CommanderBond.net
  1. 'Devil May Care' Wins Galaxy British Book Award

    By Devin Zydel on 2009-04-03
    Sebastian Faulks and Tuuli Shipster

    Sebastian Faulks and Tuuli Shipster

    Following up last month’s news that Sebastian Faulks’ Devil May Care had been nominated for a 2009 Galaxy British Book Award, the Literary 007 reports today that the centenary James Bond novel has won.

    Devil May Care fought off competition from the five other shortlisted titled to take home the Sainsbury’s Popular Fiction Award. The awards were announced earlier tonight at the Grosvenor House Hotel in London.

    Faulks arrived at the event in a Bentley along with jacket model Tuuli Shipster.

    Fans will be able to catch the event on television this Sunday at 8:00pm on WatchTV.

    As always, stay tuned to the CommanderBond.net main page for complete coverage of Devil May Care and all the latest literary James Bond news.

  2. 'For Your Eyes Only: Ian Fleming And James Bond' Now Available

    By Devin Zydel on 2009-04-03

    The paperback edition of Ben Macintyre’s book For Your Eyes Only: Ian Fleming and James Bond is shipping a few days early from Amazon.co.uk.

    Originally published in hardback in April 2008, For Your Eyes Only: Ian Fleming and James Bond acts as a companion book to the Fleming centenary exhibit of the same name that was originally launched at the Imperial War Museum in London.

    This new edition of For Your Eyes Only: Ian Fleming and James Bond is published by Bloomsbury Publishing on 6 April and retails for £7.99. A US release has not been announced.

    'For Your Eyes Only: Ian Fleming and James Bond'

    For Your Eyes Only: Ian Fleming and James Bond Paperback

    A riveting look into the world of James Bond and his creator, published on the centenary of Ian Fleming’s birth.

    In For Your Eyes Only, Ben Macintyre reveals where the world of Ian Fleming ends and the world of James Bond begins. Macintyre looks at the actual people on whom the writer based his fictional creations–friends, colleagues, lovers, and, of course, the notorious villains. Exploring the tradition of spy fiction past and present, with specific attention to the Cold War, Macintyre explains how Bond was based on the realities–and fantasies–of Fleming’s life as a wartime spymaster and peacetime bon vivant.

    Stylishly illustrated, For Your Eyes Only features a collector’s dream of gadgets, costumes, props, and storyboards from the films–Daniel Craig’s bloodstained shirt from Casino Royale, the Aston Martin DB5, complete with weaponry–as well as memorabilia from Fleming’s personal archive: his smoking jacket, the manuscript for Casino Royale, his golden typewriter, his guns, and much more.

    Stay tuned to the CommanderBond.net main page for all the latest literary James Bond news.

  3. Collecting 007: John Gardner's James Bond In Large Print (1)

    By Devin Zydel on 2009-04-02

    For collectors who specialize in the literary James Bond, there is a seemingly endless supply of different editions and printings available to search for. One such format is the Large Print editions. Meant to accommodate those who have poor vision, the typical large print edition of a book will have size 16 font or higher.

    Numerous James Bond novels have been published in the Large Print format, including the Ian Fleming, John Gardner, Raymond Benson and Charlie Higson adventures. These editions of the novels are almost always printed in relatively limited quantities with the majority of them being stocked exclusively in libraries. Additionally, they often feature brand new jacket cover artwork that is not featured on any other printing of the book.

    As a result of this, the Large Print editions of the Bond novels can be a bit more tricky to obtain for dedicated collectors.

    Following up our Raymond Benson collecting guide, CommanderBond.net now continues with the James Bond novels written by author John Gardner from 1981 to 1996. Included are publication details, the International Standard Book Number (ISBN) identifiers, cover artwork and other related notes.

    NOTE: Ordering links are provided for Amazon.co.uk and Amazon.com, but do note that the overwhelming majority of these Large Print editions are out of print. However, one can often obtain a used copy via the Amazon Marketplace or at alternate used sites, such as eBay or AbeBooks.

    All of the James Bond novels and novelizations written by John Gardner have been released in the Large Print format with the exception of 1989’s Licence To Kill.

    Collecting 007
    John Gardner’s James Bond In Large Print
    PART 1

    Part 1 | Part 2 | Part 3 | Part 4


    John Gardner

    John Gardner

    Licence Renewed

    Number of Large Print editions: 4

    1 – UK Chivers Press/New Portway Hardback

    Publication Date: September 1982

    ISBN: 0-85119-183-5

    Dustjacket: Yes

    Special Notes: N/A


    'Licence Renewed' (UK)

    Licence Renewed (UK)

    Licence Renewed

    Number of Large Print editions: 4

    2 – UK ISIS/Compass Press Hardback

    Publication Date: November 1997

    ISBN: 0-7531-5803-5

    Dustjacket: No

    Special Notes: Simultaneously published in Australia by Australian Large Print Audio and Video Pty Ltd. (ALPAV).


    'Licence Renewed' (UK)

    Licence Renewed (UK)

    Licence Renewed

    Number of Large Print editions: 4

    3 – UK ISIS/Compass Press Paperback

    Publication Date: February 2000

    ISBN: 0-7531-6217-2

    Dustjacket: No

    Special Notes: Simultaneously published in Australia by Australian Large Print Audio and Video Pty Ltd. (ALPAV).


