CommanderBond.net
  1. Ian Fleming Limited Edition Reader Digital Book From Sony

    By Devin Zydel on 2009-02-25

    James Bond fans can equip themselves with an all-new limited edition Ian Fleming Reader Digital Book bundle from Sony Style.

    Released to mark the centenary of 007 creator Ian Fleming and the theatrical release of Quantum of Solace last year, the Ian Fleming Reader Digital Book retails for $299.99 and is currently available to order online at the Sony Style Store.

    Full product specifications follow below:

    Ian Fleming Limited Edition Reader Digital Book

    Sony's Ian Fleming Limited Edition Reader Digital Book

    Sony’s Ian Fleming Limited Edition Reader Digital Book

    This limited edition Ian Fleming Reader Digital Book bundle includes an eBook download code for two Bond titles, plus a “007” embossed cover.

    James Bond creator Ian Fleming was a master storyteller who gave life to the man with a license to kill. To mark the centenary of Fleming’s birth and the release of the latest Bond film, Quantum of Solace, we now offer a limited edition Reader bundle.

    Bundle includes:

    • A Reader Digital Book
    • An eBook Store download code for one download of each of two of Ian Fleming’s original Bond books: Casino Royale, the novel that started it all, and served as the basis for Daniel Craig’s first appearance as 007, and For Your Eyes Only, a short story collection which includes Quantum of Solace, the short story that shares its title with the current Bond film release.
    • A “007” embossed cover for the Reader.

    The Reader Digital Book
    The Reader Digital Book holds about 160 eBooks or hundreds more with optional removable memory cards. Its portable size makes it the perfect travel companion, allowing you to read a variety of books whenever and wherever you want. With thousands of eBook titles available from the eBooks Store, you can choose to download new releases, classics and popular book titles as well as view other document formats such as Adobe® PDF10, RTF, TXT, BBeB® and Microsoft® Word. Its long battery life lasts up to 7,500 continuous page turns, and the amazing paper-like screen technology is easy on the eyes.

    Note: Use of companion eBook Store limited to U.S. and Canadian residents. Certain titles may not be available for download based on place of residence.

    FEATURE

    Ultra portable
    The Reader Digital Book offers a unique, on-the-go reading experience and is the perfect travel companion. With a compact and lightweight design, you can take it almost anywhere and read your books whenever and wherever you want. More compact than many paperbacks, it weighs about 9 ounces (without cover), is 1/3″ thin, and holds up to 160 eBooks. You can easily hold it in one hand, and with its rechargeable battery, you can turn up to 7,500 continuous pages on a single charge.

    Impressive, paper-like display
    The Reader Digital Book provides a new way to experience reading. It boasts an impressive 6-inch display, utilizing breakthrough E Ink® technology that’s almost paper-like, making it easy to read, even in bright sunshine. In addition, the screen allows for high contrast and high resolution, with a near 180 degree viewing angle. The text can also be magnified for comfort.

    Content Storage Capability
    With a compact and lightweight design you can take the Reader Digital Book almost anywhere. And with plenty of internal memory, and a slot for optional removable memory cards, you can take hundreds of titles, user-selected Web content, or other supported documents for reading on the go. It will hold approximately 160 averaged sized eBooks in internal memory and hundreds more with optional removable memory cards.

    Multiple eBook titles available
    The Reader Digital Book allows you to search, browse, discover, and buy thousands of new releases, classics and popular eBook titles from the Connect eBook Store and other participating websites. You can even go to other sites that have unsecured eBooks in file formats that the Reader supports. This translates into an incredible amount of content suitable for the Reader.

    More Than eBooks
    The Reader Digital Book isn’t just about reading eBooks. Using the included eBook Library 2.0 PC Software, you can easily transfer Adobe® PDF documents, Microsoft Word documents, BBeB Book, and other text file formats to the Reader, allowing you the flexibility to access and view multiple files at any time.

    Keep your eyes locked on the CommanderBond.net main page for all the latest literary and collecting James Bond-related news.

  2. Looking Back: 'James Bond And Moonraker'

    By Devin Zydel on 2009-02-23

    The CommanderBond.net ‘Looking Back’ series continues on with the second of Christopher Wood’s two contributions to the literary 007 canon: 1979’s James Bond and Moonraker. Like his previous James Bond, The Spy Who Loved Me novelization, James Bond and Moonraker translated the screenwriter’s storyline for the popular Bond film from screen to page with some minor changes.

    CBn looks back at James Bond and Moonraker through publication details, cover artwork, the original jacket blurbs, trivia notes, reactions from forum members and more.

    'James Bond and Moonraker' UK Jonathan Cape Hardback

    James Bond and Moonraker UK Jonathan Cape Hardback

    American space shuttles don’t just disappear. M knows they had better not even seem to disappear when on loan to the British Government if Anglo-American relations are to avoid taking a pounding. So Miss Moneypenny has her instructions: find 007. Now.

    Bond’s first port of call is a dumb-founding French Renaissance chateau and space complex in the Californian desert, where the unlovable Hugo Drax first manufactured the shuttle Moonraker and from which he now conducts 40 per cent of the American space programme. As Drax’s appealing helicopter pilot Trudi puts it, ‘what he doesn’t own he dosen’t want.’

    From there to Venice, where Bond discovers a dastardly Drax laboratory in the bowels of a Venetian glass factory which, when he comes to reveal it, has vanished during the night. On to a penthouse in Rio de Janeiro–so palatial that it seems to stop just short of the Pacific coast and comes complete with swimming pool and shapely swimmer. Outside, however, amongst the revelling Brazilian throng, is a carnival figure sporting an obscene set of jagged stainless steel teeth which Bond is soon to recognise as belonging to the killer Jaws. His next stop after a deadly chase over squalling falls in a tropical rain forest is–unbelievably–outer space.

    UK Jonathan Cape First Edition Hardback

    Trivia

    Christopher Wood

    Christopher Wood

    As many James Bond fans are aware, Christopher Wood also wrote the screenplays for The Spy Who Loved Me (shared with Richard Maibaum) and Moonraker films. His two novelizations of these films represent the first novelizations in the literary 007 canon. John Gardner and Raymond Benson would later go on to write novelizations for the films Licence to Kill through Die Another Day.

    To possibly avoid confusion with Ian Fleming’s original 1955 novel of the same name, Wood’s novelization was titled James Bond and Moonraker for all printings in the UK and US.

    Although counted inside the official James Bond canon, Wood’s James Bond and Moonraker has never been reprinted. While copies of both the UK and US paperbacks are generally easy enough to locate online, the UK Jonathan Cape hardback printing is increasingly difficult to come by and is often found for sale in excess of £300 ($450).

    Novelization/Film Differences

    While Christopher Wood’s James Bond and Moonraker novelization is generally much closer to the film of the same name as compared to his earlier James Bond, The Spy Who Loved Me, there are still a few differences that can be pointed out:

    • Novelization: The assistant to Hugo Drax is doomed helicopter pilot Trudi Parker.
    • Film: In the film, the character is named Corinne Dufour.
    • Novelization: In chapter 17, ‘Take The Weight Off Your Feet’, James Bond engages in an ‘outer space walk’ that results from his fear that the laser turret mounted on the Drax spacestation may be able to fire at the oncoming US assistance. Reaching this area via the passages inside the station would require Bond to pass by the most heavily guarded areas, so he chooses this alternative route.
    • Film: No such sequence is present in the film.
    'James Bond and Moonraker' French Paperback Edition

    James Bond and Moonraker French Paperback Edition

    A Major New James Bond Movie

    A very regrettable incident has occurred. A US MOONRAKER space shuttle, on loan to the British, has disappeared–apparently into thin air. Who has the spacecraft? The Russians? Hugo Drax, multi-millionaire supporter of the NASA space programme, thinks so. But Commander James Bond knows better.

