Aicha – An Algerian Muslim woman who falls in love with de Glatigny.[4]
Julien Boisfeuras, Captain - A Franco-Chinese soldier with an expertise in unconventional and political warfare. He spearheads the implementation of torture to end the bombing campaign during the Battle of Algiers.[4] It has been claimed that he was loosely modeled on Paul Aussaresses, a SDECE captain,[5] although Lartéguy himself stated that Boisfeuras was completely fictitious.[6]
Mahmoudi, Lieutenant – An Algerian Muslim officer with divided loyalties.[4]
Yves Marindelle, Lieutenant
Merle, Lieutenant
Orsini, Captain
Pinières, Captain
Beudin, Major
Pierre-Noel Raspéguy, Colonel – Born a Basque shepherd, he rose through the ranks to eventually command the 10th Parachute Regiment. The character was modeled on Colonel Marcel Bigeard.[6]
Reception
The Centurions was highly successful in France at the time of its writing and sold over 420,000 copies. Indochina expert Bernard Fall called it "one of France's greatest bestsellers since World War II."[7] In 1972, the American journal The French Review stated that Lartéguy "almost overnight became something of a household" name in France after its publication, and that during the 1960s, he was one of the most widely read authors in the nation. It went on to say that Larteguy, beginning with The Centurions, was partly responsible for a revival of novel reading in France where, at the time according to statistics cited from Le Figaro Littéraire, 38% of adults had never read a book.[8]
As American involvement in the Vietnam War increased, it was studied by American officers and Special Forces soldiers. The book regained currency with the onset of the Global War on Terrorism and the insurgency phase of the Iraq War. Since then, it has often been quoted or analyzed in works on counter-insurgency. Some individuals who have either publicly praised The Centurions or quoted it in their own work include:
^Burke, Edmund (1961). The Annual register of world events, Volume 202. Harlow, Essex. England: Longmans, Green and Co. Ltd. p. 461. Other prizes award to French writers in 1960 included the following: .. the prix Eve-Delacroix to Jean Lartéguy for Les Centurions