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  1. 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.

  2. 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.

  3. '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.

  4. Doubleday 'Devil May Care' Website Online

    By Devin Zydel on 2008-05-21
    'Devil May Care' US cover artwork

    Devil May Care US cover artwork

    With less than a week remaining until the publication of Sebastian Faulks’ novel Devil May Care, the promoting is really kicking into gear.

    Doubleday, the US publisher of Faulks’ James Bond novel, have set up a website at www.doubleday.com/jamesbond.

    While currently limited in actual content, the site does allow visitors to sign up for their newsletter in order to receive details on the forthcoming Bond novel.

    In addition, a new video has appeaed online in which Faulks discusses how he came to write a Bond adventure, following Ian Fleming’s thriller formula and where Devil May Care fits in the entire literary 007 canon.

    When asked if he could reveal any clues as to the plot of the novel, Faulks replied: ‘I could tell you something about the content of Devil May Care, but if I did, I’d have to come over and kill you…’

    Click below to view:

    Visit CommanderBond.net’s Devil May Care section for complete coverage of the novel, including the massive marketing plans, pre-ordering details, discussions with Sebastian Faulks and much more.

  5. Better The 'Devil' You Know…

    By Matt Weston on 2008-05-21

    The UK’s two biggest bookstore chains will mark the centenary of Ian Fleming’s birth next week in spectacular fashion.

    Devil May Care cover

    Devil May Care cover

    Waterstone’s and Borders will each host an abundance of James Bond-themed events to coincide with the launch of Sebastian Faulks’ hugely-anticipated 007 novel, Devil May Care.

    Last week, CommanderBond.net reported that the first copies of the novel would be escorted along the Thames on 27 May to the HMS Exeter at Tower Bridge, where the world’s media will be waiting.

    According to 007 Magazine, both Faulks and cover model Tuuli will accompany the first shipment of books as they’re transported from the HMS Exeter to Waterstone’s Piccadilly, where doors will open at 8 a.m. the following day as the book goes on sale. The store has the following events planned for 28 May.

    Bond Is Back At Waterstone’s Piccadilly

    8 a.m. – Bond is back

    To celebrate the launch of the new Bond novel we will be giving away an exclusive print of the cover to the first 200 customers who purchase Devil May Care, and serving cocktails and canapés until 9 a.m. The Waterstone’s exclusive, luxury, signed and numbered edition will be on sale (while stocks last), rrp £100. The first person in the queue to purchase this edition will get number 7.

    12 noon – Hurricane Gold

    Celebrate the launch of Hurricane Gold, the paperback of the new Young Bond novel from 12 noon – 4 p.m. There will be Bond themed activities, and the chance to be amazed by the sleight of hand of magician David Croft.

    2 p.m. – James Bond Fancy Dress Competition

    To celebrate the paperback launch of Hurricane Gold we’d like to invite you to come along to the children’s department dressed as your favourite James Bond character. Judging will take place at 2 p.m., and the maximum entry age is 16 years old. There are three family tickets to the James Bond exhibition at the Imperial War Museum to win.

    6:30 p.m. – Bond: The Story Continues with Lucy Fleming

    We are delighted that Lucy Fleming, niece of James Bond creator Ian Fleming, will be instore reading from Devil May Care, the new Bond novel by Sebastain Faulks, and talking about all things Bond. Join us on the first floor at 6:30 p.m. for an insight into this fasciniating man.

    For more information on all of these events, contact Customer Services at 020 7851 2400.

    Borders, meanwhile, have their own festivities planned for later in the week…

    Bond’s Back: Borders celebrate the release of the latest Bond novel with an action-packed day

    Borders will celebrate the launch of the brand new James Bond novel Devil May Care in style this weekend with a series of activities in its bookstores that are intended to leave customers in double-o heaven!

    To mark the centenary of the birth of Bond creator Ian Fleming, author Sebastian Faulks has been commissioned by The Ian Fleming Estate to write a brand new action-packed Bond adventure. Borders are celebrating its release of Devil May Care with their very own James Bond Day on Saturday 31st May.