    'Licence Renewed' (US)

    Licence Renewed (US)

    Licence Renewed

    Number of Large Print editions: 4

    4 – US G.K. Hall Hardback

    Publication Date: January 1982

    ISBN: 0-8161-3326-3

    Dustjacket: Yes

    Special Notes: N/A


    'For Special Services' (UK)

    For Special Services (UK)

    For Special Services

    Number of Large Print editions: 2

    1 – UK Chivers Press/New Portway Hardback

    Publication Date: May 1983

    ISBN: 0-85119-217-3

    Dustjacket: Yes

    Special Notes: N/A


    'For Special Services' (US)

    For Special Services (US)

    For Special Services

    Number of Large Print editions: 2

    2 – US G.K. Hall Hardback

    Publication Date: January 1983

    ISBN: 0-8161-3477-4

    Dustjacket: Yes

    Special Notes: N/A


    'Icebreaker' (UK)

    Icebreaker (UK)

    Icebreaker

    Number of Large Print editions: 2

    1 – UK ISIS Large Print Books Hardback

    Publication Date: October 1987

    ISBN: 1-8508-9204-0

    Dustjacket: No

    Special Notes: The Large Print edition of Icebreaker was simultaneously published in the UK and US with the same cover artwork by ISIS and Landmark Books, respectively.


    'Icebreaker' (US)

    Icebreaker (US)

    Icebreaker

    Number of Large Print editions: 2

    2 – US Landmark Books Hardback

    Publication Date: November 1987

    ISBN: 1-55736-064-2

    Dustjacket: No

    Special Notes: The Large Print edition of Icebreaker was simultaneously published in the UK and US with the same cover artwork by ISIS and Landmark Books, respectively.


    'Role of Honor' (US)

    Role of Honor (US)

    Role of Honour

    Number of Large Print editions: 1

    1 – US G.K. Hall Hardback

    Publication Date: May 1985

    ISBN: 0-8161-3850-8

    Dustjacket: Yes

    Special Notes: As this was a US-only release, this particular edition uses the Role of Honor title spelling.


    As always, keep turning to the CommanderBond.net main page for the most complete and up-to-date news from the world of James Bond.

  4. Latest Literary 007 Release Round-up

    By Devin Zydel on 2009-03-31

    This week sees the release of various James Bond-related books in both the US.

    Due out tomorrow are three biographies, one for Sean Connery, another for Daniel Craig and lastly the reissue of Andrew Lycett’s in-depth examination of 007’s creator, Ian Fleming.

    Daniel Craig: The Illustrated Biography

    Daniel Craig

    Daniel Craig

    Daniel Craig: The Illustrated Biography looks at the life of this notoriously private actor, including his film and television appearances, his two-year marriage to Scottish actress Fiona Loudon (with whom he had a daughter, Ella) and his long-standing relationships with actress Heike Makatsch and film producer Satsuki Mitchell.

    From humble beginnings on the Wirral, Merseyside in England where his mother was an art teacher and his father was the landlord of the Ring o’ Bells pub, Daniel Craig has worked long and hard for the high-profile career and international acclaim that are now his. Leaving home at the age of sixteen to join the National Youth Theatre in London, Daniel studied at the Guildhall School of Music and Drama before landing a series of minor roles in British television series, including the swashbuckling Sharpe’s Eagle with Sean Bean. Daniel’s first major break in a leading TV role came in the BBC TV series Our Friends In The North in 1996, when he was twenty-seven years old. Further TV work followed until he landed the role of Angelina Jolie’s lover in the 2001 movie Lara Croft: Tomb Raider. Establishing his Hollywood credentials, Daniel went on to appear in movies such as Sword of Honour and Road To Perdition, leading to his first starring role in 2004 in the thriller, Layer Cake.

    By now a movie veteran with more than a dozen film acting roles under his belt. Daniel would go on to appear in another handful of films before it became known, early in 2005, that he was to become the sixth official screen Bond in the twenty-first Bond movie, Casino Royale. Although his appointment was controversial, heavily criticized by some Bond fans, his performance was widely praised. Having signed a multi-million dollar contract to appear in five Bond movies, Daniel will next appear, “Licensed to Kill” as 007, in the November 2008 release Quantum of Solace. Daniel has other movie roles slated for 2009, including I Lucifer, before beginning work on the as yet untitled Bond 23.


    Sean Connery: Neither Shaken Nor Stirred

    This is a biography of the actor, Sean Connery, who was born and brought up in an Edinburgh tenement, the son of a van driver and a charlady. Having left school at 13 and had a variety of jobs, including brickie and milkman, he spent three years in the Navy until invalided out with ulcers, and took up body-building and won a bronze medal in a Mr Universe contest.

    Deciding on an acting career, he made his film debut in 1956 and the major break came with his appearance in the first James Bond film, Dr No. The book traces Connery’s career and also examines the contradictions of the man himself – one who is renowned for watching the pennies but gives generously to charities; a dedicated Scottish Nationalist who lives as an unrepentant tax exile; a star who sues film companies whilst being admired throughout the industry for professionalism, hard work and commitment; a sex symbol barely touched by scandal.


