CommanderBond.net
  1. "One tribute, one centenary, one book."

    By Matt Weston on 2008-05-27

    On the eve of the publication of the literary event of the year – Devil May Care – author Sebastian Faulks has ruled out writing a second James Bond novel.

    Sebastian Faulks

    Speaking to the Associated Press, Faulks said: “One tribute, one centenary, one book.”

    Should Faulks stay true to his word, he’ll join the likes of Kingsley Amis and John Pearson, who each penned a single 007 adventure.

    Faulks was quoted as the first seven copies of Devil May Care made their way to Waterstone’s Piccadilly as part of a lavish publishing event.

    Ian Fleming’s niece, Lucy said, “I can remember Uncle Ian’s books being delivered wrapped in brown paper and string by a postman on a bicycle. The Royal Navy has upped the ante a little.”

    The navy loaned the HMS Exeter and its 250-strong crew for the extravagant launch.

    Devil May Care cover

    Devil May Care cover

    “We didn’t want a thriller writer,” said Lucy Fleming on choosing the centenary novelist. “We wanted someone who would read Ian’s books and see how he did it … [Faulks] has thought himself into Ian’s mind.”

    Faulks told Reuters: “I found writing this light-hearted book more thrilling than I had expected. I hope people will enjoy reading it and that Ian Fleming would consider it to be in the cavalier spirit of his own novels and therefore an acceptable addition to the line.”

    After much hype, Devil May Care will be published worldwide tomorrow.

  2. Turning James Bond Into A Technical Exercise

    By Devin Zydel on 2008-05-27

    Sebastian Faulks

    The BBC News carries a new article centering on how Sebastian Faulks followed Ian Fleming’s footsteps in his approach to writing Devil May Care.

    As the British novelist has stated several times before, he was initially intrigued by the direction the Fleming family and Ian Fleming Publications (IFP) wanted to take with this new James Bond novel.

    ‘What Ian Fleming’s family wanted was a centenary book,’ he said. ‘They didn’t want a conventional thriller writer. They wanted to cast against type.’

    ‘My last book [2005’s Human Traces] was a 650-page novel about psychiatry, set in a lunatic asylum. It was quite a weird choice, but I think a good choice.’

    I viewed the whole thing as a technical exercise,” he says. “I wrote the whole thing in six weeks.

    I tried to go inside Bond’s head,’ Faulks revealed, ‘to create an inner life for him, and I realised he didn’t have one.’

    ‘There were bedroom scenes where I thought it might help to show him being reflective, but it was like being in the bedroom with a stranger. It was very embarrassing.’

    Ian Fleming

    Ian Fleming

    While the plot elements of Devil May Care remain relatively underwraps (some snippets have shined the light on a bit of what can be expected), Faulks did say that he chose the Middle East as one of the novel’s locations because it hadn’t previously appeared in a Fleming Bond novel.

    ‘Fleming was very forthright in his prejudices–anything between Marseilles and Delhi was viewed with great suspicion. I was very happy to tread in territory he chose to avoid.’

    ‘The focus is on an individual bad guy but there are political ramifications,’ he added.

    And while Faulks is ‘writing as’ Fleming, there are some differences that will set his story apart. ‘I had written about him eating breakfast washed down with spirits, but it was giving me indigestion. So I have compelled him to drink wine.’

    Humour will also play a role. ‘I wanted to be witty without being arch,’ Faulks explained.

    ‘When situations presented themselves, I wanted to be able to make people laugh. But I didn’t want the humour to be groan-worthy.’

    Devil May Care is released tomorrow.

    For a full round-up of the numerous events going on this week to mark the Ian Fleming centenary and the release of Devil May Care, visit CommanderBond.net’s Literary 007 section.

    Stay tuned to the CBn main page for complete coverage of Devil May Care.