    In typical Bond-style, Borders will be offering their customers thrills that will leave them both shaken and stirred. Events to mark the launch of the novel will be taking place in stores nationwide, including roulette wheels and competitions for Bond-inspired breaks and DVDs.

    There will also be some jaw-dropping activity synonymous with Bond’s extraordinary lifestyle. Customers in the London Oxford Street store and Glasgow’s Buchanan Street branch will be amazed by James Bond abseilers – in tuxedos, of course – who will scale the store’s front before presenting copies of Devil May Care to lucky customers. For every guy (or girl) who has dreamt of Bond’s fast-living lifestyle, both Oxford and Cambridge stores will also install twin-racer Aston Martin simulators running fastest-lap competitions at 10 a.m. and 3 p.m.

    However, no Bond celebration would be complete without a stunning female presence and at 1 p.m. this Saturday Borders’ Oxford Street store will host a book signing with the stunning supermodel, Tuuli – cover girl of Devil May Care.

    Dom Kippin, Borders UK Marketing, said of the activity, “James Bond is a British institution so we could not let the release of this new novel pass us by. Though we have had to go some way to match the wild antics of Bond’s thrilling lifestyle, we hope that our customers enjoy all the events that are taking place in Borders stores throughout the UK this Saturday.”

    For further information on activities taking place in Borders bookstores please visit: www.borderslocal.co.uk

    Other participating Borders stores will feature in-store roulette wheels, Young Bond quizzes, competitions for children and competitions for adults to win weekend breaks, DVDs and posters.

    Additionally, as previously reported, Charlie Higson will be appearing at Borders Norwich on 30 May as part of his Hurricane Gold tour.

    Keep watching CommanderBond.net for all the latest news about the Ian Fleming Centenary celebrations.

  6. 'Devil May Care' Hype In Full Bloom

    By Matt Weston on 2008-05-20

    Last month, CommanderBond.net exclusively revealed the promotional poster for Sebastian Faulks’ upcoming James Bond novel, Devil May Care. Last week, it was revealed that the poster will go on display in over 1,000 UK public transport stations as part of an epic marketing blitz to promote the book.

    Devil May Care poster

    Devil May Care poster

    Now, the official Devil May Care Myspace.com blog has updated with a fascinating look at the surprisingly complex process it took to create the poster.

    According to the blog’s intrepid reporter, one Candy Goodwood, “The ad for Devil May Care had to look slick, confident and classy. No complicated messages, no clever lines – just the simple announcement that Bond is Back.”

    “You’ve probably guessed by now that the poppy is a symbol from the book,” Candy continues. “It’s what gives the striking red of the cover and what had to be used to create the look we were going for. Getting poppies in February, however, is easier said than done. These particular poppies had to be specially imported from Italy. So, on the day the shoot was due to take place, Marketing Director Jane ‘Moneypenny’ Rose, Creative Director Rob Williams and Art Director Jim Stoddart, turned up at the photographer’s studio bright and early to receive the delivery of 300 poppies.”

    Ultimately the flowers arrived – albeit closed. Images from the shoot can be found online at Flickr.

    “After a few stamped feet / sobs / general exclamations of ‘what are we going to do?’ and ‘whose idea was this?’ it was realised that closed poppies can be manually peeled open one by one. So, that’s what they did … It took three long hours.”

    “Once the poppies were ready for action they were carefully laid out with the book, as per the original drawing done by Rob Williams. Hours were spent carefully laying down different numbers of poppies to see what looked best.”

    Devil May Care cover

    Devil May Care cover

    “What you’ll know if you have actually seen the advertising around, is that we didn’t in the end use the full flowers. It was the petals themselves which gave the greatest impact. So it was back to the flowers, in order to rapidly start taking them apart. One step ladder and vertigo-stricken-Jane Rose later, and petals were tumbling down over the book while the photographer tried desperately to catch them. Unfortunately the speed of falling poppies isn’t something that can be controlled, so it was a few goes before they got what they needed.”

    The result is strikingly simple and beautiful. The poster wonderfully complements the novel’s artwork, which itself, took two months to complete.

    Head on over to the Devil May Care Myspace.com blog for the full report.

