CommanderBond.net
  1. 'Double or Die' Slips Out Early In US

    By Devin Zydel on 2008-04-15

    Although it isn’t officially due for release until 22 April, James Bond fans in the US can now get their hands on Charlie Higson’s Double or Die.

    A report from Double O Section notes that Higson’s third Young Bond novel is currently turning up at several bookstores throughout the US, most notably the Borders chain.

    As earlier reported on CommanderBond.net, the US hardback edition of Double or Die features brand new artwork from Kev Walker (who also designed the US Blood Fever cover and is behind the upcoming SilverFin graphic novel).

    Higson offered his own praise of the cover: ‘It’s fantastic to see the new American cover of Double or Die which has all the romance and atmosphere I imagined when writing the books. Double or Die is a new start for Young Bond in the states and I’m very excited about its release.’

    So go ahead and pre-order online or start the hunt at your local bookstore…

    Keep watching CommanderBond.net for all the latest Young Bond and literary 007 news.

  2. Charlie Higson Explains The Popularity Of James Bond

    By Devin Zydel on 2008-04-15
    Ian Fleming

    Ian Fleming

    A BBC News correspondent recently took an extensive tour of Goldeneye, Jamaica, Ian Fleming’s exotic villa and also the birthplace of the character of James Bond.

    Included in the article are four videos which give readers a closer look at the actual room where Fleming first began work on Casino Royale in 1952 (as well as the several 007 adventures that followed).

    The outside garden and the Green Grotto caves, which were used as Dr. Kananga’s lair in 1973’s Live and Let Die, are also examined.

    Young Bond author Charlie Higson was also at the location to discuss why James Bond became–and still remains–such a popular character.

    ‘One of the things that made the books really popular in the kind of drab English 1950’s was the feeling of all this [gesturing to the nearby Goldeneye beach], of all the exotic places and warmth and colour,’ he said. ‘Getting away from the ordinary lives that the readers were living.’

    ‘And famously after Moonraker his third book which he set entirely in England, he got floods of letters saying “I don’t want to read about James Bond in Kent.” They wanted [Bond] to be in someplace like Jamaica. That whole spirit of James Bond is sort of encapulated in [Goldeneye].’

    Continuing on the same vein of the never-ending popularity for Fleming’s original 007 novels, Higson said: ‘The books, when they came out, were the ultimate escapism. People very rarely travelled abroad. Jet flights to foreign places were still out of reach for most people. And then suddenly there’s this guy in these books who’s flying all around the world and drinking champagne and eating fantastic steaks and lobsters. He’s completely out of reach from the average reader. They just thought that this is fantastic lifestyle.’

    ‘I mean, Bond is the ultimate male fantasy. He’s got no wife and kids. He basically lives in hotels, eats in restaurants and travels around the world. He can basically do whatever he likes. He can even kill people–being allowed to by the government. And that’s a fantastic fantasy for men who have a complete lack of responsibility to anyone else.’

    ‘But right at the heart of it, he does go up against some nasty villains and does get knocked around a lot. But he comes out on top, which we’d all like to do.’

    Check out the full BBC News report here.

    Stay tuned to CommanderBond.net for all the latest James Bond-related news.

  3. The Blades Library Book Club: Death Is Forever

    By Devin Zydel on 2008-04-15

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

    John Gardner's 'Death Is Forever'

    John Gardner’s Death Is Forever

    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 26th Book

    Currently 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. The club has just finished all fourteen of the Ian Fleming novels as well as the one-time-only Bond novel by Kingsley Amis, Colonel Sun. Most recently, the club moved onto the John Gardner era, and now continues with his eleventh novel: 1992’s Death Is Forever.

    Obtaining The Book

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

    Discuss other places to buy Death Is Forever 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 Death Is Forever, 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

  4. Gordon Brown Talks With Sebastian Faulks

    By Matt Weston on 2008-04-15

    The 10 Downing Street website hosts a unique tête-à-tête with British Prime Minister, Gordon Brown and James Bond novelist, Sebastian Faulks, filmed at the London Book Fair yesterday.

    The Independent carries a report on the unscheduled meet, in which the duo discussed the writers that had most affected their lives.

    The Prime Minister admitted to being a fan of 007, having read “most of the James Bond novels a long time ago”. He also expressed his admiration for another 007 author: Kingsley Amis. However, Mr Brown prefers Amis’ pre-Colonel Sun work, admitting he favoured the writer’s output around the time of his 1954 novel, Lucky Jim, “before he got to his ‘more means worse’ phase, his elitist phase: Kingsley Amis the radical.”

    Check out the whole interview on the 10 Downing Street website.