  3. On The Eve Of 'Devil May Care'

    By Devin Zydel on 2008-05-27

    On the eve of publication, Sebastian Faulks’ Devil May Care has arrived in London. The first seven copies of the centenary James Bond novel have been delivered to Waterstone’s Piccadilly with the help of the Royal Navy and Bentley Motors…

    Devil May Care poster

    Devil May Care poster

    Devil May Care, the new James Bond book by Sebastian Faulks, is delivered on the eve of publication with help from the Royal Navy and Bentley Motors

    On Tuesday 27th May 2008, the first seven copies of Devil May Care, the brand new James Bond book written by Sebastian Faulks, will be delivered with the assistance of the Royal Navy and Bentley Motors to Waterstone’s Piccadilly in London.

    Details of the plot of Devil May Care have been kept under wraps since the book was announced in July 2007 to great excitement.

    Tuuli Shipster, the model featured on the front cover of the book, will be delivering these exclusive first 007 copies from the printers by hand, under a full military escort care of the Royal Navy. The books will be secured in a specially commissioned Samsonite case, and Tuuli will accompany the case as it is brought down the Thames by a Royal Navy ‘Pacific 24’ sea-boat – under the watchful eye of the Royal Navy Black Cat Lynx helicopters. They will rendezvous with HMS Exeter, which will be moored in the Pool of London. Here Tuuli and the books will be received on board by the Captain of HMS Exeter, the book’s author Sebastian Faulks and members of the Fleming family. The final stage of the journey sees the books taken to Waterstone’s Piccadilly in a cavalcade of Bentleys, including a custom-built 1950’s S 1 continental convertible.

    James Bond has always been defined by his Royal Navy training. He served on HMS Exeter as Intelligence Officer, finally holding the rank of Commander in the Service. Ian Fleming, the author of the original books, was the personal assistant to the Director of Naval Intelligence during World War II – and drew much of the inspiration for his novels from his experiences at the Admiralty. He remained in this role throughout the war, privy to many secrets and rising to the rank of Commander. Cars and Bond have always had a strong association and his personal preference in the original Fleming novels was for Bentley. Over the course of the fourteen books he owned three and in Devil May Care he is found once again behind the wheel of his much loved Bentley. To mark to occasion Bentley Motors have designed an exclusive limited edition of Devil May Care.

    HMS Exeter is a Type 42 Destroyer now over 30 years old and a veteran of the Falklands Campaign of 1982. She is the fifth ship to hold the name Exeter and one of 11 Type 42s remaining in service in the Royal Navy. These destroyers will be replaced by the technologically advanced and state of the art Type 45s, the first of which, HMS DARING, is currently undergoing her sea trials. HMS Exeter is currently in London on an informal visit, during which the Ship’s Company will take part in the high profile ‘Constable of the Dues’ ceremony at the Tower of London as well as hosting the Devil May Care launch.

    On the evening of Tuesday 27th, Penguin hosts a glamorous launch party for Devil May Care at the exclusive private members’ club, FIFTY on St James’s Street in Mayfair. The party will be attended by Sebastian Faulks, members of the Fleming family, celebrity VIPs and many more. Savile Row tailors Gieves & Hawkes have dressed Sebastian Faulks for the night, as they dressed Ian Fleming in his day. Sebastian will be wearing a classic charcoal wool/cashmere worsted two piece single breasted suit.

    Devil May Care is published by Penguin the following day, Wednesday 28th May, which is the centenary of the birth of Ian Fleming. Devil May Care will go on sale that day for the first time and Waterstone’s Piccadilly will be opening at the earlier time of 8am.

    For further information please go to www.penguin007.com.

    For a full round-up of the numerous events going on this week to mark the Ian Fleming centenary and the release of Devil May Care, visit CommanderBond.net’s Literary 007 section.

    Stay tuned to the CBn main page for complete coverage of Devil May Care.

  4. Samantha Weinberg Book Signing At The 'Bond Bound' Exhibition

    By Matt Weston on 2008-05-27

    007 Magazine reports that Samantha Weinberg will appear at the Bond Bound: Ian Fleming And The Art Of Cover Design exhibition on 11 June. The author will be signing copies of her brand new novel, The Moneypenny Diaries: Final Fling.