    Ian Fleming: The Man Behind James Bond

    Ian Fleming

    Ian Fleming

    Ian Fleming’s life was just as dramatic as that of his fictional creation–James Bond 007. Andrew Lycett’s direct access to Fleming’s family, friends nd contemporaries has enabled him to reveal–for the first time–the truth behind the complicated fa&ccedilade of this enigmatic and remarkable man.

    With an extraordinary cast of characters, this is biography at its best–part history part gossip, part informed reassessment of one of the century’s most celebrated yet mysterious personalities.

    CommanderBond.net will continue to keep you updated on all the latest literary James Bond news and coverage.

    To keep track of all the upcoming 007 releases, events, television shows, and more, check out the CBn Calendar, located on the right panel of our main page.

  5. 'By Royal Command' Unabridged Audiobook Coming In May

    By Devin Zydel on 2009-03-25

    Charlie Higson’s By Royal Command

    A new audiobook edition of By Royal Command, the fifth Young James Bond novel by Charlie Higson, is slated for release this upcoming May.

    The Young Bond Dossier reports that this unabridged edition of By Royal Command will be published by Chivers Audiobooks.

    Read by actor Nathaniel Parker, this 8-CD set is available to order online at the BBC Audiobooks website where it retails for £36.60:

    All four of Higson’s previous Young Bond adventures are also available to purchase as unabridged audiobooks from the website (they are additionally available as less expensive abridged editions, which are available from numerous retailers).

    Keep your eyes on the CommanderBond.net main page for all the latest Young Bond coverage.

  6. Literary 007 Reviewed: Ian Fleming's 'On Her Majesty's Secret Service'

    By Devin Zydel on 2009-03-25
    Ian Fleming

    Ian Fleming

    With 2008 marking the centenary of Ian Fleming, the newest CommanderBond.net review series, Literary 007 Reviewed, now continues with the author’s eleventh James Bond adventure, 1963’s On Her Majesty’s Secret Service.

    As several CBn Forum members are already aware, every two months a James Bond adventure is chosen for members of the Blades Library Book Club to read. Proceeding in chronological order, the club first read Fleming’s On Her Majesty’s Secret Service back in October 2005.

    What follows are selected reviews from the Book Club Forum members. For further details on the club or to post your own review of On Her Majesty’s Secret Service, simply click here.

    Literary 007 Reviewed:
    On Her Majesty’s Secret Service

    Ian Fleming's 'On Her Majesty's Secret Service'

    Ian Fleming’s On Her Majesty’s Secret Service

    On Her Majesty’s Secret Service reviewed by… 00Twelve

    On Her Majesty’s Secret Service is far and away the most suspenseful Fleming since Dr. No. No other Fleming novel, including From Russia, With Love, has such a blend of suspenseful action and characters that are so lovable and despicable.

    Not only was Tracy written as such a real, tragic human being, Fleming actually managed to elicit sympathy from the reader for Draco, her father, the most dangerous crime lord in Europe. I always found his character to be on the same level as Darko Kerim in terms of how much I grew to like them by the end.

    Bond himself is the most human in this story that he has ever been, before he goes off the deep end into full blown depression in the next story. I love that Fleming continued to show how much Bond wanted out, but still needed to stay in because that was the only way of life he was prepared for. And the strong choices Fleming made here, to show Bond coming closer than ever before to finally leaving the service, made me think that finally the character had evolved as a man to the point that he was finally ready to embrace life outside the existence as an assassin. Which makes the ending scene all the more tragic and difficult for even the toughest guy to handle.

    This leads to just how well Fleming wrote his great villain, Blofeld. Through Tracy’s murder, Fleming catapulted Blofeld from his station as an extremely cunning criminal to a ruthless, heartless beast who would actually murder this man Bond and his wife on their very wedding day. As we get into the next story, of course, all of that will come to a head; in this story, however, these fantastical events will be the ones that shape the rest of Bond’s life.

    Fleming truly hit his stride in writing suspense and humanity here, and I only wish that he’d been around longer! This book is definitely a must-see. You can surely get it at just about any used bookstore or national retail chain, as well as Amazon and Ebay. I promise, it’s worth it!

    On Her Majesty’s Secret Service reviewed by… Flash1087

    Just finished it this afternoon, and I really liked it.

    The skiing scenes were well-done, Blofeld’s plot was completely ludicrous but nicely detailed, the assault on Piz Gloria during the finale was good, and the sharply sad ending was still a blow to me, regardless of how far away I saw it coming.

    One thing I noticed is that it had some really good dialogue. One of my biggest complaints about most of Fleming’s novels is that the conversations just never seem right; like that’s not how people actually talk (the biggest offender I can think of is Diamonds Are Forever) but On Her Majesty’s Secret Service avoids this. And nuts to what Benson said, Draco is a nice guy.

    All in all, one of my new favorite Fleming books. It’s not going to replace Casino Royale or Moonraker at the top of my lists, but it’s still a great book. Now, for another stab at You Only Live Twice

    On Her Majesty’s Secret Service reviewed by… ComplimentsOfSharkey

    5 out of 5 stars.

