CommanderBond.net
  1. Lennertz to Score EA's 'From Russia With Love'

    By johncox on 2005-03-08

    Christopher Lennertz has been signed by Electronic Arts to compose the music to their James Bond line of games beginning with James Bond 007: From Russia With Love, according to the Film Score Monthly message board. FSM says “the entire look and feel of the game is very 60’s and the score will very much be a part of and add to that overall ambience.”

    Lennertz begins recording at the famous Abbey Road studios later this month.

    EA had planned an original 007 outing in the vein of Everything or Nothing for 2005, and hired Bond veteran Bruce Feirstein to write the storyline. However, when it became clear Pierce Brosnan would not be returning to the role of 007 and that an announcement of a successor was still some time away, it was decided to shelve the original and go with the remake concept.

    The storyline of From Russia With Love will expand beyond the storyline of the 1963 James Bond film.

    EA is expected to make an official announcement about the game soon.

  2. James Bond's First Aston Martin

    By johncox on 2005-03-07

    Pop quiz hot-shot! What was James Bond’s very first Aston Martin?

    Until last week, the answer to that question was the Aston Martin DB Mk III from the Ian Fleming novel, Goldfinger.

    But not anymore.

    That’s because in SilverFin, the first Young Bond novel by Charlie Higson, we discover that 13-year-old James Bond learned to drive his uncle’s 1.5 Liter Bamford & Martin Sidevalue Short Chassis Tourer. Fans will be interested to learn that Bamford & Martin went on to become Aston Martin, the car company most associated with the cinematic James Bond. Says Higson:

    I put an early Aston Martin in the book… for film fans.

    But how did Bamford & Martin become Aston Martin?

    According to an Aston Martin website, in 1913 Lionel Martin joined forces with Robert Bamford to sell Singer cars — adapting them for the tough up-hill challenges that formed an important part of early motorsport. The partners wanted to manufacture cars of their own and a name was needed. Martin regularly competed in climbs at Aston Hill — and with the simple combination of a hill and a driver, the Aston Martin legend was born.

    Okay, so what did this early Aston look like?

    Thanks to Ecurie Bertelli, a dealer in vintage Aston Martins (who is offering one of these rare cars for sale), we have some terrific photos of James Bond’s very first Aston Martin (cloaking device and ejector seat optional).

    Bamford & Martin  Bamford & Martin  Bamford & Martin
    Bamford & Martin Sidevalue Short Chassis Tourer from SilverFin

    The adult James Bond went on to drive an Aston Martin DB Mk III (Goldfinger), an Aston Martin DB5 (Goldfinger, Thunderball, GoldenEye, Tomorrow Never Dies, Permission To Die, Light of My Death, High Time To Kill, Live At Five, The World Is Not Enough, Never Dream of Dying, The Man With The Red Tattoo, 007 Racing, Agent Under Fire), an Aston Martin DBS (On Her Majesty’s Secret Service), an Aston Martin Volante (The Living Daylights, A Silent Armageddon), an Aston Martin Vantage (The Living Daylights), and most recently an Aston Martin V12 Vanquish (Die Another Day, NightFire, Everything or Nothing).

    The Aston Martin V8 Vantage is reported to be 007’s new car in next year’s Casino Royale.

  3. First Details of New Ian Fleming Biopic Emerge

    By Matt Weston on 2005-03-06

    CBn can reveal the very first details of a brand new biographical telemovie based on the life of 007 creator, Ian Fleming, tentatively set for broadcast later this year.

    Ben Daniels is Ian Fleming

    Ben Daniels is Ian Fleming

    Produced as a part of Wall to Wall TV Productions‘ strand of biopics based on the lives of a number of famous authors (which, to date, has included Agatha Christie and George Orwell), the yet-to-be-titled film will be directed by John Alexander (Cutting It, Outlaws) and star Ben Daniels (Madeline, Doom) as Ian Fleming. Leanne Klein (for Wall to Wall Productions) will serve as executive producer on the film.

    Unlike earlier small screen adaptions based on Fleming’s life, including 1989’s Goldeneye: The Secret Life of Ian Fleming and 1990’s Spymaker: The Secret Life of Ian Fleming (which starred Sean Connery’s son as Fleming), the new script is 100 percent documented biographical fact. Consultants include Fleming’s surviving family and friends, along with Andrew Lycett (author of Ian Fleming: The Man Behind James Bond and John Pearson (author of The Life of Ian Fleming and the fictional James Bond: The Authorised Biography of 007).