    'The Moneypenny Diaries: Final Fling'

    The Moneypenny Diaries: Final Fling

    To attend, or to reserve a signed copy of the book, contact The Fleming Collection:

    13 Berkeley Street
    London W1J 8DU
    Tel: 020 7409 5730
    Fax: 020 7409 5601

    The Moneypenny Diaries: Final Fling, published earlier this month, concludes the adventures of James Bond’s right-hand woman, which began in The Moneypenny Diaries: Guardian Angel and The Moneypenny Diaries: Secret Servant.

    The news comes two weeks after Weinberg attended Calcot Manor’s Meet-The-Author lunch in the Cotswolds.

    Meanwhile, 007 Magazine also reports that UK grocery store Tesco is now offering the 14-book Penguin 007 Collection (containing all of Ian Fleming’s Bond novels) in-store for a mere £15. The set contains the paperback editions of Fleming’s novels featuring cover art by Richie Fahey.

    The chain is also carrying copies of The James Bond Encyclopaedia by John Cork and Collin Stutz for only £10.

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

  5. Second Devil May Care Extract Online

    By Kevin Wells on 2008-05-26

    WARNING: Spoilers

    A second extract from Sebastian Faulks’ James Bond novel Devil May Care has been published in the Times. The extract this time takes place in Paris, France in Bond’s hotel where he encounters a girl for the second time in the book. The girl has come to see Bond after being referred to him by Felix Leiter. Her sister, Poppy, is said to be working for Dr. Julius Gorner against her will and she wants Bond to rescue her.

    The first extract was published by the Times last Friday.

    Devil May Care hits bookshelves Wednesday 28 May. Keep watching CommanderBond.net for the latest news in the lead-up to the Ian Fleming Centenary and the release of Sebastian Faulks’ novel.

  6. The Literary 007 Lives On

    By Devin Zydel on 2008-05-25

    A recent article posted on The Times website has confirmed what Young Bond author Charlie Higson revealed late last year: expect more adult James Bond novels in the future.

    This update comes just as the literary 007 celebrations of 2008–Ian Fleming’s centenary and the endless events associated with it–are kicking into gear.

    The literary James Bond has been moving along quite nicely with the recent Young Bond and Moneypenny Diaries series by Higson and Samantha Weinberg, respectively, but 2008 raises the bar another level with an unprecedented number of Bond-related releases. Such titles include Sebastian Faulks’ centenary novel Devil May Care, Weinberg’s The Moneypenny Diaries: Final Fling in the UK (her first novel in the trilogy also debuted in the US) and Higson’s Hurricane Gold paperback in the UK and the forthcoming By Royal Command.

    Not to mention the upcoming reprints of all fourteen Ian Fleming Bond novels in new hardbacks, the Quantum of Solace short story collection and the author’s non-Bond children’s classic, Chitty Chitty Bang Bang. The Diamond Smugglers and Thrilling Cities are also scheduled to be republished at a later date.

    ‘We concentrate on keeping Ian’s books going,’ said Corinne Turner, managing director of Ian Fleming Publications (IFP). ‘They’re the jewel in our crown, though it’s also our aim to expand the brand with other books.’

    Talking specifically about getting Faulks to pen the latest adult Bond adventure–the first of its kind since Raymond Benson’s The Man with the Red Tattoo in 2002, Turner could only heap on the praise. ‘I read Sebastian Faulks’s On Green Dolphin Street and loved it,’ she said. ‘I thought then that he’d be quite interesting. When it was revealed that we’d brought in an author, but weren’t saying who it was, everyone assumed it was Martin Amis, or somebody in the thriller genre, but we wanted to do something that was completely different. I never imagined we could attract somebody like Sebastian.’

    With Devil May Care due out this Wednesday, many fans are wondering about what will eventually follow that. ‘We have a number of projects in mind,’ Turner said. ‘Nothing concrete to talk about at the moment, but there will be some more novels in the future.’