    Aided by the beautiful–and efficient–Dr Holly Goodhead, 007 embarks on his most dangerous mission yet. Objective: to prevent one of the most insane acts of human destruction ever contemplated. Destination: outer space. The stakes are high. Astronomical even. But only Bond could take the rough so smoothly. Even when he’s out of this world…

    UK Panther Paperback

    Release Timeline

    • 1979: 1st British Jonathan Cape Hardback Edition
    • 1979: 1st British Panther Paperback Edition
    • 1979: 1st American Jove Paperback Edition

    CBn Forum Member Reactions

    In both [James Bond, The Spy Who Loved Me and James Bond and Moonraker], though, I think Wood demonstrated a familiarity with the Fleming/Bond canon and the ability to make the fanciful storylines Fleming-like. A small example: In James Bond and Moonraker, Bond is recalling his latest fitness report while on the plane. The sequence definitely recalls Fleming’s Thunderball novel. It’s a nice touch among a chapter depicting fantastic events. Wood did that sort of thing throughout both novelizations. It would have been interesting if Glidrose/IFP had hired Wood to do his own original novel.

    CBn Forum member ‘Napoleon Solo’


    'James Bond and Moonraker' UK Panther Paperback

    James Bond and Moonraker UK Panther Paperback

    I’ve been championing Wood’s novelisations for ages. James Bond, The Spy Who Loved Me is significantly better, in my opinion, than James Bond and Moonraker, which is more straight novelisation and less of the great stuff he’s infused into The Spy Who Loved Me.

    I don’t know who picked Gardner over Wood, but that was a HUGE mistake, in my opinion. Not to diss on Gardner, but Wood’s stuff was just wonderful.

    CBn Forum member ‘Bon-san’


    I have just finished reading the two Christopher Wood continuation novels James Bond, The Spy Who Loved Me and James Bond and Moonraker and I wondered if anyone else had any views regarding their merit (or otherwise!)? In my humble opinion, Wood makes a good job of trying to imitate Fleming’s narrative and gives us the “literary Bond” as opposed to the “screen version”. Unfortunately, Wood cannot resist including some “Bond quips” in both novels, but they are few and far between. Wood also equips Bond with Q gadgets, but not to the extreme of the movie versions. Not as good as a Fleming original (of course!) or Amis’s Colonel Sun in my opinion, but a fine effort anyway. Though they are both quite difficult to get hold of now (I got mine second hand from ebay), they are both worth the effort of tracking down in my opinion.

    CBn Forum member ‘marmaduke’


    I enjoyed Christopher Wood’s novelizations as well–with James Bond, The Spy Who Loved Me just a little bit more than James Bond and Moonraker. One thing I wish we could have seen that was omitted from either film was Bond’s space walking scene in James Bond and Moonraker. They already have him in outer space so why not take it a baby step further. It was a really good scene. Very suspenseful. But despite my liking of Wood’s novelizations, I enjoy some of John Gardner’s and Raymond Benson’s novels more.

    CBn Forum member ‘Double-Oh Agent’


    I just read Wood’s Moonraker novelization. It left me fairly unimpressed, unlike his previous effort. It was just too… movie novelization-ish. But it was still far above the Gardner/Benson novelization efforts.

    CBn Forum member ‘Harmsway’


    Firstly, I enjoyed both of Wood’s novelisations very much. I would say they are well clear at the top of my ranking of the novelisations. I also think that if they were included in the list of continuation novels they would also rank highly, especially James Bond, The Spy Who Loved Me.

    Of the two I prefer James Bond, The Spy Who Loved Me, which is interesting because I prefer the film of Moonraker to The Spy Who Loved Me. Wood is on top form in this book though, and I like the whole SMERSH slant which was added by Wood. Both novels pay close attention to the style of the Fleming novels, and Bond’s character is clearly Fleming’s Bond rather than Moore’s. I would heartily recommend these books to anybody who enjoys Fleming’s Bond, as they are a nice hybrid between Fleming and cinematic Bond. To be honest, I think that they should get Wood to write some continuation books.

    CBn Forum member ‘golrush007’

  3. Cover Art For 'The Girl Machine' Bond Collection

    By Devin Zydel on 2009-02-23
    'The Girl Machine' James Bond collection

    Titan’s The Girl Machine James Bond collection

    Cover artwork has been revealed for the latest James Bond comic collection from Titan Books: The Girl Machine.

    Due for release this upcoming June, this collection includes Beware Of Butterflies and The Nevsky Nude in addition to the title story. All three were penned by Jim Lawrence and drawn by Yaroslav Horak and originally syndicated in 1973/74.

    As usual, an introduction will be provided by a 007 alumni and other exclusive material will be included. Pre-order links follow below.

    Scroll below for CBn’s full list of all the Titan collections currently available.

    Note that this cover artwork is not yet confirmed as being final by Titan Books and may change before publication.

  4. Looking Back: 'James Bond, The Spy Who Loved Me'

    By Devin Zydel on 2009-02-20

    The CommanderBond.net ‘Looking Back’ series now moves onto the Christopher Wood era and the first of his two contributions to the literary 007 canon: 1977’s James Bond, The Spy Who Loved Me. As the first true James Bond novelization, James Bond, The Spy Who Loved Me translated Wood’s story for the popular Bond film from screen to page and added in several brand new elements.

    CBn looks back at James Bond, The Spy Who Loved Me through publication details, cover artwork, the original jacket blurbs, trivia notes, reactions from forum members and more.

    'James Bond, The Spy Who Loved Me' UK Jonathan Cape Hardback

    James Bond, The Spy Who Loved Me UK Jonathan Cape Hardback

    Major Anya Amasova had scored well in the course on ‘sex as a weapon’, although the SMERSH report had noted a risk of emotional attachments. James Bond was as wary of her presence in Cairo as he was charmed by her proud self-assured beauty. Where did the Russians find such women? But Bond was not an agent to be distracted from his mission: someone had learned to plot the course of nuclear submarines and, impossible as it sounded, M told him in London that the 370-foot nuclear-powered H.M.S. Ranger was ‘missing’.

    Not since Dr. No and Auric Goldfinger has Bond locked wits with an opponent so dedicated to his private obsession or shielded by such deadly cunning as Sigmund Stromberg. His double-0 prefix meant that Bond was used to death, but what Stromberg’s killer could do with his two rows of stainless steel teeth was an obscenity.

    UK Jonathan Cape First Edition Hardback

    Trivia

    Christopher Wood

    Christopher Wood

    As many James Bond fans are aware, Christopher Wood also wrote the screenplays for The Spy Who Loved Me (shared with Richard Maibaum) and Moonraker films. His two novelizations of these films represent the first novelizations in the literary 007 canon. John Gardner and Raymond Benson would later go on to write novelizations for the films Licence to Kill through Die Another Day.

    To possibly avoid confusion with Ian Fleming’s original 1962 novel of the same name, Wood’s novelization was titled James Bond, The Spy Who Loved Me for both the UK hardback and paperback printings. In the US however, where it only received a paperback printing, it was titled The Spy Who Loved Me.

    Although counted inside the official James Bond canon, Wood’s James Bond, The Spy Who Loved Me has never been reprinted. While copies of both the UK and US paperbacks are generally easy enough to locate online, the UK Jonathan Cape hardback printing is increasingly difficult to come by and is often found for sale in excess of £700 ($1,000).

    James Bond, The Spy Who Loved Me is dedicated to director Lewis Gilbert.