    The 60-minute telemovie is being financed by the BBC and is currently being filmed in London, soon to move production to Ian Fleming’s home, Goldeneye, in Jamaica.

    Stay tuned to CBn for more details of this exciting new telemovie.

    Related Links:

  4. Touchy. Feely. Eely.

    By Jim on 2005-03-05

    Contains mild spoilers.

    Jacques StewartOh, what’s the point?

    I don’t appear to be the target audience so this review is subject to the obvious criticism that I might as well be reviewing the merits of kolkhoz subsistence or line dancing or rohypnol.

    There are two things to review/abuse here. One is the book qua book. The other is the concept of Young Bond, which for many, self included, strikes one as equally welcome as unsolicited emails promising one something at the Paris Hilton and similar in wisdom to any sort of spin-off and, further, in appearing to deny that the James Bond character has always been adult and that, accordingly, “James Bond” is literary synonym for adult fantasy (and that’s pretty much all it is), about as appealing a spin-off as “Schindler’s List II: Goebbels finds the Tipp-Ex” or “Dial J for Jurder” or “Star Wars Episode 0: The Foetus Yoda”.

    On that last forced analogy, worth forcing it further until it squeaks. Wildly popular concept is reinvigorated years down the line by those in charge of the rights going “back in time” and attempting to display the genesis of (cough) revered characters. However, this may be where the analogy ends (and should end, lest I bore you); there always appeared to be a demand for the Star Wars prequels (albeit one instigated by its creator) and it’s their execution that appears to have engendered a collective chin-stroking; anticipated idea, indifferently done. However, isn’t this the converse?: indifferent idea, done … well, that’d be telling, but was there ever a demand for Young Bond? Not apparently one instigated by his creator, nor by any following him to this point. The laws of supply and demand seem to be out of kilter here–the supply is coming where the demand has yet to be readily identified.

    At least within the concept of “James Bond” itself. For whilst it’s now a moot question, query whether this really would have happened without Harry Potter. It’s inescapable, granted, that teenage boys will go to school and, if Eton rather than one of these superannuated day-care centre hotbeds of pilfering some poor sods have to cope with (Harrow), spend most of their time there so, equally granted, if one is going to tell a tale about such a teenage boy, it will be based in part at Eton. Comes back to the question, though–why tell the tale about the teenage Bond? Nobody else wanted to. Nobody appeared to have demanded it (and hence the shock and awe around these parts and others when the concept was first hurled at us a while ago). Where has this demand come from for tales of chaste derring-do with elements of the fantastical based at (cough) antiquated schools? It’s not hard to recognise that description and I’m not sure it’s in James Bond, a corrupted adult killer and killer of adults, permanently on the stage of burn-out, keeping himself going through meaningless sex, a job he claims to despise (and thereby exposes himself as an unlovely hypocrite) and particularly superficial materialism (I appreciate the tautology). Where in his inventor’s frustration at not being able to eat what he wanted, smoke as much as he wanted, drive as fast as he wanted and knob as many pretty but wounded birds in weird SM fantasy…um…as he wanted, and thereby creating a turbocharged version of himself, is a teenage kid? Whilst it’s been said (and by the man himself) that there’s adolescence in James Bond, it’s the futile attempt of an ageing and disappointed man to live as an adolescent, not actual adolescence, that’s the key to it.

    As Ken Follet observed in The Independent on 3 March 2005 “I read Casino Royale when I was 12. It changed my life. Bond knew about all that intruiged me: cars, cocktails, guns and most of all girls”. Note the age. Note the things the reader was looking for. Can Young Bond satisfy the needs of the twelve-year old when James Bond already does? Can Young Bond satisfy the twelve-year old who would want to read something shocking and illicit and something just ever-so out of reach?

    Also, why tell the tale of the early-teenage Bond without showing the development into the adult Bond (or “James Bond”). It appears–on the basis of Chiggy’s interview here – that this series will end before the more adult fantasy elements take charge, so it doesn’t look like book four will be entitled “Two Balls of Tepid Spunk up a Slack Crimson Flue”, which given that the character seemed to be a byword for thrilling the suburban adult male when it first appeared, appears something of a lost opportunity.

