skip to main content

Author Jack Higgins dies aged 92

Jack Higgins Photo courtesy of HarperCollins
Jack Higgins Photo courtesy of HarperCollins

The best-selling thriller writer Henry Patterson, known to the public under his pseudonym Jack Higgins, has died at the age of 92.

The author died at home in Jersey, surrounded by his family, his long-term publishers HarperCollins said in a statement.

He is best known for the 1975 novel The Eagle Has Landed about a fictional plot to kidnap Winston Churchill during World War Two.

The book sold more than 50 million copies and was adapted into a film starring Robert Duvall, Donald Sutherland, and Michael Caine.

Patterson was born in Newcastle upon Tyne on 27 July 1929 to an English father and a Northern Irish mother.

He was raised in Belfast until his mother remarried and he moved to Leeds.

After a two-year stint of National Service in the British Army, he qualified as a teacher and began to write novels on the side.

He received a £75 advance for his first novel, Sad Wind from the Sea, in 1959 and would go on to write another 84 books. Among his most famous protagonists were the Irishmen Liam Devlin and Sean Dillon.

His final book, The Midnight Bell, was published in 2017 and was a Sunday Times bestseller.

HarperCollins said that by the time his final novel came out, staff at the publishers referred to him simply as "The Legend".

He is survived by four children from his first marriage - Sarah, Ruth, Sean, and Hannah - as well as his wife, Denise.

HarperCollins chief executive Charlie Redmayne said: "I've been a fan of Jack Higgins for longer than I can remember. He was a classic thriller writer: instinctive, tough, relentless.

"The Eagle Has Landed and his other Liam Devlin books, his later Sean Dillion series, and so many others were and remain absolutely unputdownable. Being part of his publishing for even part of his career has been a privilege - his passing marks the end of an era."

Jonathan Lloyd, Patterson's literary agent and president of Curtis Brown, said he was at Collins Publishers when it received the manuscript of The Eagle Has Landed, and everyone there knew it would be an instant classic.

"Some 40 years later, Curtis Brown became his agent... and it was thrilling to work again with Harry, and I look forward now to working with his wife, Denise, and daughter, Hannah, and the family on preserving and promoting his extraordinary legacy," he said.

Source: Press Association

Read Next