A new Anthony Horowitz Bond novel...

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  • Napoleon PluralNapoleon Plural LondonPosts: 10,467MI6 Agent
    WTF? I only read about this this week in the papers, and I'm on this forum a lot. How would you know unless you look at the Literature section? :o
    "This is where we leave you Mr Bond."

    Roger Moore 1927-2017
  • always shakenalways shaken LondonPosts: 6,287MI6 Agent
    image.jpg nice supplies the other week out of the blue ,I was given this book by a friend (he is not into Bond) so I will take this to Cyprus with me , but as usual I will bow to any suggestion from any of our esteemed members ,I know TP and SM will suggest Moonraker
    By the way, did I tell you, I was "Mad"?
  • welshboy78welshboy78 Posts: 10,320MI6 Agent
    I struggled with Solo.

    Off to the USA a month today so will read the new book somewhere chilling out! -{
    Instagram - bondclothes007
  • ThunderpussyThunderpussy Behind you !Posts: 63,792MI6 Agent
    I'd suggest anything but Solo ! I hated it X-(
    "I've been informed that there ARE a couple of QAnon supporters who are fairly regular posters in AJB."
  • Sir MilesSir Miles The Wrong Side Of The WardrobePosts: 27,757Chief of Staff
    I'd suggest anything but Solo ! I hated it X-(

    I prefer Solo to most of the latter Bond books...DMC was the one I actually got bored reading... :o
    YNWA 97
  • always shakenalways shaken LondonPosts: 6,287MI6 Agent
    I seem to recollect my good buddy charmed and dangerous recommending that I read col sun in Cyprus as it has Greek settings . I like to read a book that is relevant to my holiday destination . That way I can eat , drink what Bond has , believe me it taste so much better
    By the way, did I tell you, I was "Mad"?
  • ThunderpussyThunderpussy Behind you !Posts: 63,792MI6 Agent
    :D I've just finished Col Sun ( again ) it's probably
    The best of the continuing novels and a great read.
    One question though AS, have you not embraced
    Electronic books ? That way you could bring an entire
    Bond library with you. :))
    "I've been informed that there ARE a couple of QAnon supporters who are fairly regular posters in AJB."
  • always shakenalways shaken LondonPosts: 6,287MI6 Agent
    :D I've just finished Col Sun ( again ) it's probably
    The best of the continuing novels and a great read.
    One question though AS, have you not embraced
    Electronic books ? That way you could bring an entire
    Bond library with you. :))
    .

    Hi Tp electronic books . . ? Where would I plug the extension lead in .i can just about manage with a I pad , my eye sight isn't what it was . At the moment I'm learning , just in case my eye sight goes completely Broille ,I'm sorry I'll just feel that again .
    By the way, did I tell you, I was "Mad"?
  • RevelatorRevelator Posts: 604MI6 Agent
    Here's the Sunday Times review of Forever and a Day:

    How Bond became 007: Anthony Horowitz takes us right back to the origins of Ian Fleming's famous hero (May 20)

    by David Mills

    If you have ever worried why James Bond prefers his martinis shaken rather than the more orthodox stirred, or wondered where he got his gun-metal cigarette case from, or why he buys his fags from Morland, then this is the book for you.

    After the lacklustre run of Bond sequels by John Gardner and Raymond Benson, 10 years ago the Fleming Estate reinvigorated the franchise by commissioning Sebastian Faulks to write a new 007 adventure. Faulks had the inspired idea to set Devil May Care in 1967. This promising start was spoilt by their next commission, the American Jeffery Deaver, whose Carte Blanche takes place in 2011. Next up, William Boyd went historical again with Solo, featuring a marvellously irritable, middle-aged Bond in 1969.

    The baton passed to Anthony Horowitz in 2015. He stuck with the past and set the frenetic Trigger Mortis in 1957, immediately following on from Fleming's Goldfinger. His latest effort goes back to 1950 and is a prequel to the first Bond novel, Casino Royale. In comic book terms, then, it's an "origins story": so we learn how Bond got his "Double-O" status as well as the answers to those other vital questions.

    Sadly it's very formulaic. Anyone who has read more than a couple of the post-Fleming Bond novels knows that we are going to get references to his knitted tie, love of scrambled eggs and heather honey, Scottish housekeeper, scarred cheek, moccasin shoes… There's (much, much) more but that's enough. Then there's the customary sequence of scenes — meeting with M, travel to foreign location, hang out in casino, drink martini, have sex, sneak up on installation that turns out not to be an innocent industrial concern after all but the heart of the villain's dastardly enterprise heavily guarded by goons in logoed uniforms, where, of course, Bond is spotted and causes havoc while escaping.

    Oh yes, and there's a grotesque baddie, in this instance a horribly fat Corsican gangster called Scipio. We learn early on that he likes to "pulverise his enemies using his own weight and body mass" — no prizes for guessing whom Scipio will end up torturing in his signature style before the end.

    The novel opens with "So, 007 is dead". A Savile Row-suited body is pulled out of a dock in Marseilles (oh you tease, Mr Horowitz) and a new agent is sent to investigate. This is his replacement, the young James Bond. The elements of the mystery are that the heroin supply, run by Corsican gangsters, seems to have dried up, and a mysterious freelance agent known as "Madame 16", who worked for the British during the war, is on the scene, as well as a super-rich American industrialist.

    Exposition is clunkingly shovelled in: "Quickly, Bond examined the other players" signals a run through of characters at the gaming table; "James Bond thought about the man he had come to kill" introduces two pages of background information. There are moments so clumsy, you groan: "Chimiques is French for chemicals," says one fluent French speaker to another. A French baker meets a woman "who calls herself Madame 16": no, she is