    Faulks’ James Bond novel, Devil May Care, will be published worldwide on 28 May 2008.

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

  5. Two Sir Sean Connery Biographies Coming Later This Year

    By Devin Zydel on 2008-04-14

    Two biographies focusing on Sir Sean Connery, Arise Sir Sean Connery by John Parker and Sean Connery: Neither Shaken Nor Stirred by Andrew Yule are due to be released later this year.

    Set for release in August and on 6 November (the latter just in time for the release of Quantum of Solace), respectively, both Arise Sir Sean Connery and Sean Connery: Neither Shaken Nor Stirred can currently be pre-ordered online at amazon.co.uk.

    This new edition of Arise Sir Sean Connery marks the book’s arrival in paperback, while Sean Connery: Neither Shaken Nor Stirred will be a reprinted edition.

    The official blurbs follow:

    Arise Sir Sean Connery

    Sean Connery is one of the world’s few true superstars. The screen creator of James Bond has commanded some of the highest fees in Hollywood and is lauded by critics and public alike. In July 2000, his unique contribution to the world of film was recognized when he was accorded a knighthood. No other British actor has had such a high profile.Yet the man himself stands back from all the Hollywood razzmatazz, private, even reclusive. Now John Parker traces the astonishing rise to stardom of a tough street kid from Edinburgh who left school at the age of 13. Arriving in London with gold teeth and tattoos to seek his fortune in the meat market of body-building, Connery fought against snobbery and prejudice to become a self-taught Shakespearian actor. Then came the big break.Auditioning for the part of James bond, he told the producers with typical bluntness how Bond should be played – and his bristling attitude landed him the job. He became an overnight star. The most famous secret agent of them all, 007 became a monster which threatened to kill Connery as an actor.

    Sean Connery: Neither Shaken Nor Stirred

    This is a biography of the actor, Sean Connery, who was born and brought up in an Edinburgh tenement, the son of a van driver and a charlady. Having left school at 13 and had a variety of jobs, including brickie and milkman, he spent three years in the Navy until invalided out with ulcers, and took up body-building and won a bronze medal in a Mr Universe contest. Deciding on an acting career, he made his film debut in 1956 and the major break came with his appearance in the first James Bond film, “Dr No”. The book traces Connery’s career and also examines the contradictions of the man himself – one who is renowned for watching the pennies but gives generously to charities; a dedicated Scottish Nationalist who lives as an unrepentant tax exile; a star who sues film companies whilst being admired throughout the industry for professionalism, hard work and commitment; a sex symbol barely touched by scandal.

    In related news, a release date has been set for the paperback edition of Connery’s own official book, Being A Scot: 6 August 2009.

    The hardback will debut on 25 August this year, the same date of the Bond actor’s 78th birthday. For more details, check out this CommanderBond.net article.

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

  6. Pre-order Sir Roger Moore's 'My Word is My Bond: A Memoir'

    By Devin Zydel on 2008-04-14

    Release dates have been set for Sir Roger Moore’s My Word is My Bond: A Memoir in the UK and US.

    Due for release on 9 October in the UK (and 4 November in the US), the hardback book can currently be pre-ordered online at amazon.co.uk and amazon.com.

    Details on the book were first announced back in October 2007 in a note circulated to several publishers.

    The book will be ghostwritten by Gareth Owen, Sir Roger’s personal assistant. He said: ‘Turning 80 is a milestone, a time to reflect. It’ll be a frank and fun book, but he’s not interested in digging the dirt.’

    My Word is My Bond: A Memoir will be published by Michael O’Mara Books in the UK and HarperCollins in the US.

    ‘For the first time, he will share his recollections of playing some of the world’s most famous roles, his fears of serious illness, including his own bout with prostate cancer (which he beat), and how his neighbour Audrey Hepburn got him involved in Unicef, a charity he is still involved with today,’ HarperCollins said in a statement.

    Stay tuned to CommanderBond.net for all the latest coverage of these upcoming memoirs by Sir Roger Moore and all the latest literary James Bond news.

  7. Website Launched For Ian Fleming James Bond Exhibition

    By Devin Zydel on 2008-04-13

    As many CommanderBond.net visitors are no doubt aware, the ‘For Your Eyes Only: Ian Fleming and James Bond’ exhibition, one of the events marking the centenary of Ian Fleming, will be opening in only a matter of days.

    Officially beginning on Thursday, 17 April at London’s Imperial War Museum, the event will bring together both personal effects of the author and an ‘unparalleled range of Bond memorabilia’ in order to discover where the identity of the debonair spymaster and journalist ended and the fictional secret agent began.