    Keep watching the CommanderBond.net main page 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.

  7. Details Emerge On Second Edition Of 'The Battle For Bond'

    By Kevin Wells on 2008-05-25

    Details have emerged about the second edition of Robert Sellers The Battle For Bond that was banned early this year for allegedly using copyrighted material owned by the Fleming Trust. Due to the banning, interest and demand in the book sharply rose paving the way for its publisher Tomahawk Press to release a second edition with the offending material removed.

    In the UK the second edition will hit bookstores on 23 June and will include a brand new foreword, this time from author Len Deighton who played a role in attempting to get a McClory Bond script off the ground in the 70s with Sean Connery. The first edition’s foreword was written by Raymond Benson. This more affordable edition will also have 44 less pages than its predecessor, mostly due to having a reduced number of images.

    The cover art for the second edition is pretty much the same except with the acknowledgment of the foreword by Deighton instead of Benson and now a red strip in the upper right hand corner that says “The Book They Tried To Ban”.

    The second edition of The Battle For Bond is due for release on 23 June and can be pre-ordered online:

  8. Sebastian Faulks Discusses 'Devil May Care'

    By Devin Zydel on 2008-05-25

    In less than three days, the literary James Bond will be making a monumental return in Sebastian Faulks’ novel for the Ian Fleming centenary: Devil May Care.

    Since the original announcement of the title in July of last year, details on the novel have remained a closely-guarded secret. Faulks himself recently stated he could tell fans next to nothing about the plot elements.

    That has now changed thanks to an indepth interview with the author in The Times.

    An Intriguing Proposal

    Sebastian Faulks

    Meeting with reporter Peter Kemp at publisher Penguin’s offices near the Thames in the UK, Faulks discusses everything from the initial invitation to write a 007 novel, following Fleming’s style, the writing process, the future of the literary Bond and much more.

    Starting things off, Faulks mentions how he was initially amazed and intrigued by the proposal to write a Bond novel. ‘I don’t think it’s very likely,’ was his first reply at the time. ‘It sounds great fun, and I did love the films, but it’s years since I read the books and I don’t imagine they’re much cop, really–though I loved them when I was 12 or 13.’

    However, he did agree to examine Fleming’s originals once again and after doing so ‘more or less straightaway I found I enjoyed them. They seemed to me to do that key thing a thriller needs to do, which is to give you a sense of real and present danger. James Bond is a very vulnerable man, with his nice suit and soft shoes and ludicrously underpowered gun. He finds himself in terrible situations, and he’s all on his own–you just worry for his safety.’

    His chronological examination of Fleming’s novels showed that there were two types of Bond adventures: ‘the crime-busting books, in which Bond is really just a superior sort of policeman, sent to break up smuggling rings and that kind of thing’. While admiring their ‘very fast pace’, Faulks laments that they ‘don’t have that creepy, sinister threat of some sort of imminent nuclear holocaust or war’–something that his personal favourite, 1955’s Moonraker, as well as others, perfectly exemplifies.

    Faulks eventually decided the task was worth a go at, but with the stipulation that the novel’s story remained in the period of Fleming’s original adventures. ‘It’s a homage,’ Faulks said. ‘It’s for a man’s centenary. If I have to crack it into the present, it just doesn’t work for me, and it looks opportunistic rather than affectionate.’

    Coming Up With The Story

    Coming up with a storyline was no easy challenge with Faulks feeling that ‘Fleming had pretty much exhausted the genre. The later books are pretty baroque. He seems completely fed up with the whole thing’.

    Devil May Care cover

    Devil May Care cover

    ‘The way I attacked it was trying to think of something the villain could do that wasn’t gold, wasn’t diamonds, wasn’t bird droppings–which is what Dr. No is incredibly into. And I thought, well, what about drugs? Because I’d already decided it was going to be a period piece. And I figured the last novel was set in 1965, and Bond was in a very bad way and needed time to get back on full form, so it had to be 1967.’