    Novelization/Film Differences

    There are several notable changes in the James Bond, The Spy Who Loved Me novelization compared to Wood’s screenplay of the same name. Some of them include:

    • Novelization: The villain is Sigmund Stromberg.
    • Film: The villain is Karl Stromberg.
    • Novelization: The real name of henchman Jaws is revealed: Zbigniew Krycsiwiki.
    • Film: In the film, he is simply referred to as Jaws.
    • Novelization: Villains organization SMERSH (‘Death to Spies’; the organization responsible for internal security in the armed forces) is present early on in the novelization when Anya Amasova meets with her KGB superiors. Previously, SMERSH was featured in several of the early Ian Fleming Bond novels before SPECTRE became the primary villains organization.
    • Film: There is no mention of SMERSH in the film.
    • Novelization: Following the killing of Fekkesh by Jaws, the novelization features a rather painful torture sequence in which electric cables are attached to Bond’s genitals by KGB associates of Anya.
    • Film: No such torture sequence is present in the film.
    • Novelization: There is no mention of Naomi.
    • Film: In the film, Karl Stromberg’s personal assistant, Naomi, eventually hunts down Bond and Anya in the late helicopter/Lotus chase.
    'James Bond, The Spy Who Loved Me' UK Jonathan Cape Hardback (Adrian Harrington Rare Books)

    A Major New James Bond Movie

    Two armed nuclear submarines are missing. One is Russian, the other British. But who is the shared enemy? The Cold War thaws as the might of MI5 joins with the cream of the KGB for one unique mission. Britain needs him: Commander James Bond, 007. Russia needs her: Major Anya Amasova, Agent Triple X. The world needs them both and in the most dangerous and complex assignment of their careers, they form an unholy, all-action and sometimes all-embracing alliance in a race against global destruction.

    UK Panther Paperback

    Release Timeline

    • 1977: 1st British Jonathan Cape Hardback Edition
    • 1977: 1st British Panther Paperback Edition
    • 1977: 1st American Warner Books Paperback Edition

    CBn Forum Member Reactions

    'James Bond, The Spy Who Loved Me' US Warner Books Paperback

    James Bond, The Spy Who Loved Me US Warner Books Paperback

    I was pleasantly surprised by Wood’s effort, and after reading it I immediately forgave him for some of the excessive silliness in The Spy Who Loved Me and Moonraker–he can’t have been the only one to blame. He’s a witty writer and I really believe he should be brought back to do dialogue polishes on future Bond films.

    This novel has some terrific passages, Bond’s arrival in Cairo, the subsequent meeting with Felicca and the fight with the henchman are top-drawer Bond. Even Jaws and his metal teeth get a convincing background.

    CBn Forum member ‘Lounge Lizard’


    Wood’s Spy is far better than anything by Gardner, Benson, Higson or Pearson. Even against Amis, its close. It is everything a book involving Ian Fleming’s James Bond should be.

    Enough said.

    CBn Forum member ‘David Schofield’


    There are a great number of CBners who believe that Christopher Wood’s novelizations are the best Bond continuation novels out there. I for one agree with this position and if you want to get a taste of how much better Moonraker would have been if they had stuck to Wood’s original script then check out his novelizarion to that movie.

    Christopher Wood’s novelization of The Spy Who Loved Me was the first Bond novel I ever read (back in the late 1970s) so I have a particular soft-spot for it.

    CBn Forum member ‘DLibrasnow’


    'James Bond, The Spy Who Loved Me' UK Panther Paperback

    James Bond, The Spy Who Loved Me UK Panther Paperback

    Christopher Wood was a die-hard Fleming fan and chose to display that in the novelizations safe in the belief that no-one at Eon would read them! He describes the process of compromise and committee in writing a Bond film vividly and believably. Wood is very self-deprecating about the process.

    The excellent novelizations (I agree, James Bond, The Spy Who Loved Me tips James Bond and Moonraker) are written by an excellent writer with the class, tone and insider polish that a good Bond author needs. Regardless of the plotting and characters (although Sigmund Stromberg and Zbigniew Krycsiwiki aka Jaws are wonderfully extrapolated), the writing is terrific and captures that high old tone of Fleming’s.

    Those who keep ragging on Purvis and Wade should heed Wood’s experience. The “writer” of a Bond film is a significant minority influence on these productions not the major guiding force some posters would have us believe.

    CBn Forum member ‘ACE’


    I enjoyed Christopher Wood’s novelizations as well–with James Bond, The Spy Who Loved Me just a little bit more than James Bond and Moonraker. One thing I wish we could have seen that was omitted from either film was Bond’s space walking scene in James Bond and Moonraker. They already have him in outer space so why not take it a baby step further. It was a really good scene. Very suspenseful. But despite my liking of Wood’s novelizations, I enjoy some of John Gardner’s and Raymond Benson’s novels more.

    CBn Forum member ‘Double-Oh Agent’


    I think Wood’s Spy is excellent. In fact, I think it could be put over Amis. I’m not sure why Colonel Sun is instantly considered the best of all the continuations novels. Have you read it lately? It’s good…but I’m not sure it’s the best. Wood’s Spy, Blood Fever, Pearson’s Bio, even License Renewed I think are worth considering over Colonel Sun.

    CBn Forum member ‘zencat’


    Firstly, I enjoyed Both of Wood’s novelisations very much. I would say they are well clear at the top of my ranking of the novelisations. I also think that if they were included in the list of continuation novels they would also rank highly, especially James Bond, The Spy Who Loved Me.

    Of the two I prefer James Bond, The Spy Who Loved Me, which is interesting because I prefer the film of Moonraker to The Spy Who Loved Me. Wood is on top form in this book though, and I like the whole SMERSH slant which was added by Wood. Both novels pay close attention to the style of the Fleming novels, and Bond’s character is clearly Fleming’s Bond rather than Moore’s. I would heartily recommend these books to anybody who enjoys Fleming’s Bond, as they are a nice hybrid between Fleming and cinematic Bond. To be honest, I think that they should get Wood to write some continuation books.

    CBn Forum member ‘golrush007’

  5. Second Benson Anthology Announced

    By Kevin Wells on 2009-02-20
    Raymond Benson

    Raymond Benson

    Good news for fans of Raymond Benson’s Bond series, a second anthology has been announced by Pegasus Books to follow last years The Union Trilogy. Tentatively titled Choice of Weapons, the anthology will consist of Zero Minus Ten (1997), The Facts of Death (1998) and The Man with the Red Tattoo (2002). As an added bonus it will also include the short stories, Live at Five and Midsummer Night’s Doom.

    Originally published in Playboy magazine in 1999, Midsummer Night’s Doom was Benson’s second 007 short story following an edited version of Blast From the Past in the January 1997 edition of Playboy. An unedited English version was finally released as part of The Union Trilogy anthology last year. Later in 1999, Live at Five was published in a November issue of TV Guide.

    No date has currently been set for the anthology, but Pegasus Books is said to be eying a release sometime around spring or summer 2010.

    With the release of Choice of Weapons, the only remaining uncollected James Bond works by Raymond Benson will be his three novelizations: Tomorrow Never Dies, The World Is Not Enough and Die Another Day.

    Stay tuned to CBn for all the latest literary James Bond news.

  6. Publishers Award For 'Devil May Care' Promotions Team

    By Devin Zydel on 2009-02-19
    'Devil May Care'

    Devil May Care

    The Literary 007 informs us that the publicity team behind the launch of last year’s Devil May Care were honoured with an award earlier this month at the Publishers Publicity Circle (PPC) Annual Awards.

    Colman Getty’s Lucy Chavasse and Jill Cotton took home the Bookseller Award for Hardback Fiction following their monumental marketing push for the centenary James Bond novel by Sebastian Faulks (which went on to become publisher Penguin’s fastest selling hardback fiction title ever).

    They will both now look forward for to the Galaxy British Book Awards ‘Nibbie’ for the best campaign of the year, set to be announced in April.

    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.

  7. Looking Back: 'Colonel Sun'

    By Devin Zydel on 2009-02-18

    The CommanderBond.net ‘Looking Back’ series now moves onto Kingsley Amis and his 1968 contribution to the literary 007 canon, Colonel Sun. As the first true James Bond continuation novel (unless one adds factors in 1967’s 003 1/2: The Adventures of James Bond Junior by R.D. Mascott), Colonel Sun has since been cited numerous times by Bond fans as one of the few that really comes close to capturing the “Fleming sweep” that makes the original adventures so readable.

