CommanderBond.net
  1. XM Radio Celebrates James Bond On Sonic Theatre

    By Devin Zydel on 2008-06-04

    XM Satellite Radio is getting into the Ian Fleming centenary celebrations with the serialisation of two James Bond novels this month.

    Sonic Theatre and Blackstone Audio together present the serialisation of Fleming’s Casino Royale and Live and Let Die.

    Casino Royale will air from 28 May to 12 June at 1:00am and 9:00am ET. Live and Let Die is scheduled to air from 13 June through 3 July on channel 163.

    Both 007 serializations will be narrated by veteran English actor, Simon Vance. So grab a martini and tune into Sonic Theatre for Bond, James Bond.

    For further details, visit the official XM Radio website.

    Stay tuned to the CommanderBond.net main page for all the latest news from the world of James Bond.

  2. Young Bond And IFP Websites Revamped

    By Matt Weston on 2008-06-04

    Amid the excitement of the Ian Fleming Centenary celebrations, a couple of literary snippets may have slipped under the radar of James Bond fans.

    Firstly, the official website for Ian Fleming Publications has been given a makeover. There, you can find information on all things literary 007, updated to cover the latest Bond releases, including Sebastian Faulks’ Devil May Care and Samantha Weinberg’s The Moneypenny Diaries: Final Fling.

    The site also features links to a range of excellent literary 007 articles from around the web.

    Meanwhile, youngbond.com has also received a drastic overhaul. All of the old site’s features remain (including extracts and character art from each of Charlie Higson’s books), while the Young Bond Dossier‘s newsfeed has now been fully integrated into the site.

    Fans can also catch a sneak peek at the prototype artwork for the US edition of Hurricane Gold, due for release next year. Simply click on “US fans” in the top-right corner to catch a glimpse. Once again, it features spectacular artwork by Kev Walker.

    Keep watching CommanderBond.net for the latest literary James Bond news.

  3. 'Devil May Care' Is Penguin's All Time High

    By Matt Weston on 2008-06-04

    James Bond fans have lapped up the return of Ian Fleming’s legendary spy, reports guardian.co.uk. Released last week, Devil May Care by Sebastian Faulks has become Penguin’s fastest selling hardback fiction title of all time.

    Devil May Care cover

    Devil May Care cover

    The site reports that 44,093 copies were sold in the first four days of the book’s release. Waterstone’s alone sold over 19,000 copies, with the chain’s exclusive £100 special edition selling out on the morning of its release. Fans queued outside the chain’s Piccadilly branch from 4:30pm the day beforehand.

    The book continues to sit comfortably at #1 on Amazon.co.uk.

    Furthermore, the Bentley Special Edition sold out within two hours – no mean feat for a £750 book.

    “We are absolutely delighted with the figures so far,” said Joanna Prior, Penguin’s director of marketing and publicity.

    Prior revealed Devil May Care will be released in a paperback edition next year.

    Devil May Care poster

    Over 1,000 Devil May Care posters were displayed at London Underground and National Rail stations

    The figures come in after an epic marketing campaign from Penguin timed to coincide with the centenary of Ian Fleming’s birth.

    The Bookseller’s Joel Rickett said that while some of the novel’s success can be attributed to the hit film adaptation of Ian Fleming’s Casino Royale, Devil May Care was still the subject of a one-of-a-kind marketing push.

    “[The success of Casino Royale] doesn’t discount from what has been an absolutely brilliant piece of publishing in terms of awareness and agitation. Sebastian Faulks was clearly an inspired choice, as someone possessed of the requisite dryness, humour and narrative drive, but who wouldn’t take the task too seriously.”

    guardian.co.uk notes that only publishing phenomena (such as JK Rowling) and genre authors with large, loyal fanbases (such as Terry Pratchett and Martina Cole) come close to such figures. For a literary author like Faulks, they’re unheard of; sales of Faulks’ non-Bond title Engleby are also said to have risen.

    The success of Devil May Care augers well for the series continuing, although not with Faulks. Prior says, “Sebastian Faulks made it clear that this would be a one-off project, and our current agreement with 4th Estate was for this project only.”