    An official website has now been set up in order to make 007 fans more aware of exactly what will be going on at the location.

    In addition to the many (click here for further details) Bond-related materials from the films as well as relating to the literary 007, there will also be a series of public and family events going on throughout the year. Especially notable are:

    Public Events

    • Young Bond – 24 May, 11am
    • A chance to hear Charlie Higson, author of the acclaimed Young Bond books, talk about his popular series and the latest instalment, Hurricane Gold.
    • Tickets £5
    • Writing Bond – 10 June, 7pm
    • Author and Times journalist Ben Macintyre chairs a panel of authors including Kate Westbrook and Charlie Higson, looking at how they each took on the legend of Fleming’s James Bond and made it their own.
    • Tickets £12, concessions £10

    Family Events

    • Thingamajigs, Gadgets and Gizmos – 24 May-1 June, 11am-4pm
    • Come and join Q branch, part of the Secret Service, and help design a new series of spying gadgets to aid James Bond in his latest mission. Drop-in art activity linked to the Museums and Galleries Month theme of Ideas and Innovation.
    • www.mgm.org.uk
    • Bond’s Baddies – 11–31 August, 11am–4pm
    • Sadistic, rich and power mad – Ian Fleming’s villains are always larger than life. Come and explore the world of Dr No, Mr Big, Blofeld, Goldfinger and many others. Drop–in art activity with a bit of dressing up!

    Admission to all family events and activities is free. All children must be accompanied by an adult.

    In addition, several of the James Bond films will be screened free of charge. The line-up includes Dr. No, From Russia with Love and Goldfinger. Click here for dates and further details.

    For further information or to purchase tickets to the exhibition and/or accompanying events, phone 020 7416 5439 or visit the official website.

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

  8. Another 'By Royal Command' Plot Synopsis

    By Matt Weston on 2008-04-13

    The official Penguin Books website offers a brand new, juicy plot synopsis of the fifth Young Bond book by Charlie Higson, By Royal Command.

    The outline offers information additional to the synopsis that emerged yesterday.

    Following a treacherous rescue mission high in the freezing Alps, James Bond is preparing for life back at Eton. But James is under surveillance; his every move is being watched. He alone holds the clue to a sinister plot that will bring bloodshed and carnage to his school – and his country.

    Forced to flee from Eton to Austria, James must leave behind everything he knows, with only a beautiful – and dangerous – girl by his side.

    Soon he is trapped in a deadly war of secrets and lies, as a nightmare reunion with a bitter enemy plunges him once more into the face of death.

    Life for James Bond will never be the same again.

    By Royal Command is due to be released on 4 September 2008. James Bond fans eager for a snippet from the novel can pick up the Hurricane Gold paperback on 28 May, which contains an extract from Charlie Higson’s fifth Young Bond title.

    Keep watching CommanderBond.net for all the latest Young Bond news.

  9. Literary 007 Reviewed: Ian Fleming's 'Diamonds Are Forever'

    By Devin Zydel on 2008-04-12
    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 fourth James Bond adventure, 1956’s Diamonds are Forever.

    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 Diamonds are Forever back in July 2004.

    What follows are selected reviews from the Book Club Forum members. For further details on the club or to post your own review of Diamonds are Forever, simply click here.

    Literary 007 Reviewed:
    Diamonds Are Forever

    'Diamonds are Forever'

    Ian Fleming’s Diamonds are Forever

    ‘Diamonds are Forever’ reviewed by… right idea, wrong pussy

    Diamonds are Forever is one of my favorite Fleming novels, though since Goldfinger is right up there as well, I’m definitely in the minority as far as my opinions go. I think that Fleming often did best when he was describing an alien culture, whether it was Russia in the first part of From Russia with Love or America in Diamonds are Forever, Goldfinger and Live and Let Die. He has has the sort of nuanced and keen appreciations for these places that only an outsider can have. As for the novel not being “Bondesque” enough, I think that’s just what makes it so wonderful. Moonraker was, in my opinion, a decided disappointment when I read it. Are we really supposed to take seriously the idea that an experienced and world-weary agent like Bond can’t see Drax is up to no good from a mile away? The payoff for the long, drawn-out set-up is an overblown flop I could have seen coming even if I hadn’t seen the movie.

    Diamonds are Forever does really well at putting Bond in an alien environment, and having him come out on top. It’s as though Fleming put Bond into one of the Raymond Chandler thrillers he respected, and the meeting of Philip Marlowe and James Bond is a refeshing one. Fleming’s research into diamond smuggling is clear, and that lends this book a sense of realism that the more silly and overblown books like Moonraker and Dr. No lack.