    CBn looks back at Colonel Sun through publication details, cover artwork, the original jacket blurbs, trivia notes, reactions from forum members and more.

    'Colonel Sun' UK Jonathan Cape Hardback

    Colonel Sun UK Jonathan Cape Hardback

    Sooner or later, as James Bond’s followers have known, certain effects of his lifework would begin to show. The reflexes would be just as fast; the audacity as unflagging; but in a man of Bond’s intelligence and perception a certain speculative turn of mind was bound to develop. Inevtiably, he would begin to question not the clear necessity of his work but its cost in human lives and human values. Thus, within the old Bond, a new Bond was destined to emerge… within the man of action, a man of feeling.

    It’s happened. Bond is pitted against a world-menacing conspiracy engineered by the malign Colonel Sun Liang-tan of the People’s Liberation Army of China. The stakes have never been higher, nor the dangers more complex and terrible. His allies–the fine-boned, tawny-haired agent of the rival secret service and the Greek patriot with a score to settle–are all too quickly neutralized. Alone, unarmed, Bond faces the maniacal devices of Colonel Sun… an ordeal that pushes him to the verge of his physical and moral endurance.

    Robert Markham is a nom de plume for Kingsley Amis, author of The Anti-Death League, Lucky Jim, and The James Bond Dossier. Incredibly, he has added to the Bond saga not only his supple prose and marevelous sense of place but his own imaginative impetus, which intensifies and deepens the excitement, pace and glitter of a vintage Fleming novel.

    US Harper & Row First Edition Hardback

    Trivia

    'Colonel Sun' UK Pan Paperback

    Colonel Sun UK Pan Paperback

    Kingsley Amis wrote Colonel Sun under the pseudonym ‘Robert Markham’. While the UK and US first edition hardbacks (which share the same cover artwork image) only list Markham as the author, later paperback printings eventually added Kingsley Amis onto the cover as well.

    Kingsley Amis provided a brief introduction to the novel, describing how he approached writing Colonel Sun, choosing Greece as the main location of events and following in Ian Fleming’s footsteps. This introduction can be found in the following editions of Colonel Sun: UK Coronet paperback (1991), UK Coronet paperback (1997) and US HarperCollins paperback (1993).

    Colonel Sun is dedicated to the memory of Ian Fleming.

    'Colonel Sun' UK Coronet Paperback

    Colonel Sun UK Coronet Paperback

    A VICIOUS GAME AGAINST DEADLY ODDS

    From the cool complacency of an elegant lunch and the pleasant challenge of the Sunningdale putting green, to an explosive confrontation on a Greek island, James Bond is drawn back into Her Majesty’s service.

    M has been kidnapped, his servants brutally murdered. Bond himself has barely escaped to follow a baffling trail that begins in Athens with the lovely Ariadne and leads across treacherous seas to a remote isle. There, as the Russians convene at a top secret meeting, Colonel Sun, master of interrogation, waits to welcome Bond to a game of ultimate risk and consummate cruelty.

    It is a game without rules. It will played to the death. At stake: nothing less than global chaos…

    US HarperCollins Paperback

    Release Timeline

    • 1968: 1st British Jonathan Cape Hardback Edition
    • 1968: 1st American Harper & Row Hardback Edition
    • 1969: 1st American Bantam Paperback Edition
    • 1970: 1st British Pan Paperback Edition
    • 1977: 1st British Panther Paperback Edition
    • 1991: 1st British Coronet Paperback Edition
    • 1993: 1st American HarperCollins Paperback Edition

    CBn Forum Member Reactions

    'Colonel Sun' UK Triad/Panther Paperback

    Colonel Sun UK Triad/Panther Paperback

    Colonel Sun is one of the better non-Fleming novels: exciting, violent, excellently written, and with a version of 007 closer to the original than any of the follow-up books. The latter shouldn’t be much of a surprise, since Colonel Sun was written only a few years after Fleming’s death, and Amis was one of the first people in the British literary scene to take the Bond novels seriously. This book was written in a substantially different era than the later Gardner and Benson tales, one where Fleming’s shadow and influence were much more immediate. Colonel Sun in some cases seems purposely written in opposition to the Eon film series, which had just made their first leap into outrageous science fiction (and away from a Fleming story) with You Only Live Twice. Colonel Sun is primarily a realistic and often violent tale with an lack of gadgetry. Amis even writes a dismissal of high-tech gadgets at the conclusion when Bond thinks about how useless all of Q Branch’s additions to his clothing actually were.

    Amis is definitely the most skilled writer on the technical level to undertake a Bond story in Fleming’s wake, and it shows. Although a member of the literary establishment because of his novel Lucky Jim, Amis still makes his story essentially a thriller, and a fairly good one at that. His descriptions have some of the exotic thrill of Fleming’s, and I can hardly fault his style; nothing seems forced or clumsy, which is a complaint I sometimes have about Gardner and frequently have about Benson. (I haven’t yet decided about Higson, although so far I’m positive.)

    Colonel Sun moves at a better pace than most of the latter-day Bonds and it held my interest most of the way, despite a slow late middle section. The novel gets off to a running start with the daring scene at Quarterdeck and the abduction of M–a nice sequel to the shocker opening of The Man with the Golden Gun. Amis shows immediately that he isn’t afraid to smash Bond around and really put the screws to him (or the metal skewers, heh heh). The book keeps up the pace for a good while before it starts to falter as Bond and Co. near the island of Vrakonisi. After the exciting underwater assault on the boat, the novel starts to slow down and get a touch dull. When Sun finally lays his mitts on Bond at the end, it’s back to the thrill factor for the climax. Amis again lays down the hurt, and it’s exciting. My only problem with the finale is that Colonel Sun is one incredibly talkative bad guy when he builds up to the torture. We expect the villain to give speeches in a 007 novel–it’s a classic part of the formula. But Sun seems not to stop, and Bond’s vituperative demands that he “get on with it” were ones with which I was readily agreeing. It is one nasty torture though, and thank you Kingsley for not going into too much detail on it. Appreciate it.

    One significant difference between Colonel Sun and Fleming’s books is the amount of time Amis dedicates to political discussions and allegiances. Although Fleming casts his stories against the backdrop of the Cold War and frequently pitted 007 against the Soviets, his novels have little interest in the “whys” of the conflict. James Bond doesn’t fight against communists, he fights against the Russians. He works for the forces of good, his opponents for evil, and that is that. It’s an unexcused fantasy setting: an organization like SMERSH seems more comfortable in a pulp adventure than in real world espionage. On the other hand, Amis’s version of James Bond’s world places political affiliations on the front lines. The scene between Ariadne and the Russian general just gets too mired in political philosophy speech-making, and for me it slowed the pace down. Such additions might have made Colonel Sun timely and realistic when it was published, but I find it much more dated than Fleming’s fantasy environment.

    Another strange thing that Amis does is include a chapter about George Ionides, the sailor who serves as an unwitting decoy for Bond and Niko Litsas. It doesn’t add much to story. The text could have just made mention of it when Bond and Litsas sneak onto Vrakonisi in a new boat, much the same way he mentioned the decoys in the car in Doctor No. It doesn’t help the pace at all in the slowest section of the novel.

    The characterizations are also a strong part of the book. I’ve already mentioned how well Bond is done. Litsas is an excellent ally (although, again, lots of political chat) with his own vengeance quest reasons for getting involved, and Ariadne is a vibrant, action-oriented Bond girl very much in keeping with the times. Colonel Sun is a bit reminiscent of Doctor No, but aside from his lengthy chatter pre-torture, he’s a deviously successful villain and comes to a good end.

