CommanderBond.net
  1. Bletchley Park National Codes Centre To Host Centenary Events

    By Matt Weston on 2008-02-18

    007 Magazine today highlights two more events to celebrate the 100th anniversary of the birth of James Bond creator, Ian Fleming.

    Both events will be held at Bletchley Park National Codes Centre.

    “From Bletchley, With Love” will feature a range of activities to celebrate the author’s life and legacy. The full press release follows.

    From Bletchley, With Love – Ian Fleming Birth Centenary, ‘Operation Ruthless’ and the Real James Bonds of Bletchley Park

    On 25 August 2008 Bletchley Park will be celebrating the Centenary of the Birth of Ian Fleming and his famous wartime connection with Bletchley Park with a whole host of Spy and Double Agent Activities, Talks and Exhibitions.

    The ‘Falling Rocks’ RAF Parachute Display Team will be making a spectacular descent into the Park – James Bond style; visitors will be dazzled by the largest display of Aston Martins Bletchley has ever seen and will get the opportunity to be photographed with the Vanquish featured in Die Another Day.

    Amongst lots of other exciting exhibitions will be the original intercepted decrypts from World War Two German Secret Service messages about their ‘spies’ in Britain, some genuine ‘Suitcase’ Spy-Sets used by the real British spies in World War Two and a brand new exhibition featuring the real Double Agents of World War Two.

    Activities for the event will include Spy Workshops and Spy Trails along with James Bond type model speedboats on the Lake. One of the featured Talks will be a fascinating account from Michael Smith, Military Correspondent for the Daily Telegraph and author of ‘Station X’; ‘Emperor’s Codes’; ‘Action This Day’ and ‘The British Spies – the Real James Bonds’, explaining the links between Ian Fleming, Bletchley Park and MI6.

    To support this event and to celebrate the Centenary of Ian Fleming’s birth Bletchley Park Post Office is issuing a superb First Day Cover based on the original Fleming documents detailing “Operation Ruthless” and Royal Mail’s James Bond Stamp Issue, launched on 8 January 2008.

    Ian Fleming and Bletchley Park

    By 1940 the greatest threat to the Allies was U-boat attacks on North Atlantic convoys. If the Allies could discover in advance where U-boat packs were assembling, they could direct convoys away from them. The German Naval Enigma was not being broken, therefore it was essential that current German Naval Enigma material should be captured from their ships.

    On 12 September 1940, Lieutenant Commander Ian Fleming RNVR, Personal Assistant to the Director of Naval Intelligence, concocted an extraordinary plan to crash-land a captured German plane in the English channel and overpower the patrol boat crew that came to rescue its “survivors”, thereby gaining access to Enigma materials.

    Fleming’s proposal, Codename ‘Operation Ruthless’ was as follows;-

    DNI,

    I suggest we obtain the loot by the following means:

    1. Obtain from Air Ministry an air-worthy German bomber.
    2. Pick a tough crew of five, including a pilot, W/T operator and word-perfect German speaker. Dress them in German Air Force uniform, add blood and bandages to suit.
    3. Crash plane in the Channel after making S.O.S. to rescue service.
    4. Once aboard rescue boat, shoot German crew, dump overboard, bring rescue boat back to English port.

    In order to increase the chances of capturing an R. or M. (R äumboot – a small minesweeper; Minensuchboot – a large minesweeper) with its richer booty, the crash might be staged in mid-Channel. The Germans would presumably employ one of this type for the longer and more hazardous journey.

    Ian Fleming later added other details to the plan:

    N.B. Since attackers will be wearing enemy uniform, they will be liable to be shot as franc-tireurs if captured, and incident might be fruitful field for propaganda. Attackers’ story will therefore be “that it was done for a lark by a group of young hot-heads who thought the war was too tame and wanted to have a go at the Germans. They had stolen plane and equipment and had expected to get into trouble when they got back”. This will prevent suspicions that party was after more valuable booty than a rescue boat.

    Fleming added that the pilot should be a ‘tough bachelor able to swim’; and that a German-speaker would also be needed to travel on the bomber. He put his own name forward.