    And, having read SilverFin, there’s now another reason for frustration at the existence of Young Bond, because it means firstly that Mr Higson isn’t writing the real thing and secondly that what is a jolly fun read (after a spluttering start) is actively spoiled by its association to “James Bond”. Replace the name “James Bond” with absolutely anything else (and given that the initial idea was that it was a “nothing” name, it should be capable of such necessary vandalism) and the book is a stormer. Perhaps we all have too much baggage to enjoy it properly. I know I do, and feel frustrated as a result. It’s an entertaining read about a lad at a school who gets himself into a bit of a scrape but the lead character could have gone by any other name and little would really have been lost, and probably more credibility gained. Should entertaining storytelling like this have to ride on the coat-tails of a concept that it doesn’t really fit? The result is damage done to a perfectly fine, fun tale, and another sort of damage done to a concept–the written James Bond–that really doesn’t need any more damaging at the moment.

    As it stands, the book is the equivalent of Chiggy winning at crocodile wrestling; I admire him for the result, but I remain to be persuaded that it’s a terribly sensible idea in the first place.

    Chiggy will say that the concept is not Potter. Generally, it does avoid Potter as much as it can, although the red headed pal and feisty female chum seem…reminiscent. Potter has the wizard thing, and (save for a few bits in Muggle world) a totally invented environment which of itself creates interest–the first book and large parts of the second book involve still getting used to the concept and effectively, the school itself is the story. Here, Eton is treated as the kicking-off point and although there’s a fair amount of true-to-life place-names and customs referred to, there seem to be some gaps (I can’t recall if it’s ever identified which house Bond belongs too, although this is probably deliberate to avoid the Gryffindor connections–although if this is as confidently “not Potter” as is asserted, why not identify the house?). Given that there are limited ways in which one may bend and shape a real-life place, it’s a good decision not to keep Bond in the environment for too long and get him away from it (even if that does rely here on a staggeringly unlikely coincidence) so something more capable of bending to Chiggy’s fecund imagination can be used. This rather suggests that in due course Eton may have to take a back seat, and accordingly, it won’t matter where Bond was at school–frankly I don’t care whether it was Eton or Fettes and if the remaining books take the same attitude, it won’t really matter because very little of real import will happen there.

    SilverFin bears a plot that is no more adult and no more childish than “James Bond saves the Cannes Film Festival” or one involving an invisible car, a talking parrot or a supercriminal gutting an Alpine sports club and hypnotising British dolly birds to love marzipan or whatever it was. Those that die, die nastily; MacSawney meets Hannibal (not the bit you’re thinking – it isn’t that graphic) and the finding of Meatpacker Moran’s body on (about) page 226 (and what it has been subjected to) is very, very (and gratifyingly) nasty (although this does rather put to bed the concept that this is a children’s book, and therefore the entire concept of Young Bond and therefore why wasn’t Chiggles engaged to write James Bond rantrantrant). The villain’s scheme in the development of eugenics is an “amusing” and genuinely creepy nod not to “Bond-lore” (ugh) but to what would come with Aryan “culture” (the physical description of George Hellebore is a less subtle reference), although the relationship between the villain and his brother reminded me of Serpent’s Tooth and a similar-ish scheme. And Frankenstein. See? We are capable of thinking outside “Bond”. Just.

    For those determined to cling to the wreckage, what of it is identifiable “Bond”? Calling a horse “Martini” seems a bit forced, the introduction of May the housekeeper, well…umm… although plusses are that the villain gets a suitably OTT description, this “young boy who gets himself into a scrape, call him John Brown or Jehosephat Beelzebub” goes through Hell, there’s bits about the Bentley and badinage over a meal between Jacob Brownowski (the Ascent of Bond? Oh, never mind) and the villain (although most unlikely coming from the mouth/mind of a thirteen year old kid, frankly). And, although chaste, there’s a bit of romping between Jesus Bellend and “Wilder Lawless”, which is a stupid name and just crammed in there for “Bond” referencing when she could just as easily have worked with the name Madge or Jenny or Turbo. There’s probably loads more but what was particularly enjoyable was that if there were, they were not shouting out loud about “Bond knowledge” (this means you, Mr Benson) and therefore not getting in the way of what is a fun thing. Let it not be recognisably “Bond”–it really should have nothing to do with “James Bond” anyway–and you’ll enjoy it more. Greatly.

    The one point at which it works, and cleverly, is in the preface; an unnamed boy, thinking of his recently deceased father, goes fishing at Loch Silverfin; there are teases to make the reader with redundant knowledge of “James Bond” believe it is Bond; the comeuppance for the character is ours, too. Neat. I have to say I fell into that trap. Nice to have a “Bond” book surprise one now and again.

