CommanderBond.net
  1. First Look At Charlie Higson's 'Double or Die' US Hardback

    By Devin Zydel on 2008-03-26

    Although it isn’t due for release until 22 April, James Bond fans can get a sneak peek at the forthcoming US publication of Charlie Higson’s third Young Bond novel, Double or Die.

    The Young Bond Dossier got an in depth look at the hardback, which 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.’

    Click here for a full gallery of photos of the US Double or Die hardback.

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

  2. Ian Fleming's 'Miss Moneypenny' Revealed

    By Devin Zydel on 2008-03-26
    Ian Fleming

    Ian Fleming

    Letters between James Bond creator Ian Fleming and his typist Jean Frampton reveal the latter’s close relationship with the world of 007.

    The BBC News reports that a collection of four signed letters from Fleming will be going up for auction next month on 10 April as a way of marking the centenary of the author.

    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, which is offering the letters for sale.

    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.

    ‘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 You Only Live Twice and The Man with the Golden Gun as well.

    ‘The collection is interesting because it details how the James Bond books were put together in the early 1960s,’ said Ms Brenan.

    Also included are letters written by Mrs Frampton and Fleming’s secretaries, Una Trueblood and Beryl Griffie-Williams. The entire collection is expected to sell for &pound2,000 – &pound3,000.

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

  3. The Literary James Bond In The 1970s

    By Guest writer on 2008-03-24

    Written by ‘SILHOUETTE MAN’

    1973's 'James Bond: The Authorized Biography of James Bond

    1973’s James Bond: The Authorized Biography of James Bond

    The literary Bond’s life and adventures are chronicled from the early 1950s onwards, and we know something of his life in the period before this. We know of his missions on into about the mid 1960s, with Kingsley Amis’ Colonel Sun (1968). After this mission however the life of Bond becomes sketchier. In fact the only decade of the literary Bond’s life that we do not seem to know very much about is the 1970s. This decade had no real continuation novel connected to Ian Fleming’s Bond novels as such, but it did have John Pearson’s James Bond: The Authorized Biography of James Bond (1973). It details Bond’s life from his birth to the events just after Colonel Sun, which means that it is still set in the 1960s.

    The other real literary continuation of James Bond in the 1970s were the two screenplays from the two last Bond films of the 1970s, The Spy Who Loved Me and Moonraker, published by the screenwriter and novelist Christopher Wood under the titles Jame Bond, The Spy Who Loved Me and James Bond And Moonraker, published in 1977 and 1979 respectively. As these are novelisations of the films to tie in with the Fleming Bond universe, they are not really seen by fans as being part of the literary Bond continuation. They do however tie in well with Fleming’s style of writing, making the books of the film at least owing more to Fleming than the films on which they are based.

    When Glidrose continued the literary Bond series proper with Licence Renewed (1981) by John Gardner, there are some very interesting details of Bond’s life in the period in between. We learn that “there was not much to console Bond these days. There had even been times, recently, when he had seriously considered resigning – to use the jargon, ‘go private’.”

    There is recalled the famous exchange between M. and Bond on the disbanding of the OO Section,

    John Gardner

    John Gardner

    “‘Changing world; changing times, James,’ M had said to him a couple of years ago, when breaking the news that the elite Double-O status- which meant being licensed to kill in the line of duty- was being abolished.

    “This was during the so-called Realignment Purge, often referred to in the Service as the SNAFU Slaughter, similar to the C.I.A’s famous Hallowe’en massacre, in which large numbers of faithful members of the American service had been dismissed, literally overnight. Similar things had happened in Britain, with financial horns being pulled in, and what a pompous Whitehall detective called ‘a more realistic logic being enforced upon the Secret and Security Services’.”

    Gardner assures us that Bond’s role will still remain much the same. As M says to Bond, we are told a two years before Licence Renewed begins, so it can be assumed this was in 1979,

    ‘As far as I’m concerned, 007, you will remain 007. I shall take full responsibility for you; and you will, as ever, accept orders and assignments only from me. There are moments when this country needs a trouble-shooter – a blunt instrument – and by God it’s going to have one. They can issue their pieces of bumf and abolish the Double-O Section. We can simply change its name. It will now be the Special Section and you are it.”

    Later we learn,

    License Renewed James Bond returns in John Gardner's 'Licence Renewed'

    James Bond returns in John Gardner’s Licence Renewed

    “Bond had left M’s office on that occasion in an elated mood. Yet, in the few years that had passed since, he had performed only four missions in which his Double-O prefix had played any part. […] It was the active life that Bond missed; the continual challenge of a new problem, a difficult decision in the field, the sense of purpose and of serving his country. Sometimes he wondered if he was falling under the spell of that malaise which seemed, on occasions, to grip Britain by the throat – political and economic lethargy, combined with a short-term view of the world’s problems.