    A continuation of the James Bond series by another author has not been ruled out.

    Keep watching CommanderBond.net for all the latest Devil May Care news – including a wrap-up of the critical reaction to the novel.

  4. 'Ian Fleming's Secret War' Declassified

    By Devin Zydel on 2008-06-03

    Following up the revealing of the cover artwork a few days ago, CommanderBond.net can now report what will be found on the pages of Craig Cabell’s upcoming book, Ian Fleming’s Secret War.

    As earlier suspected, the book will center on the activities of the James Bond creator and his role with the 30AU (30 Assault Unit)–a unit he set up during World War II in 1942, while he served as the personal assistant to the director of naval intelligence. It’s goal was to undertake top secret intelligence-gathering missions, going in before Allied troops to make sure vital information was not destroyed.

    In an article published earlier this year, Cabell stated that the unit served as inspiration to the ultimate creation of 007. He specified one particular soldier, Patrick Dalzel-Job, who, it is rumoured, ‘was a crack shot, could navigate a mini-submarine, could ski backwards and had a compass concealed in his button.’

    Ian Fleming’s Secret War

    While his extravagant and glamorous lifestyle is well known, little has been published concerning Ian Fleming’s contribution during the Second World War.

    In the very early days of the War, Fleming was earmarked by the Director ofNaval Intelligence as his ‘right hand man’. From the outset he was in the centre of events, meeting with key political and military figures as well as those of exceptional intelligence, experience and courage. All this was to give him invaluable background when he came to write the Bond novels.

    The author has uncovered through official documentation, private papers and contacts the depth of Fleming’s work in Naval Intelligence. Fascinating insights of those he worked with and details of covert trips to Europe and North Africa emerge.

    Fleming was closely associated with 30 Assault Unit, a crack team of Commandos who took the fight to the enemy. The book reveals both the history of 30 AU and Fleming’s role.

    Ian Fleming’s Secret War is due for release on 18 August 2008. The 224-page hardback, published by Pen & Sword Military, can currently be pre-ordered online:

    Keep watching CBn for all the latest literary James Bond news and coverage. To keep track of all the upcoming 007 releases, events, television shows, and more–just keep your eyes on the CBn Calendar, located on the right panel of our main page.

  5. Literary 007 Reviewed: Ian Fleming's 'Goldfinger'

    By Devin Zydel on 2008-06-03
    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 seventh James Bond adventure, 1959’s Goldfinger.

    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 Goldfinger back in February 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 Goldfinger, simply click here.

    Literary 007 Reviewed:
    Goldfinger

    Ian Fleming's 'Goldfinger'

    Ian Fleming’s Goldfinger

    ‘Goldfinger’ reviewed by… MystikTK

    This is most certainly a very under-rated Fleming outing. It’s a fairly light read compared to some of his other work, but very enjoyable and a real page-turner. I remember reading it for the time when I was about 13 and not being able to put it down. Like all Fleming books that I read around that time (which, actually was all Fleming books), I remember getting in trouble many times for reading during class.

    ‘Goldfinger’ reviewed by… Thunderbird

    My first Bond book was Goldfinger when I was about 14, and I re-read it about 3 times before I read my next one, From Russia with Love. In fact those two never quite made it back to the school library as I recall. *Blush*

    I think then I read Thunderball, followed by John Pearson’s ‘authorised biography’ of 007, which read, to me, very much like Fleming.

    By then I’d seen quite a few Bond films (the Roger Moore films were still being made then, shows how old I am!) and in fact Casino Royale I read quite late on.

    I didn’t know then how much of a fan I would become, and if I could do it again I would probably read them in order. Imagine that! All the Flemings stretching out in front of you, unread… drool.

    They’re all pretty easy reading, and you can finish most in a day or so. The ‘Fleming Sweep,’ at work, you see…

    ‘Goldfinger’ reviewed by… Double-O Eleven

    It has always been a point of irony for me that my favorite James Bond film, Goldfinger, is adapted from one of my least favorite of the Fleming novels. The irony increases because Goldfinger was the first James Bond novel I read. I might have read no further had a friend not recommended Doctor No and addicted me to Fleming for good–for which I will always thank him.