    Not only is this my favorite Fleming but quite possibly my favorite (nudging Tom Clancy’s Rainbow Six out of the top spot).

    This was the first of any Bond books I read and I can still remember the day I got it. My friend and I were at Barnes and Noble, said what the hell let’s buy some Fleming. It was early December so I picked up On Her Majesty’s Secret Service with Christmas in mind. I’ve since added it to the tradition of watching On Her Majesty’s Secret Service every Christmas day.

    I remember being blown away by the descriptiveness masked in the simplicity of the first line. It was one of those Septembers when it seemed like the summer would never end. I know it seems a bit silly but I’ve always loved that line.

    That of course leads right into a familiar Bond spinning round on the beach with PPK drawn only to be disarmed and reflect on the events of the day past as he shivers next to Tracy. The book begins with Bond, bored and at the end of his ropes, ready to pack it in and ends with him in just the same situation. Though the arc is incredible. Just as he finds something to fight for and sees life as worth it all again…it’s ripped from him and he’s left sobbing in the shell of a Lancia.

    The sequences on Piz Gloria show Bond at his crafty finest, escaping detection for as long as need be, even at the expense of a fellow agent and finally fleeing with more information than he had dreamed to find.

    Though the action is much more tame than in the movie, the ski chase is extremely well done and just like the rest of the book, positively drips suspense.

    I advise anyone with the ability to read this book. You won’t be disappointed.

    On Her Majesty’s Secret Service reviewed by… Double-0-Seven

    I finished reading this yesterday, and I must say it was a terrific novel. The first thing that surprised me was how close it was to the film, or rather, how close the film was to the book. Since it is one of my top favorite Bond films, it was very interesting to read a book that seemed so familiar yet in some ways different.

    As usual, the descriptions Ian Fleming provides are extremely detailed and very interesting to read. The action scenes in this book are exciting and keep you turning the pages. The dialogue is great, probably the best written dialogue out of all the Bond novels that I have read so far. Having seen the movie first, I knew how the book was going to end, however, that didn’t stop the impact of the scene. A great ending to an extremely well-written novel. This is easily the best of the Bond novels that I have read so far.

    Five out of five stars.

    On Her Majesty’s Secret Service reviewed by… Nicolas Suszczyk

    Ian Fleming’s eleventh novel is incredibly well written. Is very close to the 1969 film starring George Lazenby, and very enjoyable to read. The story starts in the famed Royale Les-Eaux, with James Bond getting involved with the depressed Tracy Di Vicenzo as he tries to run Ernst Stavro Blofeld down. Agent 007 saves the girl from committing suicide as she tries to get drowned in the sea. This is told to us as we read flashbacks of the first meeting between the agent and the girl, in the casino, where she dares to bet in the baccarat table without having funds. Bond pays her debt and she felts obliged to fulfill the “debt” she has now with Bond, sleeping with him and asking him to treat her as a common prostitute. The morning after, she escapes from his room as we return to 007 in the beach succeeding in prevent Tracy’s suicide attempt. Here, the agent and the girl are abducted and taken to Marc-Ange Draco, leader of Union Corse and Tracy’s father, who thinks Bond can “recover” his daughter by marrying her. Bond keeps the idea in his mind, as Draco promises him to give important information about Blofeld’s whereabouts.

    The suspenseful action moments in the novel come later, while Bond infiltrates Piz Gloria (Blofeld’s lair at the top of the Swiss Alps) posing as Sir Hilary Bray, a friend of Sable Basilisk of the College of Arms, whom Blofeld contacted to claim for the authentication of his title of Count de Bleuville. After one of his contacts is captured and his identity is blown, the agent escapes with his skis down the slope of the treacherous mountains surviving to avalanches and lots of dangerous situations. Soon, as he tries to hide from Blofeld’s men, he’s saved by Tracy, who leads him to the airport, where he says he wants to marry her. It’s a very nice touch to see how Bond feels dull of bedding lots of women as he discovers true love.

    On Her Majesty’s Secret Service is undoubtedly the best James Bond novel after Casino Royale, the action sequences are breathtaking, a delight for the spy thrillers lovers, and it’s really difficult to put the book down. Still, the descriptions of the scenarios are boring, and chapter twenty-two is full of hard to understand biological subjects (is recommended to skip most of this chapter). But, besides that, in the last chapter, titled “All the time in the world”, we see a really heartbroken and human Bond. The conversation between James Bond and Griffon Or about the Bond family to Bond Street is clever.

    To summarize, a quintessential Ian Fleming novel.

    9/10

    Keep your eyes on the CommanderBond.net main page for further reviews of Ian Fleming’s James Bond 007 adventures in the upcoming months.

  7. Win Charlie Higson's 'Double Or Die' Paperback

    By Devin Zydel on 2009-03-22
    'Double or Die'

    CommanderBond.net is giving away a free copy of the just-released US paperback edition of Charlie Higson’s third Young James Bond adventure, Double or Die.

    Originally published in 2007, Double or Die finds our hero pitted against the dangerous criminal underworld of interwar London, a world of illegal gambling dens, Cambridge spies and East End gangs.

