‘The Eagle Has Landed’ author Jack Higgins dead at 92
The Hindu
Bestselling thriller and espionage author Jack Higgins, whose is said to have more than 250 million sold copies to his name, dies at 92
British author Jack Higgins, who wrote ‘The Eagle Has Landed’ and other bestselling thrillers and espionage novels has died. He was 92.
Publisher HarperCollins said that Higgins died at his home on the English Channel island of Jersey surrounded by his family, on Sunday.
Born Henry Patterson in Newcastle, England, in July 1929, Higgins served in the military before studying sociology at the London School of Economics.
He became a teacher in the northern city of Leeds and a writer in his spare time, with novels that sold modestly starting in the late 1950s.
That changed with the 1975 publication of “The Eagle Has Landed”, about a fictional World War II plot to kidnap British Prime Minister Winston Churchill.
In a 2010 interview with The Guardian, Higgins recounted a pivotal call from his accountant.
“He asked me what I wanted to get out of my writing,” Higgins said. “I replied that I wasn’t really sure, before adding as a joke it would be nice to make a million by the time I retired. He then said: Well you’re a bloody fool. Because you’ve just earned that much this week. So what are you going to do about it?’” He was advised to leave England because of 1970s taxation rates and he eventually settled with his family on Jersey.