    Colonel Sun definitely ranks among my favorites of the post-Fleming Bond novels, and it’s unfortunate that Kingsley didn’t have the opportunity to publish any further 007 adventures.

    CBn Forum member ‘Double-O Eleven’


    'Colonel Sun' US Bantam Paperback

    Colonel Sun US Bantam Paperback

    This book has taken the longest to finish of any Bond novel (including Spy). An interesting book. Amis has managed to ape Fleming’s style very well, and it sits easily with the Fleming canon. It is obviously well-written, but far too low-key, dull and political. It isn’t FUN, and is too serious. The ‘M’ kidnapping smacks of the age-old problem of writers taking over a franchise – let’s do something unconventional. It is probably a better book than some of the lessr Flemings, but Amis unequivocally lacks the Fleming sweep. I would have read further Amis adventures, but I think Colonel Sun is an interesting experiment and a nice thank you to Fleming, but ultimately,not Fleming. Whilst many different actors and technicians have handled the film Bond well, it seems only Fleming had the ease, the seductiveness, the playfulness to make one lose themselves in his world.

    The torture scene was extremely disturbing and Amis is more explicit about sex (but doesn’t mke it sound fun!). The story was good, Amis’s detest of Q Branch palpable. I find Amis’s prose difficult to read, Fleming, at least in the ’50’s books, tried to describe things in layman’s terms. Amis is obviously a verbose, intellectual writer. And perhaps too serious to write Bond.

    So, all in all, a worthwhile book. Probably (I haven’t read them all) the best non-Fleming book. But it is not an easy read for many reasons, and i find myself extremely ambivalent about the novel.

    CBn Forum member ‘manfromjapan’


    I got an old copy of this book and decided to review it. I’ve read it before and the book has always invoked strong feelings within me. It’s strange why this is the case. I personally think the book is one of the few James Bond continuation novels to be sufficiently seamy. By seamy I mean that there’s atmosphere and its dark and moody as a proper James Bond novel should be.

    I happened to like the Gardner and Benson novels but they’re continuations from the movie series in everything but technicality. I don’t honestly mind this and buy them because I like reading about movie James Bond. I haven’t purchased Devil May Care because I’ve become accustomed to the “new” style and don’t want to read a Bond book written in the 21st centuries set in the 1960s.

    I had heard of Ian Fleming’s widow writing an inflammatory review of the work and that it had been suppressed because of libel. I don’t know the contents of this work, though I would certainly love to read it. Unfortunately, I suspect that such a thing is lost to the ages.

    Having established that I think the book is wonderfully written, extremely seemy, and that there’s a very James Bond-ish plot (the literary James Bond not the movie James Bond); I want to warn people that the rest of this review is going to be extraordinarily hostile. I don’t like giving bad reviews but I’m not going to hide my feelings about the work or what they invoke.

    So, if you don’t want to read further then note that if you’re not interested in subtext then you are absolutely welcome to check out Colonel Sun and will undoubtedly walk away with the book with a wonderful reading experience. Purely classic Bond and you’ll definitely get your money’s worth from the experience. I say this in terms of writing and plot 7/10. Now, my actual review is going to start with a 1/10… [click here to continue reading]

    CBn Forum member ‘Willowhugger’

  8. "A Quantum of Gold-dust"

    By Guest writer on 2009-02-16

    Written by Craig Arthur

    A quirk of the combination of Ian Fleming’s For Your Eyes Only and Octopussy story collections in the new Quantum Of Solace: The Complete James Bond Short Stories, is that the book begins and ends with Bond day-dreaming about a woman named Solange.

    In the opening story, From a View to a Kill, Bond sits in a Paris café imagining that he would “somehow find himself a girl who was a real girl, and he would take her to dinner at some make-believe place in the Bois like the Armenon-ville… He would say to her: ‘I propose to call you Donatienne, or possibly Solange, because these are names that suit my mood and the evening.'”

    By 007 in New York, the final story included in the collection, his daydream has found fulfilment. He has found Solange. Or rather the story is a Fleming daydream about his alter ego in Manhattan on business (“to warn a nice girl, who had once worked for the Secret Service, an English girl now earning her living in New York, that she was cohabiting with a Soviet agent of KGB…”) and to do some shopping ending at Abercrombies’s “to look over the new gadgets and, incidentally, make a date with Solange (appropriately employed in their indoor Games Department) for the evening.” Bond then daydreams about the places in New York he would take her to: “Dinner with Solange would be easy – Lutece in the sixties, one of the great restaurants of the world…” He also reflects on her obsession with hygiene: “Every time Bond had made love to Solange, at a time when they should retire to the bathroom for a long quarter and there was a lengthy period after that when he couldn’t kiss her because she had gargled with TCP. And the pills she took if she had a cold! Enough to combat double pneumonia.” We also discovered that she likes jazz. But for all these insights, Solange remains as much a daydream as the anonymous fantasy figure in From a View to a Kill.

    Quantum of Solace

    She does become a character in her own right in Casino Royale (2006), however. Or rather, in a reference to these two Ian Fleming short stories, the screenwriters appropriated the name and used it for Caterina Murino’s character. (Appropriated it and, in my opinion wasted it. Because, as with Kissy Suzuki in You Only Live Twice, the character is never referred to by name.)

    The character of Solange in Casino Royale is essentially a variation on Domino in Thunderball, Liz Krest in the short story The Hildebrand Rarity or Rhoda Masters in Quantum of Solace. Like Domino, Solange is in a relationship with a brutal criminal in the Bahamas. But more importantly, like Liz Krest or Rhoda Masters, the downtrodden Solange is in a marriage where the “quantum of solace” as Fleming defines it – amount of comfort – is at zero, as was the case in Rhoda Masters’ marriage to Philip Masters. Milton Krest’s use of a stingray tail to whip his wife in The Hildebrand Rarity was incorporated into Licence to Kill, but Alex Dimitrios’s cold indifference to Solange is more reminiscent of the Masters’ marriage in Quantum of Solace where Philip Masters froze Rhoda out of his daily existence, even dividing their house in half, and leaving her destitute. Hence the amount of comfort in the marriage is nil.

    Casino Royale evoked elements of Quantum of Solace. It is possibly as close to a literal adaptation of this Fleming short story as we are likely to see (even taking place in a similar setting, the Bahamas). But Quantum of Solace also provides the title for the new Bond movie, as well as the inspiration, the springboard, for at least one spectacular action sequence. The boating sequence, set in Port-au-Prince, is perhaps a reference to Bond’s Caribbean mission to sabotage the gun-runners boats in the short story. In the story, the guns were intended to help destabilise the Cuban Government while in the movie Dominic Greene’s Quantum organisation is engineering a coup d’état in Bolivia. But in the movie there are no guns. Instead, Dominic Greene ‘gives’ General Medrano Camille Montes (Olga Kurylenko) as a ‘sweetener’ in their deal to destabilise the Bolivian Government and Bond liberates her from Medrano’s boat. It could even be argued that the use of the vintage DC3 aircraft in the movie’s spectacular aerial dog-fight harks back to the early era of commercial aviation when Philip Masters met his future wife (a former air hostess).

    Elements of every short story in the new Quantum of Solace collection have made it into the Bond movies made between For Your Eyes Only in 1981 and Quantum of Solace in 2008. Whether it was simply the use of the Parisian and rural French setting of From a View to a Kill in A View To a Kill, the names Milton Krest and the ‘Wavekrest’ and the other elements of The Hildebrand Rarity in Licence to Kill, or the (near faithful) adaptation of The Living Daylights in The Living Daylights or For Your Eyes Only and Risico in For Your Eyes Only.