    Weaknesses? There’s waaay too much in the (terrible) opening chapter, which really isn’t representative of the whole (and is the opening chapter that was leaked); the cribbing of the opening line of Casino Royale is naff (what next? “There are moments of great luxury in the life of a thirteen-year-old snotbag”?) and although it does suggest that Chigs can recognise potential when he steals it, it’s the only moment when he does the practically impossible and out-Bensons Benson, and in that same opening chapter a teacher “reminding Bond of King George” one of the few (and this one, clumsy) references to time and place. Indeed, there are few elements to date the book as being set in the 1930s–not wise to alienate the apparent target audience–but some of the dialogue seems most unlikely coming from modern Etonians, never mind those of seventy years ago. One also can’t help escaping the feeling that the villain did shoot his son in the initial draft; somehow that would have been a more immediately satisfying end to that father-son relationship.

    Ultimately, the major weakness is in the attempts to tie it into the “Bond universe”. Why bother? It’s better without it.

    If the aim is to introduce a new readership to James Bond, it’s a pointless exercise because this character is not James Bond and given that there are moments of ickiness equal to “James Bond”, why the target audience should start on this and not Casino Royale is a bit of a mystery. The enterprise comes across as a needless cash-in on two success–James Bond and Harry Potter–and that’s a bit of a shame because divest it of its proclaimed connection to the Fleming adult and it’s a mighty good read.

    In short, despite the hilarious (and slightly demeaning) juxtaposition of the blurb: “Ian Fleming first wrote about James Bond over fifty years ago. He was uniquely placed to chronicle Bond’s secret-service career–he was himself involved at a high level in intelligence-gathering operations in World War II” against “Charlie Higson is a well-know writer of screenplays and adult thriller novels, as well as a performer and co-creator of The Fast Show”, what SilverFin–against considerable odds–turns out to be is the best spin-off Bond we’ve had for some time, but it would be better and more welcome were it not one. In even shorter, “no, but yeah”.

    And if Chigs is a writer of adult thriller novels, hasn’t someone at IFP missed a trick here? Time to rethink that contract…

    Jacques Stewart read the UK Edition of SilverFin.

    Return to CBn Reviews Young Bond #1: SilverFin

  5. But Is It A Good Bond Book?

    By johncox on 2005-03-05

    Contains mild spoilers.

    John CoxSilverFin, the debut Young Bond novel by Charlie Higson, is a well-written “boy’s adventure”-type book that will please its pre-teen target audience. It should get glowing reviews, and Ian Fleming Publications should be very happy with author Higson’s hard work. While there is some gruesome violence in SilverFin, mothers can rest assured that there is not a whiff of sexuality within its 372 pages (the longest James Bond novel yet written). In these regards, Young Bond #1 is a resounding success.

    However, CBn is a James Bond site run by fans for fans. We know our Bond and we know our Fleming. The juggernaut of SilverFin publicity has promised the book will “appeal to new readers and James Bond fans alike.

    Well…

    While Bond fans can certainly enjoy SilverFin as a well-written adventure book, they may have a slightly harder time embracing it as “A James Bond Adventure.” But make sure you read this review to the end because there is a twist.

    Critics complained that John Gardner and Raymond Benson could never step free of the shadow of Ian Fleming in their 007 “continuation novels.” The good news is Charlie Higson has finally stepped clear of that shadow…the bad news is he’s landed squarely in the shadow of J.K. Rowling. Far too much of SilverFin reads like a Harry Potter clone, and this will initially be the most difficult aspect for Bond fans to get past.

    After a thrilling opening prologue that would not be out of place in a legitimate…err, I mean, adult James Bond novel, we meet young James (Higson’s elects to call him “James” instead of the traditional “Bond”) as he arrives at Eton in the 1930s. James is polite and self-effacing, gets lost “at least twice a day” on his way to class, and feels fear when confronted by bullies. Even though he’s described as tall for his age and athletic, he lacks competitive drive (not to mention killer instinct). James loses almost every Eton sporting competition he enters — which doesn’t seem to trouble him in the least. In fact, he is quite pleased to place 7th (get it?) in a shooting competition. While James is supposed to be 13 in this book, he reads much younger. Are “monsters in the dark” still a concern of 13-year-olds? In short, the James Bond of the first two thirds of SilverFin is a bit of a wimp. This is clearly NOT Fleming’s Bond. It’s not even Roger Moore’s Bond. But keep reading…

