The_Veteran_(short_story_collection)

<i>The Veteran</i> (short story collection)

The Veteran (short story collection)

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The Veteran is a short story collection by British author Frederick Forsyth. The book was first published on 8 September 2001, through Thomas Dunne Books and includes five of Forsyth's short stories. This is the second short story collection by the author, following the release of his 1982 collection, No Comebacks.

Quick Facts Author, Country ...

Stories

  • "The Veteran (short story)"

An unidentified elderly man is kicked half to death by a pair of thugs in London in a mugging gone wrong (when he resists and injures one of them badly). The police identify and apprehend the pair. By then the elderly man has succumbed to his injuries in hospital, but with the evidence and testimony available, the prosecution is certain of life imprisonment for the two criminals.

But they are acquitted when a Queen's Counsel approaches the solicitor of the two accused men and becomes their Legal Aid barrister for no apparent reason, winning the case. Cryptically, after the judgement has been read out, the attorney ignores his clients and shakes the hand of the inspector leading the police investigation, who angrily brushes it off saying that he hopes the QC is proud of himself: they killed that old man and thanks to him they would be at liberty to repeat their crimes. The advocate responds whispering that it may surprise the inspector him, "but it has to do with the triumph of justice".

Soon after the dismissal of the case, the detectives identify the dead man as a former SAS trooper who served in "The Battle of Mirbat", Oman. Shockingly, they discover that the very same Queen's Counsellor who argued and won the dismissal of the two thugs was the commanding officer of the dead man in that same battle, together fending off an attack of 300-400 men and forming a tight-knit bond for life, among the soldiers and officer.

Realisation dawns on the detectives and soon, they realise the two thugs would now meet a fate worse than life imprisonment. And sure enough, a few weeks later, the bodies of the two men are found at the bottom of a lake, strangled by piano wire - in a case that is eventually closed as "unsolved" - the justice referred to by the QC was not that of the Old Bailey but of the Old Testament.

  • "The Art of the Matter"
  • "The Miracle"
  • "The Citizen"
  • "Whispering Wind"

Publication

The stories were originally published individually online by the company Online Originals under the collective title Quintet, before being collected into a single volume as The Veteran.[1][2]

Reception

Critical reception has been mixed.[3][4][5] The Guardian panned The Veteran, writing "Paper-thin plots and cardboard characters from the self-styled world's greatest storyteller".[6] Christopher Petit reckoned Forsyth was a relic of bygone times, calling it "polished and moribund as a joke at an after-dinner speech, with a ponderous twist, a punchline and a little moral to tie it all up".[7] The BBC was mixed, stating that "This collection is tautly written and practically boasts of the deep level of research that underpins it. But the storytelling itself has mixed results - perhaps too mixed to convince a first-time reader of Forsyth's reputation as the thriller writer's thriller writer."[8]

The Daily Telegraph was more positive in their review, as they felt that Forsyth had fun writing the work and that while some of the stories were weaker than the others, they were all "highly readable".[9]


References

  1. Dwek, Peter (2 November 2000). "Publishers face surge of e-books". Marketing Week. 23 (40): 16.
  2. Munro, Rachel (20 September 2000). "Online publishing gets boost from Forsyth". ZDNet. Retrieved 26 June 2015.
  3. "The Veteran (review)". Library Journal. Retrieved 26 June 2015.
  4. "The Veteran (review)". Booklist. Retrieved 26 June 2015.
  5. "The Veteran (review)". Kirkus Reviews. Retrieved 26 June 2015.
  6. Petit, Christopher (10 November 2001). "Big in Thrillers". Guardian. Retrieved 26 June 2015.
  7. "Master storyteller caught short". BBC. Retrieved 26 June 2015.
  8. "The day of the softy". Telegraph. Retrieved 26 June 2015.

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