    Bond’s four most recent missions had been quick, cut and dried, undercover operations; and while it would be wrong to say that James Bond yearned for danger, his life now seemed, at times, to lack real purpose.”

    We learn of the changes in Bond’s lifestyle since the 1960s,

    “Bond had even managed to alter his lifestyle, very slightly, adapting to the changing pressures of the 1970s and early 1980s: drastically cutting back – for most of the time – on his alcohol intake, and arranging with Morelands of Grosvenor Street for a new special blend of cigarettes, with a tar content slightly lower than any currently available on the market.”

    “With fuel costs running high, and the inevitability that they would continue to do so, Bond had allowed the beloved old Mark II Continental Bentley to go the way of its predecessor, the 4.5-litre Bentley.”

    The most interesting titbit of information comes when the details of Dr. Anton Murik and Franco are being told to Bond in M’s office. Bond says,

    ‘Not a healthy mix – an international terrorist and a renowned nuclear physicist. Been one of the nightmares for some time, hasn’t it, sir? That some group would get hold of not only the materials but the means to construct a really lethal nuclear device? We suspect some of them have the materials – look at that fellow Achmed Yastaff I took out for you. At least four of the ships he arranged to go missing were carrying materials…’
    M snorted, ‘Don’t be a fool, 007. Easiest thing in the world to construct a crude device.’

    It would perhaps be an interesting idea to look at the literary Bond in the 1970s because there has been so little written about Fleming’s creation in this period. It would give new scope and new ground for the literary Bond to work within. Perhaps the mentions of the four missions where Bond used his licence to kill could be expanded on in a novel or short story collection by a new continuation author at some stage, including the story of Achmed Yastaff. It might be some sort of an answer to the problem some see in continuing the literary Bond character indefinitely into the future, as the dates given in Fleming’s work give his revised date of birth as 1924. It would also be an adult antidote to the ‘Young Bond’ series. Of course in the novels Bond hasn’t really aged very much, but the 1970s could be an interesting retro angle rather than writing adventures in between the 1950s novels as some have suggested.

    What are your thoughts about the literary James Bond in the 1970s? Join in the discussion here on the CommanderBond.net Forums.

  4. 'James Bond: The History Of The Illustrated 007' Coming In September 2008

    By Devin Zydel on 2008-03-22
    Original Daily Express Advert

    Original Daily Express Advert

    Mark your calendars. 2008 is shaping up to be yet another year filled with various literary 007 releases, and today we report on another new one.

    Due for release in September 2008 is Alan J. Porter’s James Bond: The History Of The Illustrated 007.

    As the title suggests, this 240-page paperback will be focusing on Bond in the world of comics, as most recently reprinted by Titan Books throughout the past four years. The book will be published by Hermes Press.

    According to the author’s personal blog:

    The fully illustrated book will chronicle the story behind Bond’s comics adventures around the world, from British newspaper strips, to original stories produced for markets such as Sweden and Chile, to Japanese manga, and of course the various American series and movie adaptations.

    I’ll also be taking a look at the various Bond spoofs, 007’s influence on comics art in general, and hopefully lining up interviews with some of the creators who have added to Bond’s story over the years.

    Alan J. Porter

    Serpent's Tooth

    Serpent’s Tooth comic

    Since that posting, writers Mike Grell and Doug Moench, who worked on the original US Bond adventures Permission To Die and Serpent’s Tooth in the early 1990’s (Moench also worked on 1994’s Minute of Midnight), have been mentioned as part of Porter’s research for the book.

    In addition, fans can view an early design concept cover for James Bond: The History Of The Illustrated 007 on Porter’s blog.

    Most recently, Porter has contributed his articles on the US comic book adventures of Bond in Titan’s Death Wing and Shark Bait collections. He’ll also be contributing to Titan’s forthcoming Bond collection, The Paradise Plot (due out on 27 June).

    For more on Porter’s researching for James Bond: The History Of The Illustrated 007, visit his personal blog.

    Now for the first time, the complete history of the illustrated James Bond is chronicled by pop culture historian Alan J. Porter in James Bond: The History Of The Illustrated 007. Porter’s new book examines James Bond’s adventures in newspaper strips and comic books. Before Bond became world famous with his movie series, the character was the subject of successful English newspaper strips and later in comic books. With the explosion of Bond on the screen the character and his exploits become even more popular in comic strip and comic book versions all over the world. James Bond: The History Of The Illustrated 007 examines it all, and covers Bond’s newspaper strip and comic book appearances from the 1950s to the present. The release of this all-new history is timed to coincide with James Bond’s newest movie appearance and is sure to be a must for all Bond fans. The cover of the book presents a never-before-seen painting by noted artist Bob Peak who made a significant contribution tot he Bond canon’s movie poster art.

    Pre-order James Bond: The History Of The Illustrated 007

    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.

