The Eagle Has Landed (novel)
The
Eagle Has Landed is a book by British writer Jack
Higgins, set during World
War II and first published in 1975.
It
was quickly adapted as a British film of the same name, directed by John
Sturges and released in 1976. It starred Michael
Caine, Donald
Sutherland, Jenny
Agutter, and Robert
Duvall.
Plot
The
book makes use of the false
document technique, and opens with Higgins
describing his discovery of the concealed grave of thirteen German paratroopers
in an English graveyard. The characters discuss the historic rescue
of Hitler's ally Benito Mussolini
in September 1943. After Mussolini was deposed and imprisoned by the Italian
government, Otto Skorzeny
led a German team and achieved his release and escape from Italy.
Hitler,
with the strong support of Himmler, considered a similar plan to kidnap British Prime Minister
Winston Churchill.
Admiral Wilhelm Canaris, head of the Abwehr (German military intelligence), is ordered to make a feasibility
study of capturing Churchill and taking
him to the Reich. Canaris realises that although Hitler will soon forget the
matter, Himmler will not. Fearing Himmler may try to discredit him, Canaris
orders one of his officers, Oberst Radl, to undertake the study, despite feeling that it is
all a waste of effort.
An
Unteroffizier
on Radl's staff finds that one of their spies, code named Starling, has
provided a tantalising piece of intelligence. "At any other time, in any
other place, this information would be useless", Radl said. "And then
synchronicity
rears its disturbing head." Churchill is scheduled to spend a relaxing
weekend at a country house near the village of Studley Constable, Norfolk, where Joanna Grey, an Afrikaner woman and longtime Abwehr agent, lives. She detests England because she was abused
and raped by British soldiers, and her husband, daughter, and parents were
killed during the Anglo-Boer War.
As a result of her reports, Radl devises a detailed plan to intercept Churchill
and transport him to Germany. Although Radl is certain the plan has real
possibilities, Admiral Canaris orders him to abandon it.
Himmler,
however, has already learned of the scheme and summons Radl. He orders him to
proceed, but without informing Canaris. In response, Radl arranges for Liam
Devlin, a member of the Irish Republican
Army[1] and served as an officer in the Lincoln
Battalion in the Spanish
Civil War,[2] to be smuggled to Norfolk by way of Northern
Ireland. Posing as a wounded veteran of the
British
Army, he contacts Mrs. Grey, who
arranges a position for him as gamekeeper to the estate of Studley Grange. While awaiting further
developments, Devlin becomes romantically involved with Molly Prior, a girl
from the village.
Meanwhile,
Radl selects the members of the "commando style" unit, to be led by disgraced Fallschirmjäger commander Lieutenant Colonel
Kurt Steiner, which is supposed to carry out the operation.[3] While returning from the Eastern Front, Steiner had
intervened when SS soldiers were rounding up Jews at a railway station in Poland. To the outrage of the SS and Polizei,
he took one of their men hostage and helped a teenage Jewish girl to escape on
a passing freight train. For this he was court-martialed, along with his men,
who backed his actions. Too highly decorated to face a firing squad, Steiner
and his men were allowed to transfer to a penal
unit in the Channel
Islands. There they are forced to make
high-risk attacks with manned
torpedoes against Allied ships in the English
Channel.
Radl
travels to Alderney
and recruits Steiner and his surviving men. Steiner's father, General Steiner,
is being tortured by the Gestapo
for his alleged ties to the German Resistance. This serves as an additional incentive for the Colonel to
accept the mission. Radl relocates Steiner and his men to an airfield on the
north western coast of Holland,
where they familiarise themselves with the British weapons and equipment they
will be using. The team will be air dropped into Norfolk via a captured C-47 Dakota
with Allied markings. The commandos outfit themselves as Free Polish troops, as few of them speak English; the plan is to
infiltrate Studley Constable, capture Churchill, rendezvous with an E-boat at the nearby coast, and make their escape. As part of the
ruse, they arm themselves with Sten
guns, M1
Garands, Bren guns
and revolvers, as well as Browning
Hi-Powers, instead of German weaponry.
At
first, the plan seems to go off without a hitch. But one of Steiner's NCOs
rescues a young girl who fell into a mill race. He is killed by the water wheel
and his German uniform (worn, by Himmler's order, under the Polish uniforms, as
protection against being executed as spies) is seen by several of the
villagers. Determined to continue the mission, Steiner arranges for the locals
to be rounded up, but the sister of Father Vereker, the local priest, escapes
and alerts a nearby unit of US
Army Rangers. Colonel Robert Shafto, an
inexperienced but glory-seeking officer, rallies his forces to retake the
hostages. Without notifying headquarters, he orders a foolhardy assault in
which many Americans are killed. After the Colonel is shot in the head by Mrs.