    Meanwhile, Devil May Care continues to climb the charts with eight days until its release. At Amazon.co.uk, the novel sits pretty at #14 on the charts. Waterstone’s, meanwhile, rank the book at #6 among its pre-orders.

    Keep watching CommanderBond.net for all the latest Devil May Care news.

  7. 'Devil May Care' Launch Plans Unveiled

    By Matt Weston on 2008-05-16

    “The most spectacular in publishing for decades.”

    That’s how Penguin’s Managing Director, Tom Weldon, described the impending launch of Sebastian Faulks’ highly-anticipated James Bond novel, Devil May Care, due out on 28 May.

    Devil May Care cover

    Devil May Care cover

    theBookseller.com has landed the first details of the Devil May Care launch plans. According to the site, the first copies of the novel will be escorted along the Thames on 27 May to the HMS Exeter at Tower Bridge, where the world’s media will be waiting. The event will take place from noon. Afterwards, a delivery convoy will transport the books to Waterstone’s Piccadilly, which will open at 8 a.m. on publication day.

    Books will be delivered to other bookstores in the UK overnight.

    Earlier this week, CommanderBond.net reported The Times will launch a Bond book giveaway from this Saturday, starting with short story collection Octopussy and 007 In New York. This is part of an extensive marketing campaign that kicks off on 19 May and will run until 1 June.

    Devil May Care poster

    Devil May Care poster

    The lavish campaign includes a digital strip banner at Piccadilly Circus, which will feature a countdown to Devil May Care‘s release (blogger Tom Johnson snagged a picture of the countdown in action). Furthermore, 600 posters – which CommanderBond.net exclusively revealed last month – will appear at London Underground locations. An additional 450 will be displayed at National Railway stations.

    Internet and high street promotions, such as Waterstone’s postcard giveaway, will also occur.

    The news comes as Devil May Care creeps up Amazon.co.uk‘s charts. The book currently sits at #114, with 12 days – and a marketing onslaught – before its release.

    As Devil May Care excitement reaches fever pitch, keep watching CommanderBond.net for all the latest coverage.

  8. 'Devil May Care' Deal At Waterstone's

    By Devin Zydel on 2008-05-14

    As the 28th of May draws nearer, more and more James Bond fans are picking up the pace in pre-ordering Devil May Care online.

    However, CommanderBond.net Forum member ‘marktmurphy’ alerts us that Waterstone’s will be offering a special deal on Sebastian Faulks’ debut 007 novel.

    The book will be available to purchase for £9.49 (half off the list price) during the first week of sales and will also include a set of free Bond postcards.

    Most recently, Faulks acted as host to the first Waterstone’s Writer’s Table and put together his list of the top 40 most influential books–Ian Fleming’s Moonraker made the cut at #9.

    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.

  9. Amazon Quizzes Sebastian Faulks

    By Matt Weston on 2008-05-12

    With the centenary of Ian Fleming’s birth just weeks away – and with it, Sebastian Faulks’ Devil May Care – James Bond fever is tightening its hold on popular culture.

    Sebastian Faulks

    Among a glut of recent media coverage, Amazon.co.uk has posted a brilliant Q&A with Faulks.

    With Devil May Care picking up after the events of Fleming’s final James Bond book, 007 fans are keen to see Faulks’ interpretation of the famous spy. Faulks tells Amazon.co.uk: “Ian Fleming had put Bond into this rather Baroque situation in the last couple of books – Bond was losing his marbles a bit – and I said to myself let’s produce an absolutely rip-roaring mainstream Bond adventure. Get Bond back at the height of his powers, miraculously recovered from the late Fleming period.”

    Faulks also discussed Fleming’s story templates and how Devil May Care fits alongside those. “I looked at the books and analysed them and they fall roughly into two kinds. There’s the crime story where Bond is really a sort of superior policeman, a crime gangbuster if you like. Then there are the ones which have a threat to national security where he is more of a spy. Frequently in the crime stories Fleming must have thought to himself: why is someone from the secret service going off to break up a diamond-smuggling ring? or whatever it happens to be. Bond often asks it of M, raising the question so that Fleming can deflate it. And M simply says things like: ‘Well, the PM’s very worried. That’s all you need to know, Bond.'”

