
The Kill List
Frederick Forsyth
The international bestselling political thriller from the author of The Day of the Jackal, now a Sky TV series with Eddie Redmayne
'Packs a punch... impossible to put down' Daily Mail
'The plot is as taut and lean as ever' Daily Express
'The master of the political thriller strikes again' Kirkus
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THE KILL LIST
The names of those men and women who would threaten the world's security - held above top secret at the highest level of the US government.
THE PREACHER
At the top of it, a radical Islamic cleric whose sermons inspire his followers to kill Western targets. As the bodies begin to pile up in America, Great Britain and across Europe, the message goes out: discover this man's identity, locate him and take him out.
THE TRACKER
Ex-US marine, now one of America's most effective terrorist hunters, with an impossible job. Aided only by a brilliant teenaged hacker, he must throw out the bait and see whether his deadly target can be drawn from his lair...
Readers love The Kill List:
'Totally unputdownable! ***** Reader review
‘Frederick Forsyth books always hit the spot. One of the greats.’ ***** Reader review
‘[An] action-packed page-turner' ***** Reader review
‘Another great read from the master storyteller’ ***** Reader review
‘This book is up there with his best, meticulously researched, well- plotted...and the story doesn't lose impetus all the way through.’ ***** Reader review
Product Details
About Frederick Forsyth
Reviews for The Kill List
Geoffrey Wansell
Daily Mail
I was gripped by the story of the lone assassin hired to kill President de Gaulle. I reread it last year and found it just as enthralling. It hadn't dated a bit. More than four decades later Forsyth's new thriller proves he has lost none of his powers. The prose, like the plot, is as taut and lean as ever. That reflects the journalist that first and foremost Forsyth has always been. So too does his unerringly topical eye.
Fergus Kelly
Daily Express
THRILLER OF THE WEEK - A contemporary update on the theme of a deadly assassin closing in on an important target
Mail on Sunday