  5. 'The Moneypenny Diaries: Final Fling' Paperback In November '08

    By Devin Zydel on 2008-03-20
    'The Moneypenny Diaries: Final Fling'

    The Moneypenny Diaries: Final Fling

    While Final Fling, the third and final novel in Samantha Weinberg’s The Moneypenny Diaries trilogy, hasn’t even debuted in hardback yet, a listing for the paperback has already appeared on amazon.co.uk.

    The novel is scheduled for an unusually early release of 13 November 2008 considering the hardback doesn’t come out until this May (perhaps to capitalize on the theatrical release of Quantum of Solace during the same month).

    The The Moneypenny Diaries: Final Fling UK paperback will retail for £7.99 and will be published by John Murray. Cover art is yet to be revealed.

    Bond fans will recall that a March 2009 release date was originally mentioned for this paperback in early 2007.

    Final Fling will be set in Jamaica, the Outer Hebrides (an island chain off the west coast of the west coast of Scotland), Cambridge, and London. The novel’s action is planned to be split between Jane Moneypenny’s 1964/65 diaries and the contemporary adventures of her neice, Kate Westbrook. The full blurb follows:

    Final Fling combines the excitement of a cold war spy thriller with the mystery of a contemporary detective story. In the 1964/65 volume of her private diaries, Jane Moneypenny reports her demotion from the position of M’s secretary as the British Secret Intelligence Service is hit by a series of defection scandals. Facing considerable personal danger, she combines forces with 007 in a resolve to smoke out the mole she is convinced is buried deep in the heart of the Office. But, when Bond is sacked and M is forced into retirement, Moneypenny finds herself on her own…

    Forty-two years later, Miss Moneypenny’s niece and heir, Kate Westbrook, starts to suspect that her aunt’s death was no accident. She is sure the clues to what happened lie in the search for the mole. As she pieces them together, however, she realizes that there are significant forces who are determined to prevent her finding the truth.

    From the glamour of 1960s Jamaica to the treacherous beaches of the Outer Hebrides, Final Fling reveals just how far people are prepared to go to defend – or betray – their beliefs, and relates the life and death, and surprising final love, of the world’s most famous fictional secretary.

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

  6. 'By Royal Command' Audiobook Planned For September 2008

    By Devin Zydel on 2008-03-19

    The Young Bond Dossier informs us that an audiobook edition of Charlie Higson’s fifth Young James Bond novel, By Royal Command, is planned for release this upcoming September.

    According to a listing on the amazon.fr website, the audiobook will be released on 4 September–the same day that the UK hardback edition of By Royal Command debuts.

    While further details are yet to be announced, as Higson previously read the audiobook editions for the four previous Young Bond novels, it’s a likely bet he’ll be reading this one as well.

    As earlier reported on CommanderBond.net, this new adventure sees Bond ‘forced to go on the run, pursued by enemy agents and the British authorities. James must choose between friendship and duty. His life will never be the same again…’ Locations include England and the Alps.

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

  7. SAL Wins 'Devil May Care' Theme Song Contest

    By Matt Weston on 2008-03-17
    SAL

    SAL

    Cardiff band SAL will provide the official theme song to Sebastian Faulks’ upcoming James Bond novel, Devil May Care, Penguin and MySpace announced today.

    The contest, held on the official Devil May Care MySpace page, drew over 500 entrants, each hoping to provide the first ever theme song to a 007 novel.

    SAL’s track can be heard on the MySpace page. Additionally, it will feature on the Devil May Care audiobook. The song will also be available for free digital download via penguin.co.uk and iTunes.

    The full press release follows.

    Penguin and MySpace announce winner of James Bond soundtrack competition
    Cardiff band SAL voted in by the MySpace community

    London – 17th March 2008: Cardiff-based band, SAL have today received the exciting news that their track will be given pride of place on the audio book for Devil May Care, the eagerly awaited new James Bond novel by Sebastian Faulks. SAL’s track will be exposed to a potential audience of millions, securing them a place in 007’s history.

    More than 500 musicians submitted original work through the book’s MySpace profile (http://uk.myspace.com/devilmaycarebook) in the hope their track would be chosen as the official theme tune to Devil May Care. The book is due to be published on 28th May 2008 to mark the centenary of Ian Fleming’s birth.

    After careful deliberation by a panel of expert judges, SAL’s track was selected for the shortlist alongside four other artists and then put to a public vote. Within the MySpace community SAL emerged as a clear winner after the tracks were put to a public vote within the MySpace community.

    SAL is a four-piece punk/rock outfit who are made up of Catrin Wyn Southall, Lee Lavis, Chris Saunders and Denley Calais Slade. SAL’s debut album ‘Dysfunctional’ was produced by Greg Haver of Manic Street Preachers and Catatonia fame and released in 2005. SAL are currently working on their second album and regularly perform at gigs across the UK.