    SilverFin is divided into three parts. Part I chronicles Bond’s life at Eton and involves a series of confrontations and competitions with brutish blonde American George Hellebore. At Eton the agreeable James quickly gathers a collection of colorful and diverse friends: an Indian boy, a German-Jewish boy, a boy from Hong Kong, a lovable chubby tuba player… Maybe it’s a foretelling of James’s amazing gambling luck that he would draw the only living quarters that didn’t contain a single Englishman. On the one hand, this works as a motivator of Bond’s future worldliness; on the other, it feels like pandering to a “politically correct” mentality and, again, to the Harry Potter crowd. While clearly very well researched, and despite the highlight of an exciting chapter-long footrace, this first section of SilverFin is a bit tedious and one hopes Higson will get young Bond bounced out of Eton sooner than later.

    Bond breaks free of the Eton section and heads to Scotland in Part II, where the real SilverFin adventure begins. But just when you thought you were free of the Potter formula, Bond is instantly teamed with a talkative red-haired Irish companion (inventively named “Red”) and the spunky “girl” of the story, Wilder Lawless. In what is certainly a low point of young Bond’s masculine development, upon meeting James, Wilder wrestles him to the ground and shoves leaves into his mouth. (There’s talk of this bizarrely humiliating moment being cut from the U.S. version.)

    On a more positive note, the villain of the story, Lord Randolph Hellebore, is well drawn and his caper is teased out very effectively. (It’s a curious feature of SilverFin that, when Higson is free of young James, the book improves dramatically. One of the best chapters in the novel is told entirely from the point of view of Hellebore’s abused son, George.) Hellebore is American, “like a great Roman,” who makes bizarre speeches and could give Hugo Drax a run for his money in a debate on master race theory. Lord Hellebore shares a worldview consistent with the recently empowered Nazis. One wonders why Higson didn’t make the character a German; certainly, Fleming would have. But maybe this would have been too cliché and, again, not “politically correct.” The enemy nation in SilverFin appears to be America. Americans are brutes, simpletons, or worse in SilverFin. Maybe this reflects a 2005 zeitgeist more than that of the 1930s, but know that the spirit of Felix Leiter (not to mention the camaraderie of World War II) is nowhere to be found in Young Bond #1.

    Many of Higson’s Bondian biographical touches, found mainly in this second section, may come off as a bit too cute for hardcore James Bond fans. Bond’s uncle Max teaches young James to drive in an early model Aston Martin (a Bamford & Martin Sidevalve Short Chassis Tourer). Bond’s love of Bentley motorcars, we discover, is rooted in the fact that his Aunt Charmian drives a 4.5 litre (the same car Bond drives in Casino Royale). Bond’s attraction to martinis (shaken, not stirred) has, apparently, nothing to do with the need to dull the guilt and fear that comes with being a paid assassin. Now, when we see 007 order his signature drink, we can assume his mind is drifting back to the memory of Wilder Lawless and her horse named, yep, “Martini.” *Sigh*

    Ah…but now it’s time for our twist.

    While the first two thirds of SilverFin may shake and stir old guard Bond fans, know that it is also by design. It’s no spoiler to say Young Bond #1 is a story of transformation and that, by the end of the novel, the timid boy has via his experience found his 007 steel and menace. If nothing else, this book HAD to be that. And when Bond finally shakes off his yammering Potteresque companions, the action of the final third of the book is downright thrilling! Higson knows how to write, and he weaves horror and sci-fi elements into the story very effectively. You’ll never look at an eel the same way again after reading SilverFin.

    It’s in this final section that Higson shows us the true potential of a Young Bond series. Age becomes far less of a factor when Bond is facing off with a madman, or on his own battling for his life in the waters beneath a Scottish Castle. It’s here Higson begins to channel Fleming at his best, and it’s here that SilverFin becomes, yep, A JAMES BOND ADVENTURE! (There is also an interesting twist to Bond’s transformation that could have Bond chat boards buzzing for some time to come.) For this reviewer, the final third was a last minute save; a rousing return to Bondian basics with a dash of sci-fi horror thrown in. And when the bullies back at Eton see something “cold and frightening” in young Bond’s eyes, I suddenly found myself looking forward to Book 2 in a major way. Like young Bond himself, I was transformed in the end by SilverFin.

