. Forsyth reported on his early activities as a journalist. His early career was spent covering French affairs and the attempted assassination of
Charles de Gaulle. He had never been to Africa until reporting on the
Nigerian Civil War between
Biafra and
Nigeria as a
BBC correspondent. He was there for the first six months of 1967, but few expected the war to last long considering the poor weaponry and preparation of the Biafrans when compared to the British-armed Nigerians. a relationship that continued for 20 years. According to Forsyth, he was not paid. Forsyth did occasional radio commentary on political issues. He also wrote for newspapers throughout his career, and up until August 2023 wrote a weekly column in the
Daily Express. In 2003, he criticised "gay-bashers in the churches" in
The Guardian newspaper.
Writing According to Forsyth, his turn to writing fiction was born of financial need; he did not think himself cut out to be a novelist. As a boy, he said, he wanted to be "a fighter jock," and when he traded his career in the RAF for journalism, it was "to see the world" as a foreign and war correspondent. As for becoming a novelist, he confessed "I never wanted to be a writer," but wrote his first full-length novel,
The Day of the Jackal, because he was "skint, stony broke." He applied similar research techniques to those used in journalism. Published in 1971, the book became an international bestseller and gained its author the
Edgar Allan Poe Award for Best Novel in 1972. In this story, the
Organisation armée secrète hires an assassin to kill then–French President
Charles de Gaulle. It was made into a
film of the same name, and subsequently a
television series. The reporter discovers him via the diary of a Jewish
Holocaust survivor who died of suicide earlier, but he is being shielded by an organisation that protects ex-Nazis, called
ODESSA. This book was later made into a
movie with the same name, starring
Jon Voight, but there were substantial alterations. Many of the novel's readers assumed that a centralized ODESSA organisation really existed, but historians asserted there was no centrally-organized network facilitating the escape of German Nazis. In
The Dogs of War (1974) 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 a colossal platinum-ore reserve. This book was also adapted into a
1980 film starring
Christopher Walken and
Tom Berenger.
The Shepherd was an illustrated novella published in 1975. It tells of a nightmare journey by an
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 is set in 1982. In this book, the Soviet Union faces a disastrous grain harvest. The U.S. is ready to help for some political and military concessions. A Politburo faction fight ensues. War is proposed as a solution. Ukrainian freedom fighters complicate the situation later. In the end, a Swedish 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.
The Fourth Protocol was published in 1984 and involves renegade elements within the
Soviet Union attempting to plant an
atomic bomb near a U.S. 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 government. The
1987 adaptation as a thriller film starred
Pierce Brosnan and
Michael Caine and was co-produced by Forsyth. Forsyth's tenth book came in 1989 with
The Negotiator, in which the United States 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 short stories reviewing the career of British secret agent Sam McCready. At the start of the novel, the Permanent Under-Secretary of State (PUSS) 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, a novel which concerns the first
Gulf War,
Project Babylon and competition between
intelligence agencies. Next, in 1996, he published
Icon, about the rise of fascists to power in
post-Soviet Russia. Forsyth then 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, murderers, terrorists, special forces soldiers, fighter pilots, you name it, and I got to think, could I actually write about the human heart?" The novel was adapted into a
film starring
Sam Elliott and
Timothy Hutton.
The Cobra, published in 2010, features some of the characters previously featured in
Avenger, and has as its subject an attempt to destroy the world trade in
cocaine. On 20 August 2013, his novel
The Kill List was published. It was announced earlier in June that year that
Rupert Sanders would be directing a film version of the story. In September 2015, Forsyth's autobiography,
The Outsider: My Life in Intrigue, was published. In January 2018, it was announced that Forsyth would publish his eighteenth novel, a thriller about computer hackers, inspired by the
Lauri Love and
Gary McKinnon stories.
The Fox was published in the same year as an
espionage thriller regarding a highly skilled autistic hacker. ==Other awards==