    This competition is open to all members of CommanderBond.net (CBn). You must be a registered member of the CBn Forums and answer the following question correctly to be eligible to win. Not yet a member of CBn? Register here now–it is free and only takes a minute!

    How To Enter:

    To enter, fill out the following questionnaire and send a Communiqué/Private Message on the CBn Forums to ‘CBn Competition’ (Subject: CBn Mar09 Higson) by Midnight EST on 24 April 2009 (simply click on the link in this paragraph).

    1. All of the following were working/rejected titles for Charlie Higson’s Double or Die, with the exception of:

    1. Shoot the Moon
    2. The Big Smoke
    3. Six Days in December
    4. Double M

    2. What is your CBn Forum Screen Name?
    3. What country/state do you live in?

  8. 'Double or Die' Hardback Hits Germany In July

    By Devin Zydel on 2009-03-16
    Original 'Double or Die (GoldenBoy)' Edition

    Original Double or Die (GoldenBoy) Edition

    The Young James Bond releases in Germany just keep on coming. Following up the recent hardback releases of Charlie Higson’s SilverFin and By Royal Command, the Young Bond Dossier reports today that Double or Die will also be released in that format this upcoming July.

    Titled GoldenBoy in Germany, Higson’s third Young Bond adventure was originally released as a paperback alongside the UK release back in January 2007.

    This new special edition from publisher Arena Verlag will be limited to 10,000 copies. Click here for your first look at the cover artwork.

    Keep you eyes on the CommanderBond.net main page for all the latest Young Bond coverage.

  9. Collecting 007: Raymond Benson's James Bond In Large Print

    By Devin Zydel on 2009-03-15

    Devin ZydelFor collectors who specialize in the literary James Bond, there is a seemingly endless supply of different editions and printings available to search for. One such format is the Large Print editions. Meant to accommodate those who have poor vision, the typical large print edition of a book will have size 16 font or higher.

    Numerous James Bond novels have been published in the Large Print format, including the Ian Fleming, John Gardner, Raymond Benson and Charlie Higson adventures. These editions of the novels are almost always printed in relatively limited quantities with the majority of them being stocked exclusively in libraries. Additionally, they often feature brand new jacket cover artwork that is not featured on any other printing of the book.

    As a result of this, the Large Print editions of the Bond novels can be a bit more tricky to obtain for dedicated collectors.

    Raymond Benson

    Raymond Benson

    Today, CommanderBond.net presents a collecting guide for all of the 007 novels written by continuation author Raymond Benson between 1997 and 2002. Included are publication details, the International Standard Book Number (ISBN) identifiers, cover artwork and other related notes.

    NOTE: Ordering links are provided for Amazon.co.uk and Amazon.com, but do note that the overwhelming majority of these Large Print editions are out of print. However, one can often obtain a used copy via the Amazon Marketplace or at alternate used sites, such as eBay or AbeBooks.

    There are no known Large Print editions of the following James Bond books written by Raymond Benson: Zero Minus Ten, Tomorrow Never Dies, The Facts of Death and The Man with the Red Tattoo.

    Collecting 007
    Raymond Benson’s James Bond In Large Print


    'High Time To Kill' (UK)

    High Time To Kill (UK)

    High Time To Kill

    Number of Large Print editions: 3

    1 – UK Windsor/Chivers Press Hardback

    Publication Date: June 2000

    ISBN: 0-7540-1389-8

    Dustjacket: Yes

    Special Notes: The UK hardback edition of High Time To Kill is identical to the US edition with the exception that it was issued with an accompanying dustjacket featuring strikingly different cover artwork.


    'High Time To Kill' (UK)

    High Time To Kill (UK)

    High Time To Kill

    Number of Large Print editions: 3

    2 – UK Paragon/Chivers Press Paperback Edition

    Publication Date: April 2000

    ISBN: 0-7540-2293-5

    Dustjacket: No

    Special Notes: N/A


    'High Time To Kill' (US)

    High Time To Kill (US)

    High Time To Kill

    Number of Large Print editions: 3

    3 – US Thorndike Press/Chivers Press Hardback Edition

    Publication Date: February 2000

    ISBN: 0-7862-2338-3

    Dustjacket: No

    Special Notes: The US hardback edition of High Time To Kill is identical to the UK edition with the exception that only the UK edition was issued with an accompanying dustjacket featuring strikingly different cover artwork.


    'The World is not Enough'

    The World is not Enough

    The World is not Enough

    Number of Large Print editions: 1

    UK Ulverscroft/Linford Western Library Hardback Edition

    Publication Date: July 2005

    ISBN: 1-84395-844-9

    Dustjacket: No

    Special Notes: Although the original printing of Raymond Benson’s The World is not Enough took place in late 1999, this Large Print edition was not released until July 2005.