    I returned to Goldfinger to re-read it less than a year after the first time. I liked it much more because I had a better understanding of Fleming’s strengths after having read all the other books. The nuances of characterization and the internalized stream-of-consciousness for Bond were much more apparent and effective. However, I still placed the book near the bottom of my list of the Fleming novels, beaten out only by Diamonds are Forever and The Man with the Golden Gun.

    Time hasn’t improved the novel significantly for me. Reading over it again for the Blades Book Club brought back into focus many of the book’s problems. Now Goldfinger has to stand the light of my cultish admiration for the film and my own development as a writer, which makes the flaws in it all the more glaring apparent.

    In its pace, I find Goldfinger the slowest moving of all Fleming’s novels. Moonraker has a similar tripartite construction, but is far more engaging. Until its last third, Goldfinger moves so casually it feels like a country stroll, or a leisurely golf game. Most of the action consists of Bond thinking about problems and courses of action, pondering possibilities, and going off on tangents. Getting to know Bond in this way is one of the books better aspects, which I’ll talk about below, but it has a lethal effect on pacing.

    Compounding the pacing is the way the book keeps drawing the reader’s attention to it illogical story. The plot problems are immense. The coincidence that Bond randomly encounters Goldfinger while in Miami, and then immediately afterwards receives an assignment from M to investigate him, is a tough one to accept. Twice is indeed coincidence: a bit too much or one! Even more outrageous is that after M learns that 007 has crossed swords with Goldfinger, he still sends the agent on the assignment to investigate the man. Why in the world would M think to send an agent whom Goldfinger already knows and has good reason to hate? It’s ludicrous. And why does Bond let Jill Masterson go back to working for Goldfinger after she helped Bond wreck his cheating ploy? He should have taken her back with him to England and as far away from her psychotic employer as possible.

    Of course, the largest logic lacuna (or L.L.L.) in the novel–one that everyone points out–is Goldfinger’s amazingly stupid idea to keep Bond alive right at the last minute before a buzzsaw dissects him. If the villain had bothered to make a single phone call to his masters at SMERSH he would have discovered who Bond was and summarily iced him. Goldfinger does eventually make that call to Moscow, but only after operation Grand Slam has fallen apart! (I’m trying to imagine this phone conversation: “Auric, you really should bring up possible security breeches with us as they happen, okay? Just an FYI. So, when’s that gold coming in?”) Goldfinger’s excuse for keeping alive both Bond (who just tried to strangle him to death) and Tilly (who brought a rifle to shoot him) is limp: he needs two people to take notes for him. So, we are supposed to believe that this mad genius, who has planned rigorously for five years to execute this “crime de la crime,” somehow overlooked the need for some clerical work? Couldn’t he have at least gone to a temp agency? They cost less and killing them won’t draw immediate attention. Keeping tabs on Bond and Tilly causes a serious waste of manpower. There are certainly better things Oddjob could do with him time than keeping Bond in line. I would prefer that my killer bodyguard keep a watchful eye on the not-too-bright gangsters with interpersonal grudges whom I’ve hired, frankly.

    You also have to hand it to the CIA for arranging for a whole town to lie around playing dead for a few hours. It’s a good thing Goldfinger didn’t think to do a check on one of the bodies, or the ambush never would have happened. And the CIA still lets him slip out from their fingers and then set up an operation inside a major U.S. aiport! D’oh! And why does Tilly hang around when she doesn’t serve any purpose once she fails in her assassination technique? Why does Pussy Galore, famed criminal, just abruptly switch sides?

