It looks like you're new here. If you want to get involved, click one of these buttons!
^ Back to Top
The MI6 Community is unofficial and in no way associated or linked with EON Productions, MGM, Sony Pictures, Activision or Ian Fleming Publications. Any views expressed on this website are of the individual members and do not necessarily reflect those of the Community owners. Any video or images displayed in topics on MI6 Community are embedded by users from third party sites and as such MI6 Community and its owners take no responsibility for this material.
James Bond News • James Bond Articles • James Bond Magazine
Comments
I was thinking that myself. Thanks my friend.
My pleasure. Obviously, the John Gardner Bond novels are working checking out too. ;)
Of course. Everything from them to Young Bond to the Moneypenny Diaries are on my agenda. The films have gotten a little familiar so it's time to branch out. I'll remember to write a scathing review of Never Send Flowers.
I feel the influence of @TheWizardOfIce here! ;)
Oh dear me. :)
One of Fleming's best. I love the breezy flow of the book.
Next time I will read this after reading all of Fleming in order...
I'm reading it as well. Well-written.
“So this was Bond, this figure in the shadows. Until this moment I had taken it for granted that I knew him, as one does with any familiar character in what one thought was fiction. I had been picturing him as some sort of superman. The reality was different. There was something guarded and withdrawn about him. I felt that I was seeing an intriguing, unfamiliar face half-hidden by an image I could not forget.
It was a strong face, certainly – the eyes pale-grey and very cold, the mouth wide and hard; he didn’t smile. In some was I was reminded of Fleming’s own description of the man. The famous scar ran down the left cheek like a fault in the terrain between the jaw-line and the corner of the eye. The dark hair, grey streaked now, still fell in the authentic comma over the forehead. But there was something the descriptions of James Bond had not prepared me for – the air of tension which surrounded him. He had the look of someone who had suffered and who was wary of the pain’s return. Even Sir William seemed to be treating him with care as he introduced us. We shook hands.”
Brilliant stuff...
This made me think of Dalton even though I always see Connery as Bond in the novels.
Bond in exotic locations is always a positive for me, both in the books and the films - this book no different. The story however, wasn't for me. It's good of course (it's Fleming, after all), but compared with the Fleming novels I've read before, this didn't offer much. Think I'll need to rank it last, behind Goldfinger.
Before continuing with For Your Eyes Only, I'm going to read Anthony Horowitz's Forever and a Day.
!!!
Before this last Flemingathon, I actually had Dr. No ranked rather low. It felt like a real jumping the shark—squid?—moment for me in Fleming's oeuvre. As if Fleming had taken things far too far into the realm of the ridiculous. But this last go around, I was fully onboard with the adventure and the fantasy and enjoyed the hell out of it.
Give it some time and give Dr. No another chance with a fresh mind slate.
I guess Dr No would be somewhere in the bottom five if I ever did a serious ranking of the novels.
(MR, CR, FRWL, OHMSS, TMWTGG (yes, I love it, love reading it, love Bond coming back under a spell, love the disgusting Scaramanga)..., and yes TSWLM (shoot me-- this was a risk and I love the noir feel to it)...
I too would have DN in my lower five (I love the first two-thirds; the escape with the squid does veer OTT and Fleming's precise, crisp descriptions seems, to me, to become muddy and chaotic).
I'm sure I will on a later reading, but for this time around it felt a bit boring, really. Never felt like the page turner I hoped it would be. Also, the giant squid was ridiculous. It almost felt like I was reading something completely different than a Bond novel.
Dr No was bit interesting for me for something completely different than the story itself, though. My grandfather was a sailer (this must have been pre-1940), and one of the places he visited was Jamaica. Only a small coincidence of course, him having visited the location of the book. Even more a coincidence was the mention of the H.M.S. Narvik. My grandfather happened to be in the town of Narvik in 1940 during the Battles of Narvik.
I don't know what connection the name of the H.M.S. Narvik has to the town of Narvik, though.
I could never disagree with this statement. He was a unique voice that oozed silk and class, but the added dimension, I think, of the outsider. He was "allowed in" but his perceptions were never of the so-called "norm".
He took normal and turned it upside-down and on its head.
Don't get me wrong, my opinion of DN is only within a "Fleming context". It was very enjoyable, but far from LALD for example, or FRWL.
I think everyone who bothers to post on this thread do it because we are in love with Fleming's novels. I wouldn't doubt that a second!
That is not to say we cannot be critical. True love after all is being aware of your lover's weaknesses and still except them. ;)