    'DoubleShot'

    DoubleShot

    DoubleShot

    Number of Large Print editions: 1

    US Thorndike Press/Chivers Press Hardback Edition

    Publication Date: November 2000

    ISBN: 0-7862-2870-9

    Dustjacket: No

    Special Notes: N/A


    'Never Dream of Dying' (UK)

    Never Dream of Dying (UK)

    Never Dream of Dying

    Number of Large Print editions: 2

    1 – UK Windsor/Chivers Press Hardback

    Publication Date: March 2002

    ISBN: 0-7540-1695-1

    Dustjacket: Yes

    Special Notes: N/A


    'Never Dream of Dying' (US)

    Never Dream of Dying (US)

    Never Dream of Dying

    Number of Large Print editions: 2

    2 – US G.K. Hall/Chivers Press Hardback

    Publication Date: November 2001

    ISBN: 0-7838-9624-7

    Dustjacket: Yes

    Special Notes: The US Large Print edition and regular US Putnam hardback edition have virtually identical cover artwork.


    'Die Another Day' (UK & US)

    Die Another Day (UK & US)

    Die Another Day

    Number of Large Print editions: 2

    1 – UK Windsor/Chivers Press Hardback

    Publication Date: July 2003

    ISBN: 0-7540-1928-4

    Dustjacket: No

    Special Notes: Both the UK and US Large Print editions of Die Another Day share the same cover artwork.


    'Die Another Day' (UK & US)

    Die Another Day (UK & US)

    Die Another Day

    Number of Large Print editions: 2

    2 – US G.K. Hall/Chivers Press Hardback

    Publication Date: March 2003

    ISBN: 0-7862-5117-4

    Dustjacket: No

    Special Notes: Both the UK and US Large Print editions of Die Another Day share the same cover artwork.


    As always, keep turning to the CommanderBond.net main page for the most complete and up-to-date news from the world of James Bond.

  10. An Interview With Benjamin Pratt

    By Guest writer on 2009-03-12

    An Interview By: Wesley Britton

    James Bond: Forgive me Father, for I have sinned.

    Q: That’s putting it mildly, 007.

    (Roger Moore and Desmond Llewelyn in For Your Eyes Only, 1981)

    As Ian Fleming’s Centenary Year came to its close, James Bond fans could look back over a year rich in new 007 lore–a new film, new radio adaptations, new novels, new memoirs, new editions of the original classics. Along the way, we saw new appreciations of Fleming, his major creation, and a stream of new critiques of what it all meant over the years.

    Then, in November 2008, a new book appeared that couldn’t be more jaw-dropping in its premise. The title, Ian Fleming’s Seven Deadlier Sins and James Bond’s Moral Compass: A Bible Study with James Bond (David Crumm Media) by Benjamin Pratt staked out as incredulous a concept as anyone could imagine. The “sex, snobbery, and sadism” of the Bond books as a means to explore Holy Scriptures? True, seeing 007 as a modern day St. George tackling updated incarnations of medieval evil is no startling development; for one example, no less an authority than John Cork observed in his 1995 “Ian Fleming: Literary Style and Legacy,” “Fleming’s villains provide the author with great opportunity to explore larger themes. Through the grand schemes of Mr. Big, Sir Hugo Drax, Goldfinger, Dr. No, and Ernst Stavro Blofeld, Fleming wages a literary battles with the deadly sins. Sloth, vengeance, greed, and snobbery are but some of the dragons Bond must battle in human form.”

    Still, drawing literary parallels is one matter, but making a direct connection between Fleming himself and his 007 books as intentional parables of Christian theology is another. To his credit, Benjamin Pratt finds an appropriate touchstone to link these notions in the 1962 volume, The Seven Deadly Sins, an anthology Fleming conceived. Some of England’s finest writers contributed essays on their sin of Choice preceded by Fleming’s own foreword. Building on what he found in this collection, Pratt explored the word choice, character descriptions, and story lines to demonstrate that Fleming, at the very least, integrated these Biblical concepts into his literary mix.

    Even so, the picture of church groups pouring over Casino Royale to probe spiritual values doesn’t easily square with anyone’s image of 007, even if we discount, as Pratt does, the cinematic versions of the saga. The reviews, so far, are mixed–from those reading Bond for the first time due to Pratt’s study to the other end of the spectrum, long-time Fleming lovers who see the whole idea as a pathetic stretch exploiting the name of James Bond to promote an agenda wildly remote from anything Fleming imagined. While we can’t ask Ian Fleming what he’d say on this matter, we can ask Benjamin Pratt how he crafted his controversial book. In December 2008, I asked him a series of questions about how his book came to be–here are his responses:

    An Interview With Benjamin Pratt

    Q:

    In your book, you speculate that Ian Fleming might not have chosen the name James Bond after the ornithologist, but rather from the first sentence of the Epistle of James. What lead you to this notion?

    Benjamin Pratt

    Benjamin Pratt

    007’s adventure tales are laced with symbolic names. The list is long but a few of the most obvious are Dr. No, Auric Goldfinger, Tiffany Case and Hugo Drax (Drache). I kept looking for a symbolic understanding of the name James Bond. My gut never trusted the notion that James Bond came from Bond Street or from the ornithologist. I was jolted when I read one particular translation of the opening line of the Letter of James, ‘James, a bond servant.’ (James 1:1) When I discovered that Fleming’s list of deadlier sins was in the Letter of James, I was even more convinced there was a connection. James Bond’s character fits the nature of a dedicated servant’s, as well as the key description of a person of faith in the Letter of James: “I by my works will show you my faith.” (James 2:18).The capstone for the theory is found in Bond’s signature each time he writes a resignation letter to M…”I am Sir, Your Obedient Servant.”