    ‘Operation Ruthless’ was quickly given the go-ahead; a plane and crew were procured and Fleming travelled down to Dover to put it into practice. However, to the deep frustration of the Bletchley Park Codebreakers, the plan was abandoned due to the lack of suitable German boats operating at night.

    Frank Birch, Head of German Naval Section at Bletchley Park lamented that “Turing and Twinn (both key Codebreakers at Bletchley Park) came to me like undertakers cheated of a nice corpse … all in a stew about the cancellation of Operation Ruthless”. It now seemed that only the Naval equivalent of a miracle would enable the Codebreakers to break into Naval Enigma but the prolific genius of Ian Fleming for writing spy plots had been born.

    The second event, details for which are forthcoming, will be a family event based on Ian Fleming’s classic children’s tale, Chitty Chitty Bang Bang.

    Keep watching CommanderBond.net for the most up-to-date James Bond news on the web.

  2. The Blades Library Book Club: The Man From Barbarossa

    By Devin Zydel on 2008-02-15

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

    John Gardner's 'The Man From Barbarossa'

    John Gardner’s The Man From Barbarossa

    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 25th 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 tenth novel: The Man From Barbarossa.

    Obtaining The Book

    Ordering online should be fairly easy. The Man From Barbarossa can be ordered online (although in used condition) from the following sources:

    Discuss other places to buy The Man From Barbarossa or where you got your copy in this thread.

    Discuss The Book While Reading

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

    Review And Rate The Book

    After you have finished reading The Man From Barbarossa, 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

  3. 'Shark Bait' James Bond Collection Released In US

    By Devin Zydel on 2008-02-12

    Following up the UK release of Titan’s Shark Bait, the newest James Bond 007 collection from Titan Books, earlier this year, Bond fans in the US can now order a copy from amazon.com for a discounted price.

    In addition to the title story, the Shark Bait collection also includes The Xanadu Connection (originally not syndicated in the UK) and Doomcrack. The latter represents the first of ultimately five Bond comic strips serialised in the Daily Star and is the one and only time Harry North served as the artist.

    Furthermore, this Bond collection also features the second part of an article centering on the 007 adventures in US comic strips. Caroline Bliss (Miss Moneypenny in The Living Daylights and Licence To Kill) provides the introduction. Click here to view the cover artwork for the collection.

    Stay tuned for CommanderBond.net for all the latest news on the Titan James Bond comic strip releases, including the forthcoming collection, The Paradise Plot.

  4. John Griswold Designs An Ian Fleming Centenary Medallion

    By Devin Zydel on 2008-02-11

    John Griswold Designs An Ian Lancaster Fleming
    1908 – Centenary – 2008 Medallion

    John Griswold, author of 2005’s Ian Fleming’s James Bond: Annotations and Chronologies, has designed a centenary medallion to commemorate Ian Fleming. These medallions are made of solid brass/polished brass and the other ones have an antiqued finish and are also solid brass.

    IMAGE: Fleming Centenary Medallion
    IMAGE: Fleming Centenary Medallion

    The medallions are available for purchase through eBay online. (Front side and back side of medallion images are shown.) Each Ian Fleming Centenary Medallion are approximately 3 inches in diameter and each weighs .625 lbs. ( 5/8th of a pound).

    IMAGE: Fleming Centenary Medallion

    IMAGE: Fleming Centenary Medallion

    The medallions were designed and copyrighted by John Griswold,
    author of Ian Fleming’s James Bond: Annotations and Chronologies.

    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 'Live And Let Die'

    By Devin Zydel on 2008-02-10
    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 second James Bond adventure, 1954’s Live and Let Die.

    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 Live and Let Die back in May 2003.

    Ian Fleming's 'Live and Let Die'

    Ian Fleming’s Live and Let Die

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

    Literary 007 Reviewed:
    Live and Let Die

    ‘Live and Let Die’ reviewed by… Captain Grimes

    This book, to me, feels like the beginning of Bond. Casino Royale is an interesting and entertaining little novel, but it is written on a relatively small scale with relatively conventional characters. Nothing, besides the final chapter and Bond’s final line, leaps off the page and lodges itself in your brain.

