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Comments
--If five 1-syllable words--
Of a haiku, y'all.
your probably right
From Russia I was Brainwashed...
Wait, that's not Fleming.
Diamonds are always getting smuggled?
still, anything is better than the nonsense spin off with the absent bond
That’s about exactly what I was saying on here for a couple of years, in fact that’s exactly what I was saying, but we do get the unreleased Fleming and most people on here really enjoy these new books. If you can take his works as Bond adventures and don’t even try to conflate it with literary Fleming, they’re okay.
Fleming reference in the title. The obvious, SPECTRE, LICENCE TO KILL, THE WORLD IS NOT ENOUGH, GOLDENEYE, have all been used. Something naval?
Didn't he say it was a spin on a previous title? My guess is Risico007 might have been onto something with a FRWL spin.
Holy cow I thought I was the only one...
I mean I will still read it because I like being apart of the conversation..
heck I likely will read the 00 books because maybe IFP will take a hint and give us modern bond novels again.
I am surprised about the support this opinion gets, because I got the impression that most here were rather happy with the style of the Horowitz books. I find them quite clever and very well written in a style approximating and respecting Fleming.
Like the films, the novels continue, and for the time being Horowitz has been the most successful in recent years, hence he has been asked to pen a novel for the third time. Faulkes, Deaver and Boyd all had their problems and have had their go at the material.
Maybe it would make more sense to argue what people expect from the next author and who would fit that shoe?
Count me in as a fan of Horowitz.
One thing Horowitz has going for him is placing them in Fleming's world. So if you read a lot of Fleming, you're not put off your stride by Bond surfing the internet (Benson) or whatever.
I sometimes wonder how we'd find a new Fleming novel now, if was presented to us under a pseudonym and we didn't know it was Fleming. I imagine a lot of us would pick it apart a lot more critically simply because 'it's not Fleming'.
What I mean is, when we read Fleming now, we are mindful of the fact these are considered modern classics written by 'the master'. But when we read a continuation author, I sometimes think we sit there with our subconscious arms folded - thinking 'all right then, let's see what you've come up with this time'.
I'm with you @Birdleson, I couldn't argue the finer points of what makes a good writer versus a bad one, it's just a feeling. And I'm excited for his third novel.
Yeah they're very entertaining and professionally-written books. For a bit of Bond fun they're much better than most of the continuation novels: the Benson ones are the ones I'd call fanfiction because they're so poorly-written. Anyone expecting a Bond novel to ever be of the quality of Fleming again has their hopes way too high: he was one of the the best thriller writers ever. Just enjoy them for what they are.
Heck yeah, @ColonelAdamski, you can see folks are predisposed to that.
New films, too.
There are several continuation authors who I’ve applauded, but certainly none of them are Fleming. He’s one of my favorite authors for a reason. His style is unique and stimulating. I consider Fleming, Graham and le Carre to be the three master espionage writers of the 20th Century, and it’s hard, nigh impossible, to break into that Trinity. Not only was each a wonderful writer, dexterous with English language, but each also worked in military intelligence either during World War II or immediately after. And each told there stories in completely different ways: different styles, fashions, and approach (Fleming pulp, le Carre real world, Graham irony). Love all three.
But unless Horowitz' third work is fantastic, I'm fine with them moving on and just keep the search going... I'd like to think someone, someday will at least write one great book that can sit next to Fleming at his best... (no one say Colonel Sun, that's not it!)
Haven't read Colonel Sun yet.