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  1. New Adult James Bond Novel Coming in 2008

    By Matt Weston on 2005-08-28

    Scotsman.com have today scored a major scoop with the news that Ian Fleming Publications (IFP) are planning to commission a one-off adult James Bond novel to celebrate the centenary of Ian Fleming’s birth in 2008.

    Following the success of Charlie Higson’s Young Bond series (Book 2, Blood Fever is to be released in January 2006), IFP are keen to commission a big-name author to pen the new novel.

    We are still in the planning stages, but at the moment the idea would be to have it done by an established author – potentially a big name,” said Zoe Watkins of IFP. “The literary Bond is something we want to focus on and any work would have to be in keeping with the literary aspects of the books. If it was successful there could be scope for further novels.”

    According to Ms Watkins, the new novel will be far removed from the gloss of 007’s cinematic incarnation, marking a return to the dark and complex nature of Fleming’s early works.

    Scotsman.com reports the early favourites to be approached to pen the new novel include Lee Child (Killing Floor), Frederick Forsyth (The Day of the Jackal) and John le Carré (The Tailor of Panama).

    John Gardner, who penned 16 James Bond novels throughout the 1980s and 1990s (including two novelisations) has ruled himself out for taking on the new project. “Sorry, but for me Bond is very much in the past. No more comments, no more interviews.”

    The adult literary James Bond went on hiatus in 2002, following the publication of Raymond Benson’s The Man With The Red Tattoo and the novelisation of Die Another Day. Earlier this year, Penguin released the first in a series of five novels by Charlie Higson, focussing on Bond’s time at Eton in the 1930s.

    The article also gives a few more hints as to the storyline for Higson’s upcoming book, Blood Fever. The new novel will see the teenage Bond encountering a group of Sardinian bandits and a maniacal Italian count hellbent on restoring the Holy Roman Empire.

    Head on over to Scotsman.com to read the whole article, in which a range of Bond aficionados – including Bond historian Graham Rye – share their thoughts on where the literary 007 should go from here.