    Not so with Live and Let Die. Here we find the Bond formula in full swing (or, perhaps, full sweep). Most noticeably, Mr. Big is an engaging and colorful villain, easily superior to both Le Chiffre of the previous book and Drax of the next. The grey, football-shaped head, the precise diction: these are the little details that together create a truly memorable character.

    Then there is the globetrotting. Far from being restricted to France as he was in Casino Royale, or to England as he will be in Moonraker, Bond is constantly on the move here, passing swiftly from Harlem to St. Petersburg to Mr. Big’s hideout in Jamaica. James Bond, in the popular imagination, is a jet-setter, an international playboy, and the roots of that conception can be found in Live and Let Die.

    Voodoo and black American culture provide context for the story, with both interesting and off-putting results. Interesting in that Fleming masterfully injects a tinge of exoticism into a book that he knew would be read primarily by white Europeans. Off-putting in that the book puts forward exceedingly simplistic accounts of voodoo and black culture, particularly the laughable claim that blacks in the 1950s were “just beginning” to throw up geniuses in various fields.

    But one doesn’t read for Fleming for subtle cultural and racial analysis; one reads him for entertainment, and in that respect Live and Let Die certainly delivers.

    Some things, of course, work better than others. Solitaire is alluring, but she is desperate to throw herself into Bond’s arms from page one, and so, when she finally does at the end of the book, there isn’t a great deal of satisfaction for the reader, and certainly not as much as when Bond and Vesper came together in Casino Royale.

    Felix Leiter, however, is much more interesting here, much more alive. One really gets the sense that, despite their cultural differences, Bond and Felix are two very similar men who recognize in each other a kindred spirit. Fleming creates a very believable friendship, and there is much poignancy in Bond’s reaction to the Robber’s attack on Felix.

    The rest of the cast–Strangways, Quarrel, Mr. Big’s goons–acquit themselves ably, and the book ends in a truly suspenseful finale. Of the early books, Live and Let Die is one of the very best.

    Four stars.

    ‘Live and Let Die’ reviewed by… marmaduke

    If pushed to state my very favourite Fleming (and thus Bond novel) it would have to be Live and Let Die. Why? Great atmosphere created (it gives you a great feel of what life in the USA during the mid 50’s was like in the places described). While reading Live and Let Die I was there in my mind’s eye, experiencing through Fleming’s words all of the excitement and glamour.

    ‘Live and Let Die’ reviewed by… Double-0-Seven

    This was the first Ian Fleming book I read.

    I managed to get a bargain on one of the old Pan editions (I believe it’s the 1964 edition although I can’t remember off the top of my head) and began reading it as soon as I got home. I was very excited to finally read one of Ian Fleming’s James Bond novels. Before this I had only read John Gardner’s GoldenEye novelization, as well as Raymond Benson’s novelizations of Tomorrow Never Dies, The World is Not Enough, and Die Another Day.

    As soon as I started reading, I was hooked. I was busy with school at the time, so it took me a few days to get through it all, but I enjoyed every page of it. I loved how Ian Fleming described everything in lots of detail, and how I could easily picture everything in my head. Every scene was just as exciting as the last, and it was my favorite Bond book up until I read Live and Let Die a few weeks ago.

    I’ll say it gets four out of five stars.

    ‘Live and Let Die’ reviewed by… 1q2w3e4r

    Great book, one of my favs to be honest. Definantly a solid 4 out of 5. The characters are well filled out, though Mr Big proves to be the cut of for Drax in Moonraker really isn’t a bad point in my opinion.

    The friendship development with Leiter is a highlight and the relationship with Solitare is interesting and well done. The scenes in Harlem early in the book are interesting. The highlights for me have got to be the duel with the Robber in the warehouse and Bond’s attempt to access The Big Man’s island and the fight with the barracuda.

    It would make a great book to film transfer even now. Pity they chopped it up for a handful of movies.

    ‘Live and Let Die’ reviewed by… Johnboy007

    Without a doubt, my favorite, way too many great parts of this book to deny it’s grandness.