    ‘I thought, well, great–1967, the summer of love. I remember it. I was 14. And what was going on? Well, drugs. Drugs were first coming to public notice. The Stones were busted, and there was that famous leader in The Times. And, you know, what are we talking about now all the time? Drugs. It’s still very resonant. And there’s little about drug-dealing in Fleming. It’s not something he did in any depth.’

    One of the central locations featured in Devil May Care is the Middle East–resulting from the fact that it had never before been included in any of Fleming’s novels.

    The Fleming Touch

    'Devil May Care' US cover

    Devil May Care US cover

    Before actually beginning the writing process on Devil May Care, Faulks states that he came up with a checklist of the typical “Bondian” items one could expect to come across in a Fleming story–the Bentley, Morland cigarettes, the sea-island cotton shirts, the loafers, the shoulder-holster guns, the drink, the meals, the girls and more. With this list intact, he compiled a dossier to act as a guide of sorts.

    ‘I thought, “Let’s just take all the things that we like.” Felix Leiter’s a nice character, Bond’s Scottish “treasure”, May, Miss Moneypenny, M. The bits that I didn’t like were when it just gets too silly–the silly names. And some longueurs, actually, such as the first half of From Russia with Love, where it’s just too slow to get going, Fleming showing off his knowledge of the Russian secret service.’

    Another way in which the novel relates to Fleming’s originals is Faulks’ use of real-life encounters as a basis for characters in the story. In the case of Devil May Care, it’s the odd, distinguishing feature of the villain that was inspired by ‘schoolboy memories and his father’s talk of a throwback freakishness that afflicted a fellow undergraduate.’

    How To Write A Thriller

    As mentioned before, Faulks strictly adhered to the rules set out in a 1960 article by Fleming entitled How To Write A Thriller. According to Faulks, the general idea was that ‘you’ve got to do it all quickly. You give yourself six weeks. You write 2,000 words a day and that will give you the required length. Don’t stop. Don’t agonise. Don’t try to correct your prose as you go along. Don’t worry too much about the details. You can always revise them later and get it checked by experts.’

    Devil May Care poster

    Devil May Care poster

    Normally working from 10am to 6pm in an office on his novels, the Devil May Care schedule saw him arriving earlier than usual. ‘Apart from anything else, I was really enjoying it. I was very, very turned on by it.’

    One final question posed–and one on the minds of many Bond fans–is whether or not Faulks will be penning another 007 adventure. With the author currently planning to head back to work next month on a novel-in-progress centering on contemporary Britain, the answer at this stage seems to be unlikely.

    In the meantime however, there’s plenty to look forward to this Wednesday.

    Visit The Times for the complete interview with Sebastian Faulks.

    Stay tuned to the CommanderBond.net main page for complete coverage of Devil May Care during this Ian Fleming centenary week.

  9. Radio 4's Ian Fleming Centenary Celebrations Begin

    By Devin Zydel on 2008-05-23

    As earlier reported on CommanderBond.net, BBC Radio 4 is planning to celebrate the centenary of Ian Fleming with an array of different 007-themed programmes in the next few days.

    Beginning tomorrow, ‘The Bond Correspondence’ will kick things off at 10:30am. Here, Lucy Fleming embarks upon a quest to discover more about her mysterious uncle and creator of James Bond–Ian Fleming.

    The second programme (also scheduled for the 24th of May) is an all-star dramatisation of Fleming’s Doctor No. Toby Stephens stars as 007 and David Suchet is the villainous Dr. No in the first ever full radio adaptation of Fleming’s 1958 novel.

    The third, scheduled at 8:00pm on 26 May is ‘James Bond, The Last Englishmen’. Here, Professor David Cannadine argues that the Bond novels are a fantastic response to the moment when Britain lost an Empire but was still struggling to find a role in the new world.

    To keep track of these upcoming programmes, visit the special Ian Fleming section on the Radio 4 website.