    Goldfinger turns into a litany of “whys?” Amazingly, the film solved almost all these problems in easy ways, and it’s astonishing that Fleming didn’t come up with some better fixes for a the obvious ones himself. Bond doesn’t meet Goldfinger accidentally in Miami; M sent him there a’ purpose. Goldfinger knows whom Bond is, but keeps him alive so to allay his superiors’ suspicions. Tilly gets killed at the factory and thus doesn’t hang around after she no longer serves any story function. Bond’s interaction with Pussy Galore is increased to not only make her a better character, but give her betrayal of Goldfinger a stronger basis. The robbery actually gets down inside Fort Knox instead of merely getting near it. Goldfinger gets Oddjob’s death and Oddjob gets an ‘electrifying’ new one at the vault, which gives him more to do than he ever receives in the book. (Admittedly, the film comes up with a completely new plot hole with the gangsters, since Goldfinger has no reason to explain his plan to them and then kill him after he obtains his shipments of the nerve gas. But it does show us that Delta Nine is lethal.)

    This could stylistically be called Ian Fleming’s attempt to write his own version of a Raymond Chandler novel. Chandler’s Philip Marlowe books emphasis characterization, in particular the stream-of-consciousness of its first-person detective, over plot. Chandler’s plots are sometimes near incomprehensible and riddled with problems. Goldfinger isn’t written in first-person, but it sometimes seems as if it were meant to be. The reader has a direct link to James Bond’s mind and gets quite an earful from the agent’s thoughts. One excellent example is Bond musing about the girl (Tillly, we later find out) driving the Triumph who passes him on the road during his tailing of Goldfinger. In the middle of an important assignment, he can’t help letting his mind drift to a pretty girl behind the wheel. Much of what we know about Bond’s personality comes from this book’s look into his head, and Goldfinger is real “quality” time spent with the agent.

    And then there’s Auric Goldfinger himself. He makes some weird decisions, but he’s nonetheless one of Fleming’s best villains. He gets a huge amount of time “on stage,” much more than any other adversary in the series, and he’s a delightful grotesque. When Bond at last “goes berserk” on the plane and throttles the man to death, you definitely understand how he’s feels. This pompous, murderous, greedy psycho deserves any kind of punishment you might want to heap on him. To Goldfinger’s mind made of money and numbers, human lives are nothing more than annoying statistics, and death is another way of doing business. His plan may be an outrageous fantasy (and the movie Bond politely explained why it is impossible), but there is a realistic personality deep within the caricature: a corporate avarice we’ve all encountered before.

    Oddjob: Another wonderful Fleming flight of fancy, and the quintessential killer henchman of adventure literature. The buzzsaw-bladed bowler-hatted baddie anticipated the western fascination with martial arts more than a decade before the first kung-fu film frenzy (if you’ll pardon my skaldic obsession with alliteration). The only flaw in the character–aside from some unpleasant racism in Bond’s attitude toward him–is that he doesn’t have nearly enough to do. The movie skews perspective on this, however, since Oddjob vs. 007 in Fort Knox remains one of cinema’s great fights, and the book has no equivalent.

    Goldfinger will always be one of Fleming’s most important books, since it inspired the film that sent the James Bond phenomenon into the stratosphere. The author’s characteristic style remains strong, something I can’t say for The Man with the Golden Gun. But I still count it as one of Fleming’s few failures, a poorly paced and plotted Chandler-esque exercise that always leaves me feeling a bit underwhelmed when I read it.

    ‘Goldfinger’ reviewed by… DLibrasnow

    I’ve always really liked the book Goldfinger. I read the book many, many years before I saw the movie so I came to it with a completely open mind. I seem to be against the majority in considering one of the best Flemings, I particularly enjoy all the golf in it.

    Always a fun read.

    5 stars.

    ‘Goldfinger’ reviewed by… Qwerty

    I just never really got into Ian Fleming’s seventh, Goldfinger. As I had seen the film first many, many times, I expected the novel to be one of the best as well. Truth be told, it’s a bit of a letdown really. The best part of the book is probably the opening. We are treated to an interesting introduction of our lead villain. The ‘Mr. Bomb’ touch is nice when meeting James Bond is also a nice touch. Similar highlights include the card cheating sequence as well as the golf match. After Bond later meets Oddjob though, the story just seems to run out of steam.

    Fleming seems to be jumpy and sketchy in his plotting and further descriptions compared with past Bond novels. I wish Pussy Galore would have had much more time in the storyline. Never found Tilly to be an entirely convincing character.