    ‘Live and Let Die’ reviewed by… bond_girl_double07

    I just reread Live and Let Die and it’s honestly one of my favorite books of all time, Bond novel or no. Several of the scenes in this book are incredibly exciting (the end sequence, Bond’s night swim, the escape from Mr. Big’s club, and of course Bond’s discovery of the wounded Felix!) and Fleming does a remarkable job if intermixing his beautiful descriptions of New York and the Caribbean with scenes of incredible action. Everything about this novel is so beautifully spaced, and the pacing and narration are absolutely perfect.

    ‘Live and Let Die’ reviewed by… Bond111

    This is one of Fleming’s best without a doubt. It’s nice to see Bond in America, more specifically Harlem during it’s growth period. The action scenes are as exciting as they come. A very well written and fast read.

    ‘Live and Let Die’ reviewed by… Double-Oh Agent

    Ian Fleming picked up where he left off following his debut novel Casino Royale and the result is Live and Let Die. Though not quite as good as the first book, Live and Let Die, nevertheless, is an entertaining and fun read. The novel is full of action as Bond goes up against a large criminal organization led by the mysterious and dangerous Buonaparte Ignace Gallia aka Mr. Big.

    On this adventure Fleming sends Bond to New York and he immediately becomes the target of Gallia’s virtual all-Black organization. When Bond comes face to face with Mr. Big, Fleming once again displays a knack for creating eccentric, unique, and disturbing individuals. From Mr. Big’s grotesque appearance featuring a gray-colored, football-shaped head and the voodoo symbolism all around him to Tee-Hee Johnson’s perpetual laughter, it is clear that Bond is in trouble. That point is further driven home in a well-written scene which sees Bond receiving his second dose of torture in as many books. (Hope the man has good insurance.)

    While Bond is injured, at least he has a couple of good allies on his side. Simone Latrelle aka Solitaire is a somewhat naive and frightened girl who can also see the future, who nevertheless decides to jump to Bond’s side. It is her escaping Gallia that drives the plot to the Florida coast and on to Jamaica. The other significant ally is the amiable Felix Leiter who is always a joy to behold and never more so than in this book. He and 007 really “bond” in this novel and so it is even more of a shock when the reader learns of the tragedy that befalls Leiter. Driving that point home is the sick message left by Gallia’s man in Florida, The Robber: “He disagreed with something that ate him.” Bond’s confrontation with The Robber in the marine warehouse is tightly written and one can’t help but approve of Bond’s method of revenge. The Robber has only two scenes in the entire book but both carry a lot of weight making them distinctly memorable and him one of Fleming’s better henchmen.

    In Jamaica we meet two more of Bond’s allies–John Strangways and Quarrel. Neither play a huge role in the outcome of the story but they are a likable duo who also give Bond valuable information as he prepares to confront Mr. Big.

    Bond’s undersea journey to the Caribbean island is very suspenseful and one can’t help but feel uneasy with 007 literally swimming with sharks and barracuda. Fleming really knew his underwater stuff and that is in evidence here. The aforementioned uneasy feeling is topped only by the climax of the story where Bond and Solitaire are about to be keelhauled over a coral reef toward the awaiting oceanic predators on the other side and Bond coldly decides to drown his fellow prisoner before their intended fate is met. The setup is full of suspence in what turns out to be a race against time between the ticking of a timer and the speed of a yacht. Once again the villain’s demise is appropriate and just, although Fleming’s painting of that picture via the descriptions of the sights and sounds of Gallia’s final seconds are a bit unsettling.

    The big problem with the book is Fleming’s attempt at imitating Black people’s speech. Unfortunately, it just doesn’t work and gets more in the way of storytelling that it does in just telling the story and it makes the people speaking seem less intelligent. Nevertheless, there are many more good points to recommend the novel. The plot is good and the action brisk and fast. The returning characters grow from the first novel, particularly Bond and Leiter and their budding friendship, and one is anxious to see the next chapter in the 007 saga. And for a writer, that is a mission well accomplished.

    Rating: 006 out of 007

    ‘Live and Let Die’ reviewed by… Single-0-Seven

    Terrific novel. Highly readable. I remember picking it up years ago when I was in high school, and still just getting into the Fleming craze that has now consumed in head to toe. Anyway, I couldn’t put the book down when I read it. Some of Fleming’s best descriptive travel sequences permeate the text, and the characters are some of the greatest in the canon. The Leiter and Bond friendship really blossoms in this book, and we understand how Bond is easily driven forward in his quest against Mr. Big after what is done to Leiter. An exciting, fast-paced book which has seen a bit of justice done to it over the course of three separate films.