    Bond fans gave the concept of Young Bond series a pretty rough reception when it was announced last summer. Asking 007 fans to embrace a kid-safe revisionist history of our “sexist misogynist dinosaur” may be asking too much. So for those fans predisposed to not liking the Young Bond series, know that SilverFin will probably not change your mind and maybe it’s best to skip it. For fans curious about 007’s past, but wary of getting it from a children’s book, I recommend seeking out a secondhand copy of John Pearson’s superb James Bond: The Authorized Biography of 007, which offers up a more interesting — or, at least more adult — version of young Bond’s upbringing.

    But for those more pliable fans, like myself, who have enjoyed the various “continuation novels” and are willing to gamble on this Young Bond series, SilverFin will satisfy. It’s a good start. One just hopes Higson will shake off the Harry Potter contrivances and edge back toward that shadow of Ian Fleming in Book #2.

    Then again, maybe we could all just pick up a copy of Casino Royale and embrace the unexplained mystery of how James Bond came to be the man in the silhouette: a civil servant with a license to kill, a man with few friends and no family, a man without a past who forever exists “one minute in the future”…

    Because wasn’t that Ian Fleming’s intention all along?

    John Cox read the UK Uncorrected Proof of SilverFin.

    Return to CBn Reviews Young Bond #1: SilverFin

  6. SilverFin Will Hook You.

    By righty007 on 2005-03-05

    Contains mild spoilers.

    Chris WrightSilverFin by Charlie Higson puts the pleasure in pleasure reading. It is one of the most enjoyable books I have ever read. I stayed up very late on many school nights reading it because I couldn’t put it down. It is a very addictive book. I’ve read six James Bond novels by Ian Fleming in my time and I enjoyed reading SilverFin more than some of them. Mr. Higson is a fantastic author because he writes with great detail, his writing style makes the story very easy to comprehend, and it is evident that he did much research. SilverFin started off the Young Bond™ series very nicely with a perfect introduction to James Bond’s formative years.

    I liked how Higson made James weak in the beginning and made him grow tougher as the story progressed. James was vulnerable and scared of bullies in the beginning but that all changed at the end of the story. I am eager to see more evolution in young James as the series continues. I am a little disappointed that James wiped off the kiss he received from Wilder Lawless because at thirteen years old a boy should not believe in “cooties” anymore. When I was thirteen years old I was kissing girls but maybe it was different in the 1930s but I doubt that. I would have expected James Bond to enjoy that kiss even at thirteen. Isn’t this the same James Bond that lost his virginity at sixteen, only three years later, to a prostitute in Paris? I was also a little disappointed by James’ group of friends at Eton. To me they came off as the school “rejects” but I guess that Higson wanted to show us that James is an outsider, which makes sense. James’ friend, Red Kelly, is a good character. He is important to the plot and also a source of comic relief, which got annoying at some parts.

    I enjoyed learning about James Bond’s family. The part about his parents is very touching. Higson keeps the reader hooked by hinting about his parents throughout the beginning. Later on the story of their death is revealed in an appropriate way. Aunt Charmian and Uncle Max are great characters and they obviously had influences on James that carried on into adulthood, which is evident in the Fleming novels. For example, James learned about spying and fast cars from his Uncle Max. I like how May was Uncle Max’s housekeeper. If you’ve read the Fleming novels you would know that she becomes James’ housekeeper. I am disappointed that Uncle Max passed away because he was such a lovable character but it was obvious that he would die at some point since his health was pretty bad.

    The villain in SilverFin is a very good villain. He is a very sick and cruel man, which is surprising since this book is aimed at pre-teens. His plan of creating a genetically altered race of men and beasts is very interesting especially because this story takes place in the era of Adolf Hitler and the Nazi Party. His son, George Hellebore, was a good enemy until his predictable change of heart. He turned on his father therefore becoming a good ally for Bond later on when together they destroyed Lord Hellebore’s castle in Scotland where he conducted his evil experiments.

    SilverFin is as perfect as can be but I am concerned about how it will be accepted by the parents of its target audience. The book has a lot of violence, death, and a little gore and I certainly understand why it was toned down in the United States. That stuff doesn’t really bother me but it may bother some strict parents. The only violent part I didn’t really like was the abuse and murder of some piglets by Cleek MacSawney, Lord Hellebore’s right hand man.