    Faulks continues: “The crime stories move at a great lick and I wanted that pace which you find in Diamonds Are Forever or Live and Let Die. But I also wanted the menace that you get from the spy stories like Moonraker, which is a funny little book but actually one of my favourites, or to some extent From Russia With Love. So I wrote a hybrid. What I really tried to do was to write Bond at the top of his game, with all of the good bits and none of the boring bits. A hybrid of the crime story and the spy story, featuring all the characters that you like and none of the characters that you don’t. It’s the epitome of Bond.

    Devil May Care cover

    Devil May Care cover

    The bestselling novelist also discussed his reluctance to take on the project. “The Fleming family was very nice to me – and very persuasive. They said: ‘You should think about it’. I was not the obvious choice for this since I’ve never written a thriller before and I don’t generally read thrillers. But I said alright, I’m intrigued. What I’ll do is I’ll go away and read all the Ian Fleming books and if, as I suspect, they turn out to be pulp fiction of a low order then obviously there’s nothing I can do, and I’ll just have to say thanks but no thanks.”

    Fortunately for Bond fans, Faulks’ concerns were unfounded. “I went away and read them in chronological order from the start and I was very pleasantly surprised by how good they were.”

    Faulks also appears to perfectly grasp the important differences between the cinematic and literary incarnations of 007. “One of the great things that the book Bond – Ian Fleming’s Bond – has which the cinematic versions don’t really have is this vulnerability. It’s absolutely essential in a thriller if the reader is to be thrilled, to be excited, that the reader has to feel that at any given stage the hero could die, that any situation he is in could be the last one. He may never get out.”

    “What I really liked about Bond, when I re-read the books before writing mine, was this sense of a physically by-no-means all-conquering guy. Okay, he was armed, but he had a very small gun which was ineffective beyond about ten paces. Later on, he gets a slightly more powerful one but he doesn’t go in all tooled-up like Rambo. He wears expensive suits and soft shoes. So you feel that he’s genuinely in jeopardy all the time and that’s absolutely crucial so the readers can identify to some extent with this character. He’s not a super hero. He’s a vulnerable person.”

    For more, including Faulks’ writing routine, check out the full Q&A at Amazon.co.uk.

    You can also check out a brief video interview with the author here, in which Faulks gives a few clues about Devil May Care‘s characters and locations.

    Keep watching CommanderBond.net for the latest news in the lead-up to the Ian Fleming Centenary.

  10. Limited Edition Signed And Slipcased 'Devil May Care'

    By Devin Zydel on 2008-05-08

    Following up yesterday’s announcement of a Bentley Special Series edition of Sebastian Faulks’ forthcoming James Bond novel, Devil May Care, there comes news of yet another collector’s edition.

    Due for release in June is the Limited Edition Signed & Slipcased Devil May Care.

    Limited to 500 copies worldwide, this special hardback edition will retail for £100 and be available to order from Hatchards Bookshop.

    'Devil May Care'

    Devil May Care

    DEVIL MAY CARE (LIMITED EDITION SIGNED & SLIPCASED VERSION)
    by SEBASTIAN FAULKS writing as IAN FLEMING

    This new adventure of the iconic spy James Bond has been written by leading novelist Sebastian Faulks in celebration of the centenary of Ian Fleming’s birth. The plot of Devil May Care remains wrapped in mystery. Safe to say, it is set in the Cold War and features all the sophisticated glamour, daredevil thrills and edge-of-the-seat excitement we would expect of 007. A fitting tribute to Fleming’s legacy.

    This special edition comes in a red velvet box with the book nestling in black silk. Inside the front cover is a certificate from the Fleming estate. The book has the jacket printed straight onto boards (so is different from the standard edition). It also comes with a ribbon and silver edged pages. These books are signed and numbered out of 500.

    THESE BOOKS WILL BE PUBLISHED IN JUNE.

    £100 | Hardback | 9780718154493

    CommanderBond.net will keep you updated on this special edition of 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.