    Further details on the Bond programmes follow below:

    Ian Fleming

    Ian Fleming

    ‘The Bond Correspondence’

    Saturday 24 May 2008
    10:30-11:00 (Radio 4 FM)

    Lucy Fleming embarks upon a quest to discover more about her mysterious uncle Ian, creator of James Bond. Archive letters and conversations with people who knew him, including his wartime girlfriend and stepdaughter, reveal a rather different character to the image portrayed in the press. Roger Moore plays Ian Fleming’s voice.

    ‘Doctor No’

    Saturday 24 May 2008
    2:30 (Radio 4 FM)

    By Ian Fleming, dramatised by Hugh Whitemore

    A celebration of Ian Fleming’s centenary with this ‘radio movie’ of his 1958 novel.

    Bond is sent to investigate a strange disappearance on the island of Jamaica, and discovers that the heart of the mystery lies with a sinister recluse known as ‘Dr No’.

    • ‘M’ …… John Standing
    • Moneypenny …… Janie Dee
    • James Bond ……Toby Stephens
    • The Armourer …… Peter Capaldi
    • Chief of Staff …… Nicky Henson
    • Airport Announcer/Receptionist/Inika …… Leigh Wright
    • Airport Official/Pus-Feller/Henchman …… Kobna Holdbrook-Smith
    • Quarrel …… Clarke Peters
    • Miss Chung/ Sister Lily …… Kosha Engler
    • Pleydell Smith …… Samuel West
    • Miss Taro/Telephonist/ Sister May/Tennis girl …… Jordanna Tin
    • Librarian …… Lucy Fleming
    • Honey Rider …… Lisa Dillon
    • Guard/Henchman/Crane Driver …… Jon David Yu
    • Dr No …… David Suchet
    • Acting Governor of Jamaica …… Simon Williams
    • Voice of Ian Fleming …… Martin Jarvis

    Music by Mark Holden and Samuel Barbour; producer Rosalind Ayres; director Martin Jarvis.

    ‘James Bond, The Last Englishman’

    Monday 26 May 2008
    20:00-20:30 (Radio 4 FM)

    As part of the Ian Fleming centenary, Prof David Cannadine sets James Bond and his creator in their historical context. He suggests that Bond was popular not just because he was sexy and suave – he was seen as a consoling fantasy for a country that had lost an Empire but not yet found a role in the world.

    CBn will keep you updated with all the latest news during this upcoming Ian Fleming centenary week.

    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. 'Devil May Care' Extract Online

    By Kevin Wells on 2008-05-23

    WARNING: Spoilers

    With the release of Sebastian Faulks’ James Bond novel right around the corner, the Times today published an extract which Faulks prefaces with how he came to write the novel and his early encounters with the Fleming family and Ian Fleming Publications.

    The extract begins with Bond at his home and a discussion with his housekeeper May. From there Bond goes to the office in his Bentley Continental (from Thunderball and On Her Majesty’s Secret Service) and receives his orders from M. M is worried about opium and a fellow by the name of Dr. Julius Gorner who like Bond joined the war underage though fighting for the Nazis before switching and fighting for the Russians. Presumably the villain of the novel, Gorner like many of Fleming’s villains comes with a physical congenital deformity of his own, a monkey paw for his left hand (although, I chuckled when I read it, it’s not as silly as it may sound here). After receiving his orders, Bond leaves in his Continental and is attacked by two motorcyclists.

    Personally, I found it interesting how many name drops from previous books were in this extract. Goldfinger and Kristatos are both mentioned when Bond is hearing M talk about drugs. Rene Mathis is mentioned and presumably will appear later in the book as Bond is sent to make contact with him. Mathis hasn’t been seen since From Russia with Love, although he does appear notably in Raymond Benson’s Never Dream of Dying. To no one’s surprise, before and after Bond meets with M, he also has a talk with Miss Moneypenny.

    Devil May Care hits bookshelves Wednesday 28 May. Keep watching CommanderBond.net for the latest news in the lead-up to the Ian Fleming Centenary and the release of Sebastian Faulks’ novel.