    I recommend SilverFin to readers of all ages and it is a must read for fans of James Bond. This book makes reading fun and I should know because reading has never been my favorite thing to do. If you decide to read SilverFin, don’t read it too fast because Book 2 is coming out in January 2006. Waiting for it will be as painful as being mauled by Lord Hellebore’s killer, genetically altered eels from Loch Silverfin. Well, maybe not that painful but still pretty painful!

    Mini Review

    SilverFin (2005) 5star.gif

    Places: Eton College; Keithly; Pett Bottom
    Girl(s): Wilder Lawless
    Villain(s): Lord Randolph Hellebore
    Villain’s Employer: Self-employed
    Villain’s Project: Creating a genetically altered race of men and beasts.
    Minor Villain(s): George Hellebore; Cleek MacSawney; Dr. Perseus Friend
    Bond’s Friends: Pritpal Nandra; Tommy Chong; Leo Butcher; Red Kelly; Mike “Meatpacker” Moran
    Highlights: Cross-country race; train fight; Silverfin serum injection; death of Lord Hellebore
    Remarks: A very good introduction to James Bond’s formative years.

    Chris Wright read the US Uncorrected Proof of SilverFin.

    Return to CBn Reviews Young Bond #1: SilverFin

  7. CBn Reviews Young Bond Book 1: 'SilverFin'

    By The CBn Team on 2005-03-05

    Today CBn offers readers not one but three reviews of Young Bond Book 1: SilverFin by Charlie Higson. One review is by a 16-year-old Bond fan, another by a 40-year-old Bond fan and yet another from a 31-year-old Bond fan who is an old Etonian. Equal in their passions for 007, but clearly of three distinct perspectives. Does SilverFin reach all brand of James Bond fans? Read & find out:

    Chris Wright

    SilverFin Will Hook You.
    A POSITIVE Review by Chris Wright

    SilverFin by Charlie Higson puts the pleasure in pleasure reading. It is one of the most enjoyable books I have ever read. I stayed up very late on many school nights reading it because I couldn’t put it down. [read more…]

    John Cox

    But Is It A Good Bond Book?
    A MIXED Review by John Cox

    While Bond fans can certainly enjoy SilverFin as a well-written adventure book, they may have a slightly harder time embracing it as “A James Bond Adventure.” But… read this review to the end… there is a twist. [read more…]

    Jacques Stewart

    Touchy. Feely. Eely.
    A PUZZLED review by Jacques Stewart

    Oh, what’s the point? I don’t appear to be the target audience so this review is subject to the obvious criticism that I might as well be reviewing the merits of kolkhoz subsistence or line dancing or rohypnol. [read more…]

    Purchase the UK paperback edition of SilverFin

    Purchase the SilverFin audio book

    Pre-order the U.S. hardcover edition of SilverFin (April 27, 2005)

    Pre-order the U.S. paperback edition of SilverFin (April 27, 2005)

  8. James Bond's Singles

    By Devin Zydel on 2005-03-03

    For over 40 years in the James Bond 007 series, an amazing group of talented professionals have performed the brilliant title songs for the films, most recently with pop star Madonna performing Die Another Day. Before the soundtrack came out for the film, a CD single was released which included one of the main songs soon to be released on the soundtrack, also with remixes with other artists included.

    CBn looks back at some of the most recent James Bond 007 CD singles of the main title songs, giving you the chance to take a second glance at perhaps a Bond item you’ve overlooked in collecting the soundtracks and compilation albums.

    Die Another Day – Madonna

    DAD Single Cover

    Track Listing:

    1. Die Another Day – Radio Edit – 3:27
    2. Die Another Day – Dirty Vegas Main Mix – 10:08
    3. Die Another Day – Thee RetroLectro Mix – 6:59
    4. Die Another Day – Thundrepuss Club Mix – 9:25
    5. Die Another Day – Deepsky Remix – 7:27
    6. Die Another Day – Brother Brown’s Bond-Age Club – 7:51

    Produced by Madonna and Mirwais Ahmadzai. Strings arranged by Michael Colombier. Mixed by Mark ‘Spike’ Stent.

    Buy: Amazon.co.uk or
    Amazon.com

    The World is not Enough – Garbage

    TWINE Single Cover

    Track Listing:

    1. The World is not Enough – Original Version
    2. The World is not Enough – UNKLE Remix
    3. Ice Bandits

    Produced by Garbage and David Arnold. Lyrics by Don Black.