    Occasionally, the filmmakers squeeze double mileage out of the same short story. They gave Milton Krest’s elegant yacht, the ‘Wavekrest’ from The Hildebrand Rarity to Colombo in For Your Eyes Only in order to have a passing nod to as many stories from the For Your Eyes Only collection as they could. They then used the names in Licence to Kill. Again, in Octopussy they used the Berlin setting of The Living Daylights. They then filmed the short story itself – transplanted to the Czech city of Bratislava – in The Living Daylights. And now they have used the title and concept for Quantum of Solace, having previously evoked elements of Quantum of Solace into Casino Royale (2006).

    The filmmakers have similarly obtained double mileage out of ideas from Fleming’s novels. Live And Let Die especially. The keel-hauling sequence from the novel was adapted into the cheaper-and-easier-to-film sequence where Kananga ties Bond and Solitaire to the pulley and intends to feed them to the sharks in the 1973 movie. A more literal version of what Fleming intended was later included in For Your Eyes Only. And Licence to Kill similarly made use of sequences from the novel not used in Live And Let Die.

    Quantum of Solace

    Even when the movies have borne little similarity to their source material, vestiges of the original Fleming novels or short stories always remain, if one is willing to look hard enough. This is even true of Charles K Feldman’s Casino Royale (1967). The baccarat game with Le Chiffre remains, as does the kidnap of Vesper afterward and the torture scene and the later revelation that Vesper is a double-agent. Similarly, although they were only permitted to use the title of The Spy Who Loved Me, the filmmakers still managed to incorporate two villains from Fleming’s novel, turning the metal-teethed Horror into Jaws and Sluggsy into Sandor, in a movie that is a remake of You Only Live Twice. Although A View to a Kill bears no resemblance to the short story that inspired it, the movie still retains From A View to a Kill‘s setting as I have mentioned. The titles of the movies GoldenEye and The World is Not Enough referred to the name of Fleming’s Jamaican house and the Bond family motto from On Her Majesty’s Secret Service, respectively. Die Another Day used the basic premise of Fleming’s Moonraker for it plot, as well as the inspiration for the high-tech shooting gallery in the Universal Export basement (now a virtual reality simulator) and the Blades club (with a fencing bout replacing the bridge game). But Die Another Day also contained allusions to Fleming’s non-fiction work – the illegal Sierra Leone diamond trade from The Diamond Smugglers and according to the DVD commentary, the name of the masseuse, Peaceful Fountains of Desire, which was inspired by similar, real-life names Fleming listed in the Hong Kong chapter of Thrilling Cities. (There is even a nice nod to the origins of the Bond name in the movie, when he picks up a copy of James Bond’s Birds of the West Indies and poses as an ornithologist.)

    There is always some sort of direct link, however tenuous, back to Fleming’s work, to honour his creation and let us know we are still dealing with the devil we know. Even though the later films tend to me remakes of earlier Bond films. You Only Live Twice is a remake of Dr No. The Spy Who Loved Me is a remake of You Only Live Twice. Tomorrow Never Dies is a remake of The Spy Who Loved Me. Octopussy and A View to a Kill are Goldfinger remakes.

    The reason the filmmakers began to adapt Fleming’s short stories into Bond movies was because they had already adapted (however loosely) all the novels apart from Casino Royale. The reason they are now use elements of less likely stories such as 007 in New York and Quantum of Solace, or even the allusions to Fleming’s non-fiction works in Die Another Day, is because the more cinematic short stories have already been adapted (or squandered in the case of The Hildebrand Rarity or From a View to a Kill).

    Fifty years ago, Ian Fleming had just completed writing Goldfinger. The 1964 movie version would turn Bond into a cultural phenomenon – a phenomenon beyond anything Ian Fleming could have imagined – and provide the blueprint for subsequent Bond movies, including Quantum of Solace.

    In Goldfinger, Colonel Smithers at the Bank of England gives Bond a lecture on gold commodities. Having already explained that one of gold’s defects is that it is not hard enough (“It wears out quickly, leaves itself on the linings of our pockets and in the sweat of our skins. Every year, the world’s stock is invisibly reduced by friction.”), he predicts that by 2008 the world’s gold reserves will have run out. “‘At this rate, Mr Bond,’ Colonel Smithers leaned forward earnestly, ‘- and please don’t quote me – but I wouldn’t be surprised if in fifty years’ time we have not totally exhausted the gold content of the earth!'”

    This concern with the world’s finite resources running out eerily predicts the era we live in. The era of Quantum of Solace. The era of Dominic Greene’s efforts to control as much of the planet’s water as he can. But it is also perhaps an indicator of Fleming’s own fear that his inspiration was flagging, signalling the more world-weary, doom-fraught tone of his later work. Having already attempted to kill off Bond forever at the end of From Russia, With Love, only to resurrect him for Dr No. A television treatment Fleming developed for Henry Morgenthau III provided part of the inspiration for Dr No. But he was struggling with Goldfinger.

    Despite its later impact on popular culture via the success of the movie, Goldfinger represented Fleming’s weakest novel to date. According to James Bond: The Man and his World by Henry Chancellor, “Fleming had originally conceived the scene involving Bond’s card game with Goldfinger, set at the Hotel Fontainebleau, Miami, as a separate short story, and the same is true of the scene where Bond smashes the aeroplane window and Oddjob is sucked out.” The strain of trying to link story ideas into a cohesive narrative was beginning to show. As quoted in John Pearson’s The Life of Ian Fleming, “Fleming had already announced to William Plomer that, as he had ‘really run out of puff’, Goldfinger would have to be ‘the last full length folio on Bond … Though I may be able to think up some episodes for him in the future, I shall never be able to give him 70,000 words again.’ The full-length James Bond books which had once been a treat to write were by now becoming a chore.”

    Quantum of Solace

    Short stories flowed more easily. And for the For Your Eyes Only collection, he was able to draw once again on unused scripts he had submitted for a proposed James Bond TV series. Working with Kevin McClory and Jack Whittingham on the film script that would become Thunderball provided him with one of his strongest novels in 1961. Plus, he would he would also go on to write the magnificent On Her Majesty’s Secret Service. But he was contending with health problems in addition to flagging creative energy.

    The two Fleming Bond books published posthumously suggested the gold had run out, metaphorically speaking. The Man With the Golden Gun was weak in terms of narrative and prose style and while the two short stories in the original 1966 hardback edition of Octopussy and The Living Daylights (written in 1962 and 1961 respectively) were of a higher standard, the book itself was insubstantial in that it contained just two short stories. (The Property of a Lady was included to the subsequent paperback editions, with 007 in New York added to the Penguin and Viking 2002 edition).Fittingly enough, Octopussy even deals with a dwindling hoard of gold as its plot MacGuffin. The story perhaps reflects Fleming’s own middle-aged malaise. Its protagonist is not Bond but Dexter Smythe, a retired Army Major, the same approximate age as Fleming when he wrote the story, with health problems (two coronary thromboses), who enjoys exploring the marine biology on the reefs of the north shore of Jamaica, as Fleming himself did. As such, Smythe reflects Fleming’s own malaise, his “spiritual accidie”, as he puts it in the story, “tropical sloth”. Time is running out and Dexter Smythe “had arrived at the frontier of the death-wish”. There are flashbacks to Kitzbühel in Austria, where Fleming also spent time before the war, dreaming up endless tales of a villainous Austrian Count, Graf von Schlick and his mistresses. In Kitzbühel, Smythe recovered a treasure trove of Nazi gold and then murdered his mountain guide – Bond’s old ski instructor – and pushes the body into a glacier to cover his tracks. But in Jamaica, retribution is approaching and Smythe’s ill-gotten treasure trove is running out, just as for Bond fans and Fleming’s publishers, Octopussy is the last of the gold and as Raymond Benson suggests in The James Bond Bedside Companion, “Octopussy, the affectionately named pet that Smythe feeds daily, could be a symbol of the treasure which is just beyond reach.”

    Like a pot of gold at the end of the rainbow — the further Bond stories that fans crave and that Fleming might have gone on to write. Had he lived longer.