    I don’t think it’s that surprising that Diamonds are Forever was panned when it was released and is still out of favor now. Whenver Fleming put alot of research into a Bond work or tried something innovative, he tended to get panned. The Spy Who Loved Me was quite good, but was savaged by critics and readers. Many of the short stories (other than The Living Daylights) are held in low favor even though I think Fleming wrote better short stories than novels. I’m not surpised that Fleming tried to kill off Bond in frustration with From Russia with Love, or that when he returned to the character he went with the “safe”, “Bondesque” and highly overblown SPECTRE trilogy, which represents the longest continuously weak period in his work, in my opinion.

    ‘Diamonds are Forever’ reviewed by… GreggAllinson

    I just finished Diamonds are Forever and its major problem is that the villains are so poorly realised, so it really doesn’t feel like Bond’s accomplished anything when he takes down the Spangled Mob. The Spang Brothers make cameos, Wint and Kidd are OK but again only appear sporadically, and there’s a bunch of minor villains who pop up at the start and vanish, and the plot just doesn’t hang together at all. It’s not entirely a waste- I love the Studillac, Tiffany Case is a very well-written character, and the part in the ironically-named Spectreville–but coming off of the spectacular Moonraker (featuring the best villain of the first three Fleming novels), it was a huge letdown.

    Incidentally, I just started reading From Russia, With Love and the first 65 pages are devoted exclusively to building up the history and motivations of Red Grant, G, Rosa Klebb, etc. That’s how you create memorable, well-realised villains for Bond!

    ‘Diamonds are Forever’ reviewed by… North Scorpion

    I just finished Diamonds are Forever today and I can see some of the arguments for the novel running a little slow. I think there are two items, however, that do stand out compared to the previous outings. First, the location depictions are much more detailed than in previous novels. New York is described in almost as much detail as in Live and Let Die, yet this site is not nearly as important as it is in the latter novel. Second, Fleming’s creation, Tiffany Case is superb. Try reading it whilst constantly reminding yourself that this was a Briton writing in in the mid-50’s and you will be impressed.

    These two items aside, the novel does drag in parts but if there is a bright side it is that this novel was bookended by two great books. Not to mention a fantastic movie.

    ‘Diamonds are Forever’ reviewed by… Donovan

    I like all the Bond novels by Fleming. Diamonds Are Forever isn’t quite as good as the other novels by Fleming at that time. Mainly because there really isn’t a central villain. But Tiffany Case makes a very compelling “Bond girl”. I like reading the scenes between her and Bond. Felix is good here as well. It’s kind of too bad none of the Bond scripts ever captured what this character was like. The mud bath scene is good. I also like the descriptions of America (I always do…Fleming was a great writer because of his journalism background.) So, one can’t really be a fan of the films and never have seen Golden Gun. Same goes for the Fleming novels. Gotta read ’em all.

    (The hardest Fleming 007 work for me to complete was Quantum of Solace…but I’m glad I did because I thought what that guy did to his ex-wife was pretty incredible)

    ‘Diamonds are Forever’ reviewed by… daltonlover13

    I think Tiffany Case is a great Bond girl, much better than she was in the movie. They showed her sort of, I want it this way and thats that in the first scene with her in her apartment, but at the same time, they showed a frightened side when on the phone with her superiors.

    I thought Mr. Wint and Mr. Kidd were outstanding. They are my absolute favorite literary villains. I also thought the whole ‘sucking the thumb’ aspect was very interesting. It wasn’t like something I pondered for hours, but it made me think about from the beginning whether or not and how Fleming would incorporate that later.

    I also thought that although the movie’s plot was ‘technologically’ more with today’s, (and 1971’s) time period, that the plot made it less interesting. I thought, and still think, that the biggest and most defining difference between the films and the books is the plot. If you look at the movies, almost every plot is a search for some form of world domination.

    Then look at the books. Some plots were world domination, some were mass distruction, (Moonraker comes to mind), but some, (Doctor No sending missiles off course, Rosa Klebb getting the Spectre-lektor in the movie-, etc.) had very simple plots.

    I thought the plot, final battle, bond girl, henchmen, villains, Bond, (I didn’t think Connery was very good in this particular movie), and pretty much everything else was better in the book than the movie. In my opinion, this book is more underrated than any other 007 book. I will mention I think that the movie is under rated too, however much I may dislike it.