Grey, Major Harry Kane, Shafto's Executive officer in the Rangers,[4]
organises a second, successful attack.
Steiner,
his second-in-command Ritter von Neumann, and Devlin escape with Molly's aid.
Determined to finish the mission, Steiner allows Devlin and Neumann to escape
without him and decides to make one last attempt at Churchill. He succeeds in
reaching Churchill, but hesitates, is shot and supposedly killed. (However,
Steiner reappears alive in The Eagle Has Flown, a quasi-sequel.) In Germany, Radl has had a heart attack,
implied to be fatal. At about the same time, Himmler, upon discovering that the
mission has failed, orders Radl's arrest for high
treason.
This
account is surrounded by a frame
story with a prologue and epilogue, a
technique that Higgins uses in other of his novels. The author, whilst doing
historical research in Norfolk,
supposedly meets various surviving characters. Some paperback editions have
more historical backstory than others, including a meeting with an older Liam
Devlin in a Belfast
hotel. The final revelation comes from an aged and terminally ill Father
Vereker: at the time of his supposed visit to Norfolk, Churchill was en route
to the Tehran Conference.
The "Churchill" whom Steiner nearly killed was an impersonator, meaning that even if Steiner had fatally shot the man, the
government would not have been affected.
Characters
- Lt. Colonel Kurt Steiner -- Steiner is a veteran of the Invasion of Norway, Albert Canal, the Battle of Crete, Leningrad, Stalingrad and the Ukraine.
- Liam Devlin -- Based on IRA man Frank Ryan, who during WW2 liaised with Germany to get money and weapons for the IRA.[5]
- Joanna Grey -- A South African Nazi sympathiser and Abwehr agent living in Studley Constable. Killed by American Ranger Jerzy Krukowski in November 1943.
- Molly Prior -- A local girl who falls in love with Devlin.
- Harvey Preston -- A SS British Free Corps officer attached to Steiner's unit to add credibility. A convinced Nazi, and a convicted con-man prior to his enlistment, Preston is viewed with disgust by Steiner, Devlin, and their fellow commandos. After Steiner, Neumannn, and Devlin escape, Preston is lynched inside the village's Roman Catholic Church by a mentally-ill resident of Studley Constable.
- Leutnant Ritter von Neumann -- Steiner's second-in-command.
- Hauptstabfeldwebel Otto Brandt -- Killed in action in Studley Constable in November, 1943.
- Feldwebel Hans Altmann -- Killed in action in Studley Constable in November, 1943.
- Gefreiter Werner Briegel -- Killed in action in Studley Constable in November, 1943.
- Paul Koenig -- Commander of the German E-boat.
- Captain Peter Gericke -- Pilot of the Douglas DC-3 that drops Steiner and his men over Norfolk.
- Major Harry Kane -- Shafto's Executive officer in the US Army Rangers.
Publication details
- 1975, US, Bantam Books ISBN 0-553-02500-7
Reception
Adaptation
The
film rights were purchased and an adaptation was quickly prepared. In 1976, a
British film of the same name was released, the last film directed by John
Sturges. It starred Michael
Caine, Donald
Sutherland, Jenny
Agutter, and Robert
Duvall. Its success also stimulated more
book sales.
Sequel
Higgins
wrote a quasi-sequel called The Eagle Has Flown, which was published in 1991. It was also set during World
War II.
Higgins
featured his character of Liam
Devlin in several later thrillers. He is
older and acts as a mentor to Sean Dillon and Martin Brosnan. In Higgins' novel Confessional
(1985), Devlin allies with MI6
to prevent a rogue KGB
assassin from murdering Pope John
Paul II.[citation needed]
References
· Jack Higgins,
The Eagle Has Landed, Collins,
1975, page 81: "he had been sent to New York to execute an informer who
had been put on a boat to America by the police for his own good after selling
information which had led to the arrest and hanging of a young IRA volunteer
named Michael Reilly. Devlin had accomplished this mission with an efficiency
that could only enhance a reputation that was already becoming legendary".
· · Jack
Higgins, The Eagle Has Landed, Collins,
1975, page 82: "In 1936 he had taken himself to Spain, serving in the Lincoln
Washington Brigade. He had been wounded and captured
by Italian troops".
· · Jack
Higgins, The Eagle Has Landed, Collins,
1975, page 48: "As an acting major Steiner had led a special assault
group of three hundred volunteers,
dropped by night to contact and lead out two divisions cut off during the battle for Leningrad. He had emerged from that affair with a bullet in the right
leg which had left him with a slight limp, a Knight’s Cross and a reputation
for that kind of cutting-out operation".
· · Jack
Higgins, The Eagle Has Landed, Collins,
1975, page 217: "The flash on his shoulder said Rangers and she remembered having read somewhere that they were the
equivalent of the British Commandos".
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