    Eventually of course, the producers of the Bond movies inherited this problem, coping with a finite supply of Ian Fleming material to adapt for the cinema screen. By 2008, Colonel Smithers predicted, the world’s gold supply would be exhausted; by 2008, virtually every Ian Fleming title and story idea has been used. Quantum of Solace is one of the few unused titles, coming from perhaps the least likely short story to provide the inspiration for a Bond movie.

    The filmmakers have become very skilful at recycling narrative structures and integrating elements of unlikely cinematic material from Fleming works. Octopussy, for instance, paraphrases the events of the Octopussy short story in dialogue form, explaining that Octopussy is Dexter Smythe’s daughter and hence the movie is a sequel to that story. Also, the Sotheby’s auction of a Faberge egg from The Property of a Lady is used, as is the Berlin setting of The Living Daylights, so that the movie incorporates something from each of the stories in the Octopussy short story collection. These Fleming elements are then incorporated into what is essentially a literal remake of Goldfinger. The smuggled Russian jewels from The Property of a Lady replace gold as the MacGuffin but the titular character is a revised version of Goldfinger‘s Pussy Galore, a ‘good baddy’ with links to a smuggler. The smuggler, besides cheating at games of chance and being driven around by his chauffer/henchman in a vintage Rolls Royce, is using Octopussy’s circus – like Pussy Galore’s “Flying Circus” – in a plot cooked up by a foreign general to explode an atomic bomb in a strategic target in the West. Though this time the target is an American airbase in West Germany, rather than Fort Knox. The plot is foiled when, like Pussy Galore, Octopussy’s allegiances switch from the villain to Bond at the crucial moment.

    Quantum of Solace

    But in Octopussy, the filmmakers even succeed in recycling elements of Casino Royale (1967). It is not just that the dour, aging Roger Moore waltzes through the action sequences with the same deadpan humour as David Niven playing Sir James Bond. (There is even the same joke when Bond arrives at HQ and tells Moneypenny is getting younger every day before it is revealed that this is really her daughter, in Casino Royale, or her new assistant, Penelope Smallbone, in Octopussy.) Nor is it simply that Ursula Andress (Honey Rider in Dr No) also plays Vesper Lynd in Casino Royale and Maud Adams returns to play Octopussy, having already appeared as Andrea Anders in The Man With The Golden Gun. Vesper and Octopussy are similar characters. Both are wealthy, independent women with dubious associations, who made their money through shadowy or questionable means. While Sir James Bond believed that Vesper was eaten by a shark, only to discover it was her “personal submarine”, so Octopussy thinks that a crocodile devoured Bond when really he escaped in his one-man crocodile-sub. In fact, most gadgets in Octopussy bear a striking similarity to those in Casino Royale. Both feature wristwatch TVs and pens that squirt either poisonous gas (in Casino Royale) or sulphuric acid (in Octopussy). Even the one-liner about how these pens could be useful for writing “poison-pen letters” is the same in both movies. Both movies also have sequences in Berlin, under the shadow of the Berlin Wall, as well as hunting scenes where Bond becomes the prey. And in both, Bond travels to India to meet a woman who is the daughter of somebody from his past – Mata Bond in Casino Royale and Dexter Smythe’s daughter, Octopussy. Both Mata and Octopussy live in exotic Indian palaces surrounded by a bevy of female servants in Hindu costumes.

    For Quantum of Solace, the filmmakers again returned to a Goldfinger-type scenario, creating a villain in league with a foreign general so that he can control a vital global commodity – water instead of gold. They have then used Fleming heroines such as Tilly Masterton in Goldfinger or Judy Havelock from For Your Eyes Only as the inspiration for vengeful Camille Montes. Bond himself is not out for revenge, per sa. As Daniel Craig explains, “the idea of vengeance which kind of comes into it is really everybody’s idea … they think that he has gone off course and that . . . he is a loose cannon … that his emotions have taken over and actually that is more complicated in the story and the idea of vengeance is the furthest thing from his mind. He just wants to get his closure, hence the title, Quantum of Solace.”

    Although Bond himself is not out for revenge, the movie itself loosely borrows from the structure of 1989’s Licence to Kill. Both movies begin with a major villain delivered into custody (Sanchez/White), who then escapes with the help of a traitor supposedly guarding him. Both movies are set in Latin America with the villain either keeping a dictator in power (Licence to Kill) or plotting to install a General as one (Quantum of Solace). And once again, Bond is on the run, a rogue in M’s eyes for much of the narrative. M’s confrontation with Bond in his La Paz hotel suite in Quantum of Solace parallels the similar confrontation with M at Hemingway House at Key West in Licence to Kill. Camille and Strawberry Fields (Gemma Arterton) are essentially variations on Lupe Lamora (Talisa Soto) and Pam Bouvier (Cary Lowell), with several key differences. In Licence to Kill, Lupe Lamora is minor figure compared to Camille in Quantum of Solace. Both carry the scars of ill treatment by violent men; in Camille’s case burn scars from when General Medrano (Joaquin Cosío) set fire to her family home. But where Lupe is willing to put up with Sanchez whipping her and is merely looking for an escape from the poverty of her past – ultimately hooking up with President Lopez (Pedro Armendariz) – Camille seeks to kill Medrano. Fields is a minor character compared to Bouvier but some of Bouvier’s characteristics are shifted to Camille. For instance, Camille objects to being rescued from Medrano’s boat as Bouvier objected to Bond “saving” her from Sanchez’s hoods in the Bimini bar (the boat and Bimini setting in Licence to Kill are themselves perhaps a nod to Fleming’s Quantum of Solace, given the liberal use of elements of The Hildebrand Rarity). An ensuing argument occurs between the parties during the nautical escape in both movies. In terms of the villains, Greene in Quantum of Solace is hiding behind an environmental front organisation, Green Planet, much like Sanchez’s use of televangelist Professor Joe Butcher in his drug distribution network in Licence to Kill. The climax at the Eco Hotel, Perla de las Dunas, in Quantum of Solace loosely parallels the meeting between Sanchez and his Asian investors at the meditation institute. In both movies, the villain is about to clinch the deal. Both times Bond’s intervention prevents this and leads to the subsequent fiery destruction of the facility. Both movies feature a scene where Bond presents himself at the villain’s dockside warehouse, as a representative of Universal Exports.

    Bond’s cover identity, given on his Universal Exports business card, is “R. Sterling” and in the movie The Spy Who Loved Me, Bond also used the cover name, Robert Sterling. There are several echoes of The Spy Who Loved Me in Quantum of Solace. The car chase with the on-coming trucks in the pre-title sequence. The Quantum ‘board meeting’ at the opera is vaguely reminiscent of the submarine tracking-device buyers meeting at the pyramids and Bond pushes Guy Haines’s bodyguard off the Opera House roof after trying to question him in much the same way that Roger Moore dispensed with Sandor after questioning him. And, of course, the sequence with Bond and Camille walking through the Bolivian desert in formal evening wear is an allusion to the near identical scene in The Spy Who Loved Me.

    Quantum of Solace

    Quantum of Solace‘s aerial sequence is actually also another exercise in recycling. The idea of Bond skydiving into a sinkhole from a low altitude was originally slated for 1995’s GoldenEye. Like the helicopter buzz-saw attack on the caviar factory that later made it into The World is Not Enough, the sequence was deemed either too expensive or difficult to film at the time. So it never made it onto the screen until now. But, rather like Solange eventually making the transition from simply a name in Bond’s imagination to an actual character, the sequence finally finds a home in Quantum of Solace.

    It does seem, however, that indeed fifty years on from when Fleming wrote Goldfinger, the ‘gold’ is indeed running out, so-to-speak. What is there left for the filmmakers to use?