    ‘Diamonds are Forever’ reviewed by… Double-0 Eleven

    After The Man with the Golden Gun, this is my least favorite of Fleming’s novels. Which isn’t to say that I don’t like reading it, or even that I don’t like it. It has the usual superb descriptive writing and the action sequences are often tense. Tiffany Case is the first great female character Fleming wrote. But for me Diamonds Are Forever is a book in search of a center. It lacks focus and a strong through-line, juggling travelogues with a zig-zag plot across the American gangland world that never gels. The absentee villains, Seraffimo and Jack Spang, heads of the “Spangled Mob” and its diamond smuggling operations from South Africa to Las Vegas, don’t help. The sleazy depictions of American commercial/criminal life are unforgettable (to this day, whenever I’m in Vegas, I can hear Fleming’s description of the “gilded mousetrap” in my head), and a few tense sequences such as a fiery train crash and Bond’s confrontation with mob killers in their cabin on the Queen Elizabeth make for top-notch Fleming. But for me it just doesn’t ultimately stack up to Fleming’s other work.

    Diamonds Are Forever reads a bit like Fleming dropped Bond into Mike Hammer’s bare-knuckle wise-guy world to see how he measured up. An interesting idea, since in the early 1950s, Mickey Spillane’s novels were the most popular crime novels on the market. And Fleming’s dialogue for the American heavies isn’t that bad–you might expect a British writer to overdo it more, but the dialogue is all quite believable. Bond isn’t initially amused by the idea of going against American gangsters to investigate diamond smuggling since he sees U.S. mobsters as nothing more than a cartoon figures. Everyone who knows something about organized crime cautions him how dangerous these people can be; the incessant warnings start to turn into a bit of an annoyance, since the book never makes the Spangled Mob into a threat on the level of SPECTRE or SMERSH. They can be dangerous, but not like some of Bond’s other adversaries.

    The descriptions of places like Las Vegas and Saratoga take up large amounts of text, and for the first time Fleming lets his research and fascination with his subject get away from him. The grimy, unglamorous look at American life is often interesting, but it gets in the way of the flow of the story. The Saratoga sequence in particular feels gratuitous, and Bond does little more than act as an observer.

    Tiffany Case is a treat in the book, and Bond’s attraction to her maddening hot/cold return is a joy to read. She has a fully fleshed-out background, but the story leaves her hanging at the conclusion. I wanted to know a bit more about where she stands with Bond (although we do get to find Bond also gets to pal around with Felix Leiter (now a Pinkerton agent and not that bitter about the mauling he got in Live and Let Die) and tough-talking cabby Ernest Cureo. Even if the book is Fleming’s first disappointment, it does show him advancing in character development. Shame about those villains, however.

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

  10. Ian Fleming Bond Letters Sell For 14,000 Pounds

    By Devin Zydel on 2008-04-12
    Ian Fleming

    Ian Fleming

    Letters between Ian Fleming and his own ‘Miss Moneypenny’ have sold for £14,340 at a recent auction–almost five times more than expected, reports the BBC News.

    The entire collection of four letters signed by Fleming and an annotated invoice with his initials was expected to sell for £3,000.

    As first reported on CommanderBond.net last month, the letters between the 007 creator and typist Jean Frampton reveal the latter’s close relationship with the world of James Bond.

    In one of the letters to go up for sale, dated 31 March, 1960, Fleming asks Frampton to use her ‘keen mind’ to help get his then current Bond novel, Thunderball ‘into shape’.

    Anything your quick eye falls upon… would be endlessly welcome,’ he added.

    ‘You can look on Mrs Frampton as Ian Fleming’s Miss Moneypenny,’ said Amy Brenan of Duke’s auctioneers in Dorset. ‘The collection is interesting because it details how the James Bond books were put together in the early 1960s.’

    While Frampton is believed to have never actually met Fleming face to face, the letters reveal that she often offered pointers on plot and literary style while being hired to type the manuscripts of the author’s Bond adventures.

    Ian Fleming's 'Thunderball'

    Ian Fleming’s Thunderball

    ‘I still regret the end of Thunderball,’ she wrote in one of the letters. ‘What about Blofeld or does he live to fight another day?’

    ‘Your occasional comments on the work you have done for me have been so helpful,’ wrote Fleming.

    Besides her assistance on 1961’s Thunderball, the letters reveal that Frampton also correspondended with Fleming on Live and Let Die, You Only Live Twice and The Man with the Golden Gun as well.

    ‘Mrs Frampton was actually an intelligent lady who had a French degree which she kept secret from her family,’ said Ms. Brenan.

    ‘She had lots of attributes like that and she enjoyed reading the novels as she was typing them. Her interest led her to make suggestions to the plot, for her to make alterations, and Fleming actually welcomed it.’

    ‘As well as his typist she was an editor as such, and she was the first person to read the books.’

    Also included were letters written by Mrs Frampton and Fleming’s secretaries, Una Trueblood and Beryl Griffie-Williams.

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