    Q:

    You discussed the Fleming books as modern parables regarding the 7 Deadly Sins–and connect this idea with a little known book Fleming contributed to. Can you describe this book and how it relates to the Bond novels?

    While on the editorial staff of the Sunday Times, Ian Fleming suggested they commission a fresh series of essays on the Seven Deadlier Sins. The series was successfully published with all but one of Fleming’s suggested authors penning the essays. In 1961, Fleming had his first heart attack. In 1962, he arranged to publish the series from the Sunday Times in book form as The Seven Deadly Sins. Fleming wrote the Foreword to this work in which he took responsibility for the idea of the series as well as the publication of the book. He also declared boldly that the traditional seven deadly sins (pride, envy, anger, sloth [accidie], covetousness, gluttony and lust) would no longer keep one out of heaven. He proposed seven deadlier sins that would definitely get one into Hell: Avarice, Cruelty, Snobbery, Hypocrisy, Self-righteousness, Moral Cowardice and Malice. Each of these deadlier sins, along with accidie, is personified by the evil dragons that James Bond (a.k.a., St. George) is out to slay. The code is cracked: James Bond, 007, is out to kill the seven deadlier sins!

    Q:

    In each chapter of your book, you choose one Bond novel as an example of one mortal sin or another. For hypocrisy, you used Diamonds are Forever. Why?

    Diamonds are Forever describes the passion for perfect diamonds as akin to the passion for ostentatious perfection that drives hypocrisy. Hypocrisy pretends through play-like acting that the imperfect is either not there at all, or, at least, beneath the other’s gaze and obscured by glistening, jewel-bedecked beauty.

    Fleming’s tale is based on the Greek root of hypocrisy, hupokrinein, a word generally translated as pretending or theatrical. The word refers to acting a part in a play. Appropriately, the structure of Diamonds are Forever is the closest Fleming gets to classic drama.

    Fleming brilliantly portrays the Spangled Mob’s hypocrisy. The first element is their pretense of respectability. Living under the alias Rufus B. Saye, Jack Spang pretends to lead a respectable life as the elegant owner and manager of the House of Diamonds. He is a model citizen, so elevated in respectability that he only appears in two scenes of this entire drama. He is literally and figuratively above the dirt of life.

    Bond finally meets the most prominent Las Vegas member of the gangland aristocracy, Seraffimo Spang, a playboy with a funny, symbolic name and theatrical hobbies. He’s crazy about the Old West and has bought an entire ghost town outside Las Vegas. Naturally, Bond is invited to Spectreville and engages in a bar room brawl that surpasses anything in Hollywood B Westerns. The brawl even ends with Spang shouting “Cut!” At that moment, Bond is once again face to face with an enemy who mirrors the most extreme version of Bond’s own evil: theatrical hypocrisy. There stands Seraffimo Spang, dressed in full Western costume, black boots with silver spurs, leather chaps emblazoned with silver, and long-barreled pistols with ivory butts draped in holsters on each thigh.

    Diamonds are forever! So is hypocrisy!

    Q:

    Hugo Drax in Moonraker is a perfect example of self-righteousness–but you also note Bond battles not only with such villains, but darkness within himself. Does this connect with your points on making moral choices, as between love and duty in the Fleming novels?

    Yes, at the core, each Bond tale reflects choices between moral courage and moral cowardice. This is not only reflected in the characters James Bond pursues, but in Bond, as well. When he is true to his duty and mission, his choices are morally courageous. But, like most of us, he gets world-weary (accidie) and he fails to stay true to course. He becomes self-righteous, hypocritical, snobbish, and cruel or lust driven, his most infamous moral struggle. He is constantly battling the inner spiritual and moral war, as well as the war with the deadly demons he pursues.

    'Ian Fleming, James Bond, and 007's Deadly Sins'

    Ian Fleming, James Bond, and 007’s Deadly Sins

    ‘Yes, at the core, each Bond tale reflects choices between moral courage and moral cowardice. This is not only reflected in the characters James Bond pursues, but in Bond, as well. When he is true to his duty and mission, his choices are morally courageous. He becomes self-righteous, hypocritical, snobbish, and cruel or lust driven, his most infamous moral struggle. He is constantly battling the inner spiritual and moral war, as well as the war with the deadly demons he pursues.’

    Q:

    I was surprised to see you picked From Russia with Love for your chapter on violence–I guess that’s because You Only Live Twice has so much more. I was even more surprised to read that Fleming was so non-violent himself, unable to kill a target on a training mission. So why were the Bond books so full of violence?

    John Fishman, a colleague of Fleming’s for 20 years, said Ian liked to say that people only have the right to kill what they will eat–and nothing more. In my book, I report personal Fleming stories that reflect this admonition, as well as a similar statement in his short story, “The Hildebrand Rarity”. You mention the story I tell at length in which Fleming backed out of a training assignment in which he was required to fire a loaded weapon at a person known for his ability to dodge the bullet. I, too, was initially surprised by these stories until I put them in the context of Fleming’s personal life. Ian lost his father on the battlefront of WWI when he was not quite nine, and his brother in WWII. He knew the consequences of violence. So why were the Bond books so full of violence?