    Buy: Amazon.co.uk or
    Amazon.com

    Tomorrow Never Dies – Sheryl Crow

    TND Single Cover

    Track Listing:

    1. Tomorrow Never Dies – Full-Length Version
    2. The Book – Sheryl Crow
    3. No One Said It Would Be Easy – Sheryl Crow
    4. Ordinary Morning – Sheryl Crow

    Produced by Sheryl Crow and Mitchell Froom.

    Buy: Amazon.co.uk or
    Amazon.com

    GoldenEye – Tina Turner

    GE Single Cover

    Track Listing:

    1. GoldenEye – Radio Edit – 3:28
    2. GoldenEye – A/C Mix – 4:01
    3. GoldenEye – Urban Mix – 4:01
    4. GoldenEye – Club Edit – 4:25

    Executive Producers: Bono & The Edge; Produced and Mixed by Nellee Hooper.

    Buy: Amazon.com

  9. Collector Alert! 'SilverFin' First Printing Error

    By johncox on 2005-03-03

    James Bond book collectors already have something to hunt for with the release of SilverFin, the first Young Bond novel by Charlie Higson. As CBn first reported last week the release of Book 2 has been pushed from October 2005 to January ’06. This date change has now been confirmed with Ian Fleming Publications.

    However, the first printing of SilverFin — identifiable by a roman numeral 1 on the copyright page — still shows the release date for Book 2 as “October 2005” in front of the book (under other Young Bond titles), while a “Top Secret” add for Book 2 on the last page shows the correct release date of January ’06.

    This mistake was discovered and corrected in a second printing before the March 3rd release, and the majority of copies out there are the corrected second edition.

    But there’s good news for collectors! It seems some of the first edition error copies did slip through and are out there mixed with the second. Even just being a First makes it the desirable edition, but being a First and an error copy (and possibly recalled) makes it all that more desirable and, no doubt, more valuable over time.

    So if this kind of thing matters to you, when buying your copy of SilverFin, be sure to check that copyright page or the back of that very first page. If it says Young Bond Book 2 is coming “October 2005”, then that’s the rare first edition error copy. If it says “January 2006”, then what you have there is a second.

    Happy hunting my fellow collector nuts!

    Purchase the UK paperback edition of SilverFin

    Purchase the SilverFin audio book

    Pre-order the U.S. hardcover edition of SilverFin (April 27, 2005)

    Pre-order the U.S. paperback edition of SilverFin (April 27, 2005)

  10. 'SilverFin' is HERE!

    By johncox on 2005-03-03

    CHAPTER ONE: THE NEW BOY

    The smell and noise and confusion of a hallway full of schoolboys can be quite awful at twenty past seven in the morning. The smell was the worst part-from this great disorderly mass rose the scent of sweat and sour breath and unwashed bodies, mixing with the two-hundred-year-old school odor of carbolic and floor polish.

    It’s been 3 long years since James Bond tangled with bio-terrorist Goro Yoshida in Raymond Benson’s The Man With The Red Tattoo… but today the literary Bond is BACK in SilverFin, the first Young Bond novel by Charlie Higson.

    SilverFin in stores today

    SilverFin in stores today

    CBn has been covering the relaunch of the literary James Bond with great interest; from the announcement of the Young Bond series last April, to last weeks interview with author Charlie Higson. Now you can decide for yourself whether the literary Bond is really back by picking up a copy of the SilverFin paperback edition or audio edition from your local UK bookstore, or by ordering from Amazon.co.uk.

    In addition, the full Young James Bond website (www.youngbond.com) has been launched with its own fan forums, wallpapers featuring book artwork, audio downloads for your mobile, and a competition to win a Nintendo DS (you will have to explore James’ Eton College dorm room to discover all these goodies).

    The U.S. edition is due for release on April 27…but is there really any reason for internet savvy U.S. fans to wait (especially in light of the news that the U.S. edition may be edited)? Even with shipping cost, the UK edition is still less expensive than the U.S. hardcover. (Of course, collectors will still want to snap up this U.S. edition as there will be no hardcover release in the UK for this Bond novel.)

    Bond TODAY with SilverFin and let your fellow CBners know what you think in the CBn forums. And be sure have a peek HERE for the very first news on Young Bond Books 2, 3, and 4!

    Watch for CBn’s review of SilverFin coming soon.

    Purchase the UK paperback edition of SilverFin

    Purchase the SilverFin audio book

    Pre-order the U.S. hardcover edition of SilverFin (April 27, 2005)

    Pre-order the U.S. paperback edition of SilverFin (April 27, 2005)