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The Afghan
 
 

The Afghan [Kindle Edition]

Frederick Forsyth
2.9 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (89 customer reviews)

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Product Description

Daily Mirror

The Afghan is an extraordinary story of bravery, fanaticism,
extreme espionage and advanced terrorism.

Literary Review

Exciting, frightening, instructive.

Product details

  • Format: Kindle Edition
  • File Size: 465 KB
  • Print Length: 467 pages
  • Page Numbers Source ISBN: 0552155047
  • Publisher: Transworld Digital (30 Oct 2008)
  • Sold by: Amazon Media EU S.à r.l.
  • Language English
  • ASIN: B0031RS48Y
  • Text-to-Speech: Enabled
  • Average Customer Review: 2.9 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (89 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: #17,226 Paid in Kindle Store (See Top 100 Paid in Kindle Store)
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Frederick Forsyth
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Customer Reviews

Most Helpful Customer Reviews
43 of 46 people found the following review helpful
Format:Hardcover
The book gets off to a cracking start. As always Mr Forsyth has done his research, which makes the setting out of the plot all the more believable. Indeed, with a foot so firmly placed in reality the book reads almost as if it was a journalistic account of an actual event rather than a work of fiction. So why does this book that is so engrossing for the first 200 pages suddenly massively disappoint. Well, I am sorry Mr Foryth but suddenly, and for no good reason, this gritty and believable story goes into a complete fantasy land. I shan't go into detail but basically it involves an aeroplane developing mechanical problems somewhere over the vastness of the USA What, we ask, has this got to do with our plot? All is soon revealed, as by a truly staggering coincidence of fantastical proportions, the plane crashes onto the exact spot where one of the main characters happens to be. If he had been hit by a meteor it would have been more believable. As it is, this is the point where the story virtually collapses. The strong thread of reality, which weaves together the first two thirds of the book is severered beyond repair. As a result I felt a profound indifference to what followed. What a shame!
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23 of 25 people found the following review helpful
Format:Hardcover
I have bought, and enjoyed every one of Mr. Forsyth's excellent fiction works, and I thought that he had avoided the problem common to many novelists, in that they tend to lose their 'edge' regarding plotline, 'readability' and tone after some success! Unfortunately, with 'The Afghan', I fear that Mr. Forsyth's long rule as a 'must buy' to an addict such as myself is fast approaching the end of it's path! Where the character Martin in !Fist of God' was utterly believable, because the writing led you carefully along that path of credibility, in 'The Afghan' his life turns into dust, because the author simply 'lost the plot'

I tend to agree with one of the previous reviewers when he said that the publisher probably wanted a quick release, so got something cobbled together! I expected far better from Frederick Forsyth, and am very dissappointed with his latest book!
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21 of 23 people found the following review helpful
By Grev VINE™ VOICE
Format:Paperback
The back page blurb claims this is 'Forsyth's finest novel since the Day of the Jackal'. If only! Whereas the Day of the Jackal is a breathtaking example of dazzling, original brilliance, the Afghan is an example of an author either a) sitting on his laurels or b) stuck for ideas. The problem isn't the apparently plausible terrorist plot itself, but Forsyth's attempts to crowbar (no pun intended if you've already read the novel) a western agent into the ranks of an Al Qaeda plot. In order to do this the author relies on three astronomical coincidences, only one of which is even remotely plausible - that two of the antagonists met briefly in Afghanistan (and then met a pre-infamy Osama Bin laden into the bargain); the other two are that an unsuspecting Al Qaeda incorporate the agent into the exact plot the west is worried about - as oppose to any other of their myriad operations - and that a malfunctioning f-15 fighter just happens to crash into a remote hut in the remote wilderness chosen by the C.I.A. for it's complete and utter remoteness!

All of this is a shame, because anyone interested in how the security services go about their business would find many sections of the novel very interesting. Forsyth's always been interested in the minutia of how devices/organizations work, but perhaps to cover for weaknesses in the plot here he often overdoes it, for instance giving long, lovingly detailed descriptions of a relatively minor plot device (an F-15) that most 14 year old schoolboys would already have gleaned from the same magazines that Forsyth cribbed his facts and figures from. The upshot of all this is that the character of Mike Martin is swamped and disappears almost completely from view. Which is great if you're an undercover agent, but not if you're the focus of a novel. Ironically the most sympathetic character of the whole novel is the Taliban fighter, a man caught up in conflicts not of his making who has his whole life destroyed by a stray American missile. If that had happened to any of us, we'd have sought revenge too. Which is quite an interesting thought from a rabid right winger like Forsyth.
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Most Recent Customer Reviews
Don't bother
If comic-book heroes, a fanciful plot, implausible dialogue and long, rambling explanatory passages are your thing, then Frederick's your (man's) man.
Published 12 days ago by Simon Bendle
Carry on Up the Khyber
When I was a boy I used to read a comic called The Hotspur which featured a series set in Afghanistan when gallant British soldiers in red jackets and white helmets fought off the... Read more
Published 12 months ago by John Fitzpatrick
One of his best
Almost back to earlier Forsyth's. Well detailed as ever and a page turner.
Anyone interested in current world affairs will enjoy 'The Afghan'.
Published 14 months ago by Roger Read
Not Forsyth's best but yet...
Having read Frederick Forsyth's works over the past 15 years, I have been significantly impressed by their characteristics which make them distinct from other thrillers. Read more
Published 17 months ago by Sarah Stephen
Forsyth special
A Good read plenty of research makes it more interesting.
Published 17 months ago by PJRoles
Afghan
Typical Forsythe. In my opinion few of his other books are as good as the Day of the Jackal but this is a very good read. I enjoyed it.
Published 17 months ago by Barbara Adair
Great start and then never gets going
I loved the start of the book. An outline of the Afghan war with the Soviets and an introduction to the characters. Then that was it. Read more
Published 21 months ago by Robert
Well researched but flawed plot
In "The Afghan", Forsyth again shows he's done his research well. The plot has a retired soldier, Mike Martin, assuming the identity of an Afghan Guantanamo Bay inmate to go... Read more
Published 22 months ago by NoWireHangers
AFGHAN
The Afghan is an extempore synopsis of the nature of the scare "Terrorism" poses to everybody. In this episode Frederick Forsyth was able to x-ray the intricate and the complicated... Read more
Published 23 months ago by Mr. Henry Igwedibia
Good tight suspense
I read several reviews on this and almost did not give the Afghan a chance. Yes, there is an improbable event but not as incredulous as some commentators make out. Read more
Published on 13 Mar 2010 by Clive
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Popular Highlights

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&quote;
It is forbidden to attack and kill those who have offered no offence and done nothing to hurt you. It is forbidden to kill women and children. It is forbidden to take hostages and it is forbidden to mistreat, torture or kill prisoners. The AQ terrorists and their followers do all four on a daily basis. And let us not forget that they have killed far more fellow-Muslims than Christians or Jews. &quote;
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In his lifetime Muhammad absolutely refused to bless the body of a suicide even though the man had ended his own life to avoid the crippling agony of his disease. Those who commit mass murder of innocents and commit suicide are destined for hell, not paradise. &quote;
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&quote;
Halifax, Nova Scotia, in 1917 when an ammunition ship blew up in the heart of the inner harbour. It wiped the city off the map. It still rates as the biggest non-nuclear explosion in history. &quote;
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