    Fleming was writing parables about Evil People (CR) to portray the moral contour of our time and our prevailing sins and temptations. Violence is a huge component of our moral landscape.

    The 007 tales are laced with violence, cruelty and malice offering me many options to illustrate the theme. From Russia with Love was chosen for two distinct reasons. The first ten chapters of From Russia with Love portray the systematic, disciplined cruelty of the agents of Hell as they plan to slay Bond with ignominy. Bond, as a prescient symbol of America on 9/11, awakened bored, plagued with accidie and inattentive as the enemy prepared a full scale attack. The second reason I chose From Russia with Love is the brilliant portrayal of malice in the description of Rosa Klebb’s method of torturing victims. Rosa, in the chapter “The Beautiful Lure” would coo like a loving mother over her victim as she applied another torture. Read the passage and shiver.

    Q:

    Yes, Goldfinger would be my pick for representing avarice. How about the Bond phenomena as a whole, as commercial as any pop mythology?

    Yes, there is little question that Goldfinger personifies avarice. After all, the movie’s theme song says he is Midas, the man with the golden touch.

    Countless Bond fans were born after Fleming died in 1964 and they know Bond only through the movies. The pop side of Bond took him in directions that diverge from the novels and readers won’t find my analysis played out in the movies. I want my book to reflect my deep admiration for Ian Fleming’s creativity, which I believe can only be understood from his novels. My book is published in Ian Fleming’s centenary year, and I hope it pays tribute to a skilled, though troubled, soul.

    Q:

    The snobbery of the Bond books–as you discuss for On Her Majesty’s Secret Service–has long been discussed, but I’ve never seen it connected to gay rights. Can you explain this connection?

    Ian Fleming'

    Ian Fleming

    Fleming wanted his readers to squirm as they were confronted by the temptation of snobbery. He wanted readers really to wrestle with contemporary problems people were facing, like the class system that still was so potent in Britain in the 1950s and 1960s. In my book, I want to challenge readers to wrestle with an issue that’s contemporary in their own lives. The gay rights debate is highly emotional today, so thinking about the potential of snobbery in that debate is a good way to help readers update what Fleming was describing in terms of class snobbery from an earlier era.

    Q:

    I think one of your best discussions is on accidie, or world-weariness. Many times in the books, Bond is full of torpor when he’s not on a mission. You used Live and Let Die to demonstrate your points–can you share a few?

    Certainly. Accidie is a word Fleming used in most of his books and is a central concern, not only in his life, but in the lives of millions of people today. I explain this in much more depth in the book, but using novels as an example, here are a few ways I see accidie as a potent temptation:

          No. 1: Mr. Big’s confession of his motives:

    “Mister Bond, I suffer from boredom. I am prey to what the early Christians called ‘accidie,’ the deadly lethargy that envelops those who are sated, those who have no more desires.” (Live and Let Die)

          No. 2: Blofeld as Shatterhand delivers the ultimate apologia for accidie.
    “I will make a confession to you, Mister Bond. I have come to suffer from a certain lassitude of mind which I am determined to combat. This comes in part from being a unique genius who is alone in the world, without honour–worse, misunderstood. No doubt much of the root cause of this ‘accidie’ is physical–liver, kidneys, heart, the usual weak points of the middle-aged. But there has developed in me a certain mental lameness, a disinterest in humanity and its future, an utter boredom with the affairs of mankind.” (You Only Live Twice)

          No. 3: Bond, a man of war, awakens without a mission and his spirit is declining.
    “Just as, in at least one religion, ‘accidie’ is the first of the cardinal sins, so boredom, and particularly the incredible circumstances of waking up bored, was the only vice Bond utterly condemned.” (From Russia with Love) Compare this statement to Fleming’s description of himself in the Foreword he wrote for The Seven Deadly Sins. “Of all the seven, only Sloth in its extreme form of ‘accidie,’ which is a form of spiritual suicide and a refusal of joy…, has my wholehearted condemnation, perhaps because in moments of despair I have seen its face.” (ix)

    Q:

    Your book is designed for use with Bible study, either individually or in groups. What would other readers take away from your study?

    Fleming reflected on Biblical truths, but he also drew on wisdom from many sources just as I do. Two billion people around the world call themselves Christian and look to the Bible as their primary spiritual source, so exploring Fleming’s reflections on these biblical themes potentially holds an important connection for a third of the people living today. But the wisdom here is broader than the Bible, something that Fleming himself understood. The authors who wrote the essays for his collection on sins for the Times came from many backgrounds. I know that many Fleming and Bond fans will find my book interesting because I offer a unique perspective on the reasons the tales were written. I show that Fleming, often considered a literary light weight, was in fact a writer with a serious purpose. I believe he has written the first narrative treatments on the deadly sins in centuries.

    Since the book’s launch, we’ve heard, for example, from Jewish and Muslim readers who are interested in it. Muslims, of course, have great respect for the Bible as a holy book. And we’ve heard from discussion-group leaders as far away as Panama and New Zealand that they are hearing from young people of many different backgrounds who simply are interested in exploring these connections between their spiritual lives and a hero whose adventures we all keep following year after year.