    ‘Live and Let Die’ reviewed by… MHazard

    I like the novel, but three things in particular have always stuck out for me:

    1. A lot of the racial dialogue/attitudes make me cringe;
    2. The scene where Bond has his little finger broken. Fleming making a point lost in most of the movies that being Bond is not always fun.
    3. “He disagreed with something that ate him”

    I recently re-read the novel and was also struck by the imagery of the voodoo drums being pounded and then the bodies of the first men Strangways sent returned eaten by sharks.

    I was always disappointed in the movie version, but I can’t imagine how they could possibly make a faithful version now without being picketed. But still a fantastic read.

    ‘Live and Let Die’ reviewed by… 00Twelve

    Live and Let Die is my personal favorite of Fleming’s because the pacing, suspense, relationships, locales, and overall plot are so well balanced. I often lament the lack of courage on EON’s part to make THIS movie. I understand, drugs and “pimp”-looking characters were all the rage in ’73, but oh, the missed opportunities.

    Live and Let Die is also where Bond & Felix’ relationship really fuses into the friendship they would carry on through the canon. Seeing the torture they went through together, and Bond’s utter horror at Felix’ encounter at Ourobouros, really invites the idea that Bond really does have a good friend that he doesn’t want to lose. It makes him more human. It’s also what makes me a big Felix fan.

    5/5 stars. Do not miss.

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

  6. Sebastian Faulks' 'Devil My Care' To Be Published In Russia

    By Devin Zydel on 2008-02-09
    Sebastian Faulks' 'Devil May Care'

    Sebastian Faulks’ Devil May Care

    Back in December of last year, CommanderBond.net reported on the list of international partners signed up to publish Sebastian Faulks’ upcoming James Bond novel, Devil May Care.

    The official Ian Fleming centenary website has since been updated with several newly announced publishers for the 007 novel, including Obsidian Publishers in Bulgaria and Artemis in Turkey. In addition, Devil May Care will also make it’s way to Russia thanks to Azbooka Publishers.

    The full list of international publishers for Devil May Care follows:

    Devil May Care – International Publishers

    • BRAZIL – Record
    • BULGARIA – Obsidian
    • CROATIA – Algoritam
    • CZECH REPUBLIC – XYZ
    • FINLAND – Gummerus
    • FRANCE – Flammarion
    • GERMANY – Heyne
    • GREECE – Oceanida
    • HOLLAND – Bruna
    • HUNGARY – Alexandra
    • ISRAEL – Penn
    • ITALY – Piemme
    • MACEDONIA – Kultura
    • NORWAY – Schibsteds
    • POLAND – Ksiazki
    • PORTUGAL – Civilizacao
    • RUSSIA – Azbooka
    • SLOVENIA – Mladinska Knjiga Zalozba
    • SLOVAKIA – Slovart
    • SPAIN – Seix Barral
    • SWEDEN – Forum
    • TURKEY Artemis

    Penn (Devil May Care‘s publisher in Israel) Publishing’s Hebrew catalogue is comprised of translations of world classics and best-sellers, and includes both fiction and non-fiction. We are Hebrew publishers of Ernest Hemingway, Virginia Woolf, Ian Fleming, Barnes & Noble’s Classics, and more contemporary voices such as David Grossman, Hunter Thompson, and Akhil Sharma. Many of our translations of these timeless stories will be the very first available to the Hebrew-speaking world.

    Azbooka Publishers, founded in 1995, is the largest publishing house in Saint Petersburg and one of the three Russian major publishing houses. Each year Azbooka releases over 10 million copies of books in more than 100 series and individual projects. Many of Azbooka’s projects have been awarded prestigious professional prizes and honours. Azbooka’s publishing activity is mainly focused on Russian and foreign classics, contemporary Russian and foreign fiction, children’s books, illustrated dictionaries, reference books on history and art.

