Icon | |
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Author(s) | Frederick Forsyth |
Country | United Kingdom |
Language | English |
Genre(s) | Thriller novel |
Publication date | 1996 |
Media type | Print (Hardback & Paperback) |
ISBN | 9780553574609 |
Preceded by | The Fist of God |
Followed by | The Phantom of Manhattan |
Icon is an thriller novel by British author Frederick Forsyth. Its plot centres around the politics of the Russian Federation in 1999, with an extremist party close to seizing power. Published by Bantam Books in September 1997, (ISBN 978-0-553-57460-9), Icon became a New York Times Bestseller.
Contents |
The story, set in late 1999 and early 2000, revolves around Russian presidential candidate Igor Komarov, head of the right-wing Union of Patriotic Forces (UPF).
A highly popular and charismatic politician, victory was all but guaranteed for Komarov and the UPF. However, a secret document, later known as the Black Manifesto, was stolen from his secretary's empty office at UPF headquarters by Leonid Zaitsev, the elderly janitor and ex-soldier, who happens to skim through the document while cleaning. The document contains extremely sensitive information regarding Komarov's future policies as president. The policies, such as restoration of slave camps, creation of a one-party state, destruction of political opponents, invasion of the neighbouring republics and genocide of Russia's ethnic and religious minorities, including Chechens and Jews, reveal the intentions of Komarov and his fascist UPF party.
The Black Manifesto is taken to Great Britain, where it is translated and shown to influential Western leaders. Sir Nigel Irvine, the former head of the SIS, comes up with a plan to thwart Komarov's victory. Searching for a suitable man to carry out this plan, Carey Jordan, former Deputy Director of Operations at the CIA, recommends Jason Monk, a former recruiter and runner of Soviet agents for the CIA.
In parts of the novel, there are flashbacks to earlier years, detailing Jason Monk's background, and recruitment of several Soviets as U.S. agents. These include government figures and a physicist. However, CIA mole Aldrich Ames soon betrays these agents, along with all other CIA agents in the Soviet Union. Nearly all are rounded up by the Soviets, and are either executed or sentenced to hard labour after lengthy interrogation and torture by the ruthless Anatoli Grishin.
Colonel Nikolai Ilyich Turkin, the first Soviet to be recruited by Monk, develops a close friendship with him after Monk saves his son from dying of a tropical disease. He is, however, the last of the CIA assets to be rounded up by the Soviets, and the capture takes place right in front of Monk, who can only watch helplessly. Turkin is interrogated and sent to a labour camp. There, dying of typhoid, he pens a letter to Monk detailing his interrogation and torture at the camps, and bids a final farewell. Monk, filled with anger and grief, attacks a bureaucrat known to have aided Ames, and this leads to his expulsion from the CIA.
In 1999, he leads a quiet life in the Turks and Caicos Islands, taking tourists on fishing trips. Approached by Sir Nigel Irvine, he at first refuses to carry out the mission, having sworn never to return to Russia, but agrees when he is given the chance to take revenge on Grishin.
He returns to Russia and rounds up a ring of influential figures to his cause by showing them the Black Manifesto, and, with the aid of the Chechen mafia, whose leader owes Monk his life, he begins a series of schemes aimed at derailing Igor Komarov's presidential campaign.
The book features real-life spy Aldrich Ames as a character. Ames, a Central Intelligence Agency operative, had exchanged secrets to Soviet agents for money; his actions figure in the plot of Icon. Several real-life political figures are also characters in the story, and the plot features them meeting at Jackson, Wyoming for a secret conference.
The idea is that Russians need a personified icon to be their head to live in prosperity, peace and stability. To achieve such, "the good guys" work to restore the monarchy, and select Prince Michael of Kent as the new Tsar. Michael of course is a grandson of Grand Duchess Helen Vladimirovna of Russia, born of the line of maternally Orthodox descent, and descending from Greek royals and Russian Romanovs. In the plot of the book, Michael (then 59 years old) is regarded to be of a suitable age to ascend the throne, compared to his older and younger relatives. In the end of the book, he is installed to the throne as Tsar Mikhail Jurjevich, and his son (i.r.l Lord Frederick Windsor, then 20 years old) as Tsesarevich (presumably as Tsarevich Grand Duke Fyodor Mikhailovich of Russia, though the name was nowhere mentioned in the book).
The novel can be seen as a continuation of Forsyth's previous novel, The Fist of God; one of the minor characters in Icon, a banker named Nathanson, is described as the father of a pilot who was shot down in the closing hours of the 1991 Persian Gulf War, an event that occurs in Fist. Sir Nigel Irvine had previously appeared in The Devil's Alternative and The Fourth Protocol.
In 2005 a film loosely based on the book was made, starring Patrick Swayze as Jason Monk.