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
"It's okay to do that. It's not a DeLorean." :D
Haven't read those. I was really not into continuation novels at all, but after some encouragement here, or even on the old forum, I decided I'd give them a chance with The Devil May Care. Now that put me off them for quite a bit. Then it was Carte Blanche, which was marginally better and again put me off for quite a bit. So I missed out on Solo, trying again with Trigger Mortis. As you can read on pages past I'm not that convinced, but all in all it's a lot better then those two before. So I figured there should be at least one good continuation novel, and there is and I just read it: Colonel Sun. It isn't perfect and it has some minor flaws in it, but all in all it's a very, very good effort which I thoroughly enjoyed. It's the only one I've read with the same tension buildup as Fleming wrote.
Trigger Mortis... I like the idea of the retro cover, but they should have got the artist who did all the Fleming paperback reprints a decades ago.
If the Fleming estate were to get them reprinted hardcovers with those kind of (but different) retro designs, I would be forced to buy them all over again.
I have the Cdn hardcover but I'd pick up that pb just for the collectible cover.
Yes, the pulp look is real catchy
For the most part you are correct but this, and the terrific Penguin USA Richie Fahey Flemings are the exception.
The UK hardback 'TM' first edition was terrible. Happily what lay between the covers wasn't.
Agree, the Penguin USA Richie Fahey Flemings are awesome. Way better than the Archer cartoon-y they went with.
To digress, when it comes to cover art I would vote as follows.
1) Chopping - peerless. FRWL is my favourite. TB a close second and GF a good third.
2) Hawkey - TB ground breaking. OHMSS blood curdling.
3) Fahey - FRWL sexy. TSWLM cool.
Three very different and contrasting styles that show the way.
No Bond novel feels like a Bond novel to me without the quieter bits. Horowitz's Trigger Mortis didn't drag for me at all. In fact, it felt too rushed in parts. I would have liked to have had more dialogue between Bond and Tanner.
I love these covers especially the Dr. No one. I had two box sets of these books that I got from a cheap book website when I was living in London. The first box was accidentally delivered to my neighbors so I got them to send another box. After it was delivered, the neighbors dropped off the first box. Before I returned to my home country, I got my friend to sell both boxes on ebay for me as it would have been expensive to have posted them back to my homeland. I regret not keeping one box now. Surely I could have lugged them on the plane with me...
This Trigger Mortis cover is nice but not up there with the above ones. Still, definitely better than the hardback versions.
Damn, I hope IFP don't shoot themselves in the foot and ask Horowitz to sign a contract to write a few more. When I read Trigger Mortis, I seldom felt like I was reading a continuation book. In most parts it felt so natural. I haven't felt like that with a continuation book since the early Gardner era. Although I did read a couple of Gardner books when I was only halfway through the Fleming books for the first time back in the mid 90's. I went into the book without a feeling of nervousness too which was due to the fact that so many literary Bond fans liked the book and supported Horowitz.
Sometimes I can't but help wondering if IFP have chosen to go in a different direction and have decided to ask someone like Cole, Higson or someone else to continue the young Bond books up into Bond's war years until he's recruited in to the service as a young adult (which would be great) and have decided not to continue the adult books in Bond's later years (not good). However, I have been guilty of thinking too much sometimes...
What about the writing didn't you like?
I also find differences between the various Bond novels. I can´t remember being bothered by anything described in GF, or OHMSS. But in YOLT, Bond getting to know the Japanese girl kind of bores me. In TB, I find the introduction of Domino distracting, but I generally don´t like how that novel is assembled. TM gave me the feeling that Horowitz writing as Fleming was a little bit forced in places, and that disturbed mostly in the quieter bits, IMO.
Can anyone remember when Boyd, Horowitz and the American guy were announced? If they stick to the same schedule when should the next announcement be?