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Best-selling British novelist Frederick Forsyth, author of about 20 spy thrillers, has died at the age of 86.
Forsyth, who was a reporter and informant for Britain’s MI6 spy agency before turning his hand to writing blockbuster novels like The Day of the Jackal, died yesterday at his home in the village of Jordans in Buckinghamshire.
Forsyth published more than 25 books, also including The Odessa File and The Dogs of War, and sold 75 million books around the world.
Born in Kent in 1938, Forsyth joined the RAF at the age of 18 before becoming a war correspondent for the BBC and Reuters. He revealed in 2015 he also worked for British intelligence agency MI6 for more than 20 years.
Many of his fictional plots drew on his real-life experiences around the world.
He made his name with his first novel, 1971's The Day Of The Jackal, which he wrote when he was out of work.
It is a gripping tale, set in 1963, about an Englishman hired to assassinate the French president at the time, Charles de Gaulle.
The Day Of The Jackal was turned into a 1973 film starring Edward Fox as the Jackal, and then became a TV drama starring Eddie Redmayne last year.
Forsyth followed The Day Of The Jackal with The Odessa File in 1972, which was adapted for the big screen in a film starring Jon Voight two years later.
The author had written a follow-up, Revenge of Odessa, with fellow thriller writer Tony Kent, which will be published this August.
His other best-selling works included 1984's The Fourth Protocol, which became a film starring starring Michael Caine and Pierce Brosnan.
He was made a CBE for services to literature in 1997.