    Still, we get that great line: “Once is happenstance. Twice is coincidence. The third time is enemy action.”

    Definitely required reading for 007 fans, but Fleming has written much better. A case of the film actually improving upon the original plot of the novel.

    ‘Goldfinger’ reviewed by… B007GLE

    4 stars but I may be overly generous.

    When you get down to it it is no where near as good as Live and Let Die, Moonraker, From Russia with Love or Doctor No. It is however, in my honest opinion, better than Casino Royale or Diamonds are Forever.

    The main problem is that the film version is so far superior that the book feels “sickly” compared to it.

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

  6. 'Writing Bond' Discussion At The Imperial War Museum

    By Devin Zydel on 2008-06-02

    One of the many public events that will be going on at the ‘For Your Eyes Only: Ian Fleming and James Bond’ exhibition at London’s Imperial War Museum is coming up soon.

    Taking place on Tuesday, 10 June is the ‘Writing Bond’ discussion. Author and journalist Ben Macintyre (who penned the recently released companion book to the exhibit, For Your Eyes Only: Ian Fleming and James Bond) will chair a panel of authors looking at how they each took on the legend of Ian Fleming’s James Bond and made it their own.

    The panel will include Samantha Weinberg, author of The Moneypenny Diaries trilogy; Charlie Higson, author of the Young Bond novels; Fleming’s biographer Andrew Lycett and Fleming’s niece Kate Grimond.

    The ‘Writing Bond’ discussion will take place at 7:00pm. Tickets to the event cost £15.

    To purchase tickets or for further information, phone 020 7416 5439, email [email protected] or visit the official website.

    Stay tuned to CommanderBond.net for all the latest details and coverage on all the Ian Fleming centenary events and James Bond-related releases.

  7. 'The Young Bond Collection' At Borders

    By Devin Zydel on 2008-06-02

    As if there weren’t enough recent literary James Bond releases to spend your money on, the Young Bond Dossier alerts today of yet another one.

    Available exclusively at Borders bookstores in the UK is ‘The Young Bond Collection’ which is comprised of Charlie Higson’s first three novels in the series: SilverFin, Blood Fever and Double or Die.

    Each of the books are signed by Higson and numbered–there are only 1,000 copies of the limited edition set available.

    What makes this Young Bond set interesting for collector’s is that each of the three books included differ slightly from the original UK paperbacks in that they are clearly labeled as ‘2008 Limited Editions’.

    Furthemore, another extract from the upcoming SilverFin graphic novel is included in this set (differing from the one that can currently be found in the Hurricane Gold paperback).

    Start hunting.

    Stay tuned to the CommanderBond.net main page for all the latest Young Bond coverage.

  8. Pre-order 'James Bond: The Secret World Of 007'

    By Devin Zydel on 2008-06-01

    The upcoming reprinted edition of James Bond: The Secret World of 007 by DK Publishing and Alastair Dougall is now available to pre-order at both Amazon.co.uk and Amazon.com.

    The book was last reprinted in 2006 for the release of Casino Royale and with Daniel Craig’s second James Bond film, Quantum of Solace due out this October, it seems another update is in store.

    The official blurb follows:

    Bond is back – new edition of this thrill-packed dossier on the world’s most famous spy. Become an expert on the extraordinary career of 007 and get the inside scoop on his missions, from defeating the power-mad schemes of Dr. No to the mysteries of Casino Royale and go behind the scenes of his latest movie, Quantum of Solace through unseen photography. Starting with a foreword penned by M herself, uncover the world of Bond, the world’s most famous secret agent. Spectacular photographs reveal the secrets of many of Bond’s amazing gadgets, racy vehicles and racier eye-candy. Explore the lairs of the supervillains he has defeated and follow bullet-by-blow accounts of some of his most death-defying chases and battles. Investigate 007’s distinctive style, his complicated love life and relationships with other members of M16 from M to Q and Miss Moneypenny. It’s a thrill-a-page 007 adventure.

    James Bond: The Secret World of 007 is scheduled for release on 1 October 2008 in the UK and 20 October in the US.