    Devil May Care will be published by Penguin Books in the UK and its territories (under the new Penguin 007 imprint) and by Doubleday in the US on 28 May.

    As previously mentioned by Faulks, 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.’

    CommanderBond.net 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.

  7. 'James Bond: The Secret World Of 007' Coming In October '08

    By Devin Zydel on 2008-02-04

    In what seems to be an exact replica of events two years ago in the months leading up to the release of Casino Royale, a new listing for James Bond: The Secret World of 007 by DK Publishing and Alastair Dougall has appeared online at amazon.com.

    James Bond: The Secret World of 007 offers readers a chance to look at the films by selecting certain key scenes (such as the volcano set in You Only Live Twice and the San Monique finale in Live And Let Die) and acting some of them out, showing the reader where the character’s exact movements in some instances. It also provides information on several of the main characters, gadgets and other items. MI6, the women of 007, Ernst Stavro Blofeld of SPECTRE receive a few pages dedicated to each in the book as well.

    The original edition covered from Dr. No through The World Is Not Enough. The revised edition, which was released in October 2006, was updated with coverage for Die Another Day and Casino Royale.

    While details are very limited on this new edition (due out on 20 October 2008), it seems likely that it would be updated to include coverage on Daniel Craig’s second Bond film, Quantum of Solace, due out on 7 November.

    Order James Bond: The Secret World of 007

    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.

  8. Win A Royal Mail James Bond First Day Cover

    By Devin Zydel on 2008-02-04

    CommanderBond.net is giving forum members the chance to win a James Bond First Day Cover as issued by the Royal Mail on 8 January as part of their Ian Fleming centenary celebrations.

    As earlier reported on CBn, six stamps were issued, each featuring a different 007 novel from Fleming. Furthermore, a miniature sheet, prestige stamp booklet, presentation pack, press sheet and first day covers were also issued to compliment this release.

    This competition is open to all members of CBn. You must be a registered member of the CBn Forums and answer the following question correctly to be eligible to win. Not yet a member of CBn? Register here now–it is free and only takes a minute!

    To enter, fill out the following questionnaire and send a Communiqué/Private Message on the CBn Forums to ‘CBn Competition’ (Subject: CBn Stamps) by Midnight EST on 22 February 2008 (simply click on the link in this paragraph).

    1. The following James Bond 007 novels by Ian Fleming were featured on the six newly issued Royal Mail stamps, except for (Hint):

    • A – Casino Royale
    • B – Live And Let Die
    • C – From Russia With Love
    • D – For Your Eyes Only

    2. What is your CBn Forum Screen Name?
    3. What country/state do you live in?

  9. Charlie Higson To Make Appearance At Hay Festival

    By Devin Zydel on 2008-02-02

    Following up the news that James Bond authors Charlie Higson And Sebastian Faulks would be attending the Oxford Literary Festival at the end of March/early April, the Young Bond Dossier has scored an exclusive on yet another upcoming literary 007-related appearance.

    The website reports that Higson will be making an appearance at the Guardian Hay Festival on 28 May at 2:30pm.

    What is particularly special about this upcoming appearance is the date itself–28 May–which marks the centenary of Ian Fleming’s birthday and also sees the release of Faulks’ new Bond novel, Devil May Care as well as the UK paperback of Higson’s own Hurricane Gold.

    The 2008 Guardian Hay Festival is scheduled to run from 22 May through 1 June in Hay-in-Wye, Wales. For further details on the event, visit the official website.

    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.

  10. Charlie Higson's 'SilverFin' Receives Isinglass Teen Read Nomination

    By Devin Zydel on 2008-02-01

    The Young Bond Dossier reports that Charlie Higson’s SilverFin has been nominated for the 2007/2008 Isinglass Teen Read Award.

    The author’s first Young James Bond novel is listed among the top 20 books as read and nominated by the 7th and 8th graders and then chosen by the Isinglass Teen Read committee members. The awards began in Barrington, New Hampshire in 2001 and became a state-wide event in 2005.

    To learn more about the awards or to listen to a podcast review of SilverFin, visit the official website.

    Keep watching CBn for all the latest details on the SilverFin graphic novel and all Young Bond news.