    The high-profile judging panel which chose SAL’s track for the shortlist included the book’s author Sebastian Faulks and respected figures from the world of literature and music, including cult music producer Jazzie B and Matthew Fleming, great nephew of original Bond author Ian Fleming. Dom Cook, Head of Music for MySpace UK and Alex Clarke, editor of Devil May Care were also judges.

    Dom Cook, Head of Music for MySpace UK, comments: “A big congratulations to SAL! The result of this competition really demonstrates the creativity and talent which can be found within the MySpace community, as well as the importance of fans being able to engage with, and support artists in this way.”

    Alex Clarke, Penguin Editor of Devil May Care commented, “We were incredibly excited to see which track the public would vote for. They voted for SAL and we couldn’t be happier. SAL’s ‘Devil May Care’ oozes the excitement and glamour of Bond and is a fitting theme tune to the book. A well deserved win – I can’t wait to hear it on the audio book in May.”

    Cat Wyn Southall, frontwoman of SAL, says: “It feels great to know that there’s so many people out there who liked our song enough to vote for us. We feel very proud to have a SAL song as the theme for Devil May Care!”

    SAL’s track, Devil May Care, is the first theme tune to accompany a James Bond book and will be featured on the Devil May Care audiobook, published 28 May 2008. It will later be made available as a free digital download via Penguin (penguin.co.uk) and iTunes.

    MySpace users can listen to the winning track by visiting: http://uk.myspace.com/devilmaycarebook

    Keep watching CommanderBond.net for all the latest news on the upcoming James Bond novel, Devil May Care.

  8. Charlie Higson's 'By Royal Command' Now Available To Pre-order

    By Devin Zydel on 2008-03-17

    The Young Bond Dossier informs us that Charlie Higson’s fifth Young James Bond adventure, By Royal Command, is now available to pre-order online.

    The Young Bond novel is due for release on 4 September 2008 in the UK. Like the initial release of last year’s Hurricane Gold, By Royal Command will debut in hardback format and retail for £12.99.

    As earlier reported on CommanderBond.net, this new adventure sees Bond ‘forced to go on the run, pursued by enemy agents and the British authorities. James must choose between friendship and duty. His life will never be the same again…’ Locations include England and the Alps.

    For more details on By Royal Command, visit this article where Higson discusses several elements that will feature in the story.

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

  9. Sebastian Faulks Talks James Bond With The Observer

    By Devin Zydel on 2008-03-16

    Sebastian Faulks

    Ian Fleming centenary author Sebastian Faulks sat down for an interview with The Observer to discuss his two newest novels: the introspective Engelby and the forthcoming James Bond adventure, Devil May Care.

    Initially published in May 2007, the character study Engelby, Faulks’ only first-person novel, is due to be published in paperback at the end of the month.

    With his 007 novel debuting in May, the interview notes that there will likely be a crossover in sales between the author’s two newest works.

    Discussing his surprise at landing the job as the new Bond author, Faulks said: ”I’d just finished Human Traces and it seemed ridiculous. You’ve just spent five years in a Victorian lunatic asylum and then you go on to James Bond. But I think their hope is they’ll get two markets. The more I think about it, the more I think it was clever of them, because the mismatch is intriguing.’

    'Devil May Care'

    Devil May Care

    As earlier reported on CommanderBond.net, Faulks completed Devil May Care in six weeks (12 total if counting earlier Fleming research and some ‘tidying up’)–the same amount of time Fleming often devoted to his Bond adventures.

    Emphasizing on the narrative’s pace rather than reflection, he said: ‘Bond doesn’t have an inner life. There would be moments when I’d think, we need to gather our thoughts here and have a breather, where in another novel you’d slow the pace, have some description and see what Bond feels about this. But Bond doesn’t reflect. All you can do is move on to the next bomb or shark or car.’

    Click here for The Observer’s complete interview with Sebastian Faulks, including much more on Engelby.

    Devil May Care is set in 1967 when ‘Bond is damaged, aging and in a sense it is the return of the gunfighter for one last heroic mission.’

    CBn will keep you updated with all the latest news and details on Devil May Care. 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. Charlie Higson's 'Hurricane Gold' Coming To US In 2009

    By Devin Zydel on 2008-03-14

    Charlie Higson’s ‘Hurricane Gold’

    The fourth Young James Bond adventure by Charlie Higson, Hurricane Gold, is on its way to the US.

    The Young Bond Dossier notifies us that Higson’s Hurricane Gold is being planned for a 7 April 2009 release by Hyperion Books–the US publisher of the Young Bond novels.

    US fans have had to wait a little bit longer for the Young Bond novels to hit bookshelves. The third novel in the series, Double or Die, was originally published in the UK in January 2007. It will finally be released stateside this upcoming April.

    The first two, SilverFin and Blood Fever, are currently available.

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