    Pre-order online:

    We’ll keep you updated as further information develops.

    Keep watching CommanderBond.net for all the latest literary James Bond news and coverage. To keep track of all the upcoming 007 releases, events, television shows, and more–just keep your eyes on the CBn Calendar, located on the right panel of our main page.

  9. Cover Art For 'Ian Fleming's Secret War'

    By Devin Zydel on 2008-05-31

    Back in March, CommanderBond.net first announced that yet another title would be added to an already crowded list of James Bond book releases this year. Now the cover artwork for that book–Craig Cabell’s Ian Fleming’s Secret War–has been revealed online at Amazon.co.uk.

    Specific details related to this forthcoming book remain slim and while there is still no official blurb, CBn earlier made some educated guesses for what to expect:

    A recent Worthing Herald article noted that Cabell was then currently working on two books–one related to James Bond and the other on 30AU.

    30AU, or 30 Assault Unit, was a unit set up by Fleming during World War II in 1942, when he was the personal assistant to the director of naval intelligence. It’s goal was to undertake top secret intelligence-gathering missions, going in before Allied troops to make sure vital information was not destroyed.

    Cabell stated that the unit served as inspiration to the ultimate creation of 007. He specified one particular soldier, Patrick Dalzel-Job, who, it is rumoured, ‘was a crack shot, could navigate a mini-submarine, could ski backwards and had a compass concealed in his button.’

    Ian Fleming’s Secret War is due for release on 18 August 2008. The 224-page hardback, published by Pen & Sword Military, can currently be pre-ordered online:

    Keep watching CBn for all the latest literary James Bond news and coverage. To keep track of all the upcoming 007 releases, events, television shows, and more–just keep your eyes on the CBn Calendar, located on the right panel of our main page.

  10. Pre-order Sir Sean Connery's 'Being A Scot'

    By Devin Zydel on 2008-05-30

    Following up earlier reports that Sir Sean Connery had planned to release his autobiography/memoirs in time for his birthday in August, fans can now pre-order Being A Scot from Amazon.co.uk (where the cover artwork can now be viewed).

    Mixing a ‘frank account of Connery’s life with an esoteric take on Scotland’s history and culture,’ the 312-page long book will feature more than 400 photograghs from his personal collection.

    Included are details on his childhood in a gaslit Fountainbridge tenement, learning golf from co-star Gert Frobe during the shooting of the third James Bond film, Goldfinger, and weekending with Billy Connolly, ‘the funniest man alive’.

    Being A Scot will be published by Weidenfeld & Nicolson and is due for release on 21 August 2008. A paperback edition by Phoenix will follow on 6 August of 2009.

    The official blurb follows:

    “My first big break came when I was five years old. It’s taken me more than seventy years to realise that. You see, at five I first learnt to read. It’s that simple and it’s that profound. I left school at thirteen. I didn’t have a formal education… It has been a long return journey from my two-room Fountainbridge home in the smoky industrial end of Edinburgh opposite the McCowans’ toffee factory. There was no bathroom with a communal toilet outside. For years we had only gas lighting. Sometimes the light in the shared stairway would be out after some desperado had broken the mantle to bubble gas through milk for kicks.” Although he is an indubitably international superstar, Sir Sean Connery still knows the city of Edinburgh practically street by street from delivering the morning milk as a schoolboy. His round included Fettes College, where Ian Fleming had sent his fictional James Bond after he was expelled from Eton. Being A Scot is a vivid and highly personal portrait of Scotland and its achievements, which is self-revelatory whilst full of Sir Sean’s desire to shine light upon Scottish success and heroic failure.His personal quest with his friend and co-writer Murray Grigor has been to seek answers to some perplexing questions.

    How did Scots come to devise so many new sports and games, or raise others to new heights? What gave fire to the Gothic tendency in Scottish literature? Why have so many creatively inventive and influential architects been Scots? Where did Scotland’s unreal blend of psychotic humour originate? And what about the national tradition of self-deprecation sometimes called the Scottish cringe? Sean Connery offers a correction to misconceptions that many believe are part of the historical record whilst revealing as never before his own vibrant personal history.

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