    We can probably expect to see the poisoning of the fish from The Hildebrand Rarity at some point, as well as unused character names such as Shatterhand (most likely for the head villain of Quantum), along with movie titles Risico and The Property of a Lady. (The Property of a Lady would work especially well if it referred to Bond’s relationship to Judi Dench’s M. Plus the title conveniently contains two “o”s – The Property of a Lady – to link to the zeros in ‘007’). But what else remains? How can the Bond franchise remain – to use the buzz-word of our times – sustainable?

    In Goldfinger, when Colonel Smithers tells Bond that he thinks that by 2008, the world’s gold supplies would be exhausted, Bond responds by telling him, ‘You certainly make a fascinating story of it. Perhaps the position isn’t as bad as you think. They’re already mining oil under the sea. Perhaps they’ll find a way of mining gold.'”

    Charlie Higson’s Young Bond adventures are already paving the way for this. In 2007, he took an unused name from one of Ian Fleming’s notebooks and gave it to one of his villains in Hurricane Gold, Manny the Girl. Now in By Royal Command, its 2008 follow-up, Higson brings to life a villain Ian Fleming created at age 19.

    By Royal Command draws heavily on source material from Fleming’s Bond books. It expands upon the events alluded to in Bond’s obituary in You Only Live Twice. Hannes Oberhauser, the character from Octopussy who Dexter Smythe killed and pushed into a glacier, also makes an appearance, teaching Bond to ski and fulfilling the role of “something of a father” to Bond, as Fleming described him. And there are other allusions to Bond’s later ski lessons at the “old Hannes Schneider School at St Anton in the Arlberg” (where Bond “had got pretty good and had won his golden K”) and to the instructor Fuchs, both mentioned in On Her Majesty’s Secret Service.

    In addition, Higson pays homage to Fleming’s real-life connections to the Kitzbühel area, even incorporating the Graf von Schlick character Fleming dreamt up while staying in Tennerhof in 1937.

    According to The Life of Ian Fleming by John Pearson, “He [Fleming] invented an endless story about Graf Schlick, the local lord of the manor who lived in the big castle at the end of the valley, and had him committing the most terrible crimes and perpetuating unspeakable tortures. At the end of one of these stories, when the Graf had performed multiple villainies upon some unprotesting virgin, retribution caught up with him.”

    Andrew Lycett’s 1995 biography, Ian Fleming, explains how Count Schlick was based on an actual Czech adventurer who had adopted that name and started the first ski club in Kitzbühel. “As later often happened with his books, Ian found some of his best material closest to hand. He was fascinated by the exploits of the local aristocrats, the von Lambergs. The Graf (or Count) Max von Lamberg had a formidable reputation for drinking and womanizing. While his wife and three children lived in the family castle, a sugary Gothic confection called the Schloss Kaps, Graf Max camped out in a nearby chalet with a blonde mistress who worked in the photographer’s shop and who was consequently known as the Photo-Grafin. Count Max’s exotic sister, Paula, was a close neighbour in the Schloss Lebenberg. She was an artist and sportswoman, widely known as the best female ski-jumper in the world. She married a Czech adventurer who adopted the name ‘Count Schlick’ and who started the first ski club in Kitzbühel. Schlick ran through her money, but not before introducing her to motor racing which led to her death. She was competing with her husband in a race in Salzburg, when she mysteriously fell out of the car and was killed. Local gossip had it that she was pushed by Schlick who, having inherited her castle and land, methodically sold it off piece by piece. Ian liked to concoct stories about the evils perpetuated by Schlick, including graphic details of tortures the Count devised.”

    Quantum of Solace

    In By Royal Command, Higson combines aspects of Fleming’s Schlick with the real life Max von Lamberg to bring Ian Fleming’s ideas to life after 71 years in suspended animation, like Oberhauser’s corpse preserved in the ice until the glacier thaws. Higson’s Otto von Schlick, like Fleming’s creation, inhabits Schloss Donnerspitze – “a monstrous medieval castle built high into the side of the Schwarzkogel above Jochenberg … a huge pile of massive grey-black stones, ugly and domineering, like a pile of massive grey-black stones, ugly and domineering, like a great bully squatting on the mountainside, sneering at the puny houses below.” He likes to drive dangerously around the winding alpine roads in his Bugatti Type 55 Supersport with his mistress. He is closer to von Lamberg than Fleming’s villainous creation but, supposedly badly injured in a car accident, a surviving villain from Higson’s first Young Bond adventure SilverFin with Nazi affiliations, Dr Perseus Friend, adopts the Graf’s identity and carries out the sort of “unspeakable crimes” Fleming might have imagined. So that Fleming’s ‘first’ villain becomes one and the same with one of Bond’s first adversaries in chronological terms.

    So in the same way that Solange started out as simply a name in From a View to a Kill, then a character referred to in 007 in New York and a fully-fledged character in the 2006 movie version of Casino Royale, Schlick finds life in By Royal Command.

    This, as I see it, is the future of Bond. Taking the thread of unused Ian Fleming ideas to remind us we are still dealing with the devil we know and recycling them into something new.

    Anybody reading Sebastian Faulks’s lazy effort with Devil May Care could be forgiven for thinking that the prediction of a world in 2008 where all the Bondian gold has been used up. That the well has run dry.

    Charlie Higson proves that this is not the case. There is still gold. It is just, as Bond tells Colonel Smithers, a matter of finding new ways to mine it.

    © Craig Arthur 2008

  9. Charlie Higson's 'By Royal Command' German Cover Artwork

    By Devin Zydel on 2009-02-16
    Charlie Higson's 'By Royal Command' (Der Tod kennt kein Morgen)

    Charlie Higson’s By Royal Command (Der Tod kennt kein Morgen)

    As reported on CommanderBond.net this past November, this month sees the release of Charlie Higson’s fifth Young James Bond novel, By Royal Command, in Germany.

    The book has been released as Der Tod kennt kein Morgen (Death Knows No Tomorrow) by regular publisher Arena Verlag.

    Retail price is 14.95 € and the book can currently be ordered online from Amazon.de:

    This follows the news that a special limited edition of Higson’s first Young Bond adventure, SilverFin, was released in the country. For more details, click here.

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

  10. The Blades Library Book Club: The Facts Of Death

    By Devin Zydel on 2009-02-13

    Welcome back to The Blades Library Book Club – the place for quality discussions of the books of James Bond!

    Raymond Benson's 'The Facts Of Death'

    Raymond Benson’s The Facts Of Death

    Every two months a James Bond 007 novel is chosen for the club members to read. A thread is posted in the club forums listing locations on where you can find the novel. Discussions about the book will go on as the book is read and when it is finished. Another thread will be created so that club members can post their review and give a rating on the current book.

    All fans of the Literary Bond are eligible for membership. All you need to do to sign up is register on the CBn Forums (it’s free and only takes a minute) and then post your name in the sign up thread.

    The Book Club’s 31st Book

    We are progressing though the James Bond 007 novels in chronological order, since quite a number of members are using the club as an opportunity to read the books for the very first time.
    After moving through the Bond novels by Ian Fleming, Kingsley Amis and John Gardner, the club most recently embarked upon the Raymond Benson Bond era and now continues with his second novel: 1998’s The Facts of Death.

    Obtaining The Book

    Ordering online should be fairly easy. The Facts of Death can be ordered online (although in used condition) from the following sources:

    Discuss other places to buy The Facts of Death or where you got your copy in this thread.

    Discuss The Book While Reading

    Want to talk about the book while reading it? Post a new thread in The Blades Library.

    Review And Rate The Book

    After you have finished reading The Facts of Death, you can discuss it with other club members in The Blades Library, and give the book your personal rating out of five in this thread.

    If you have any questions or suggestions just post them in a new thread. Happy reading.

    *New* Archive Of All Past Read Books

    Additionally, club members can review or comment on any of the past read books in the club any time they want. Click here for the full archive of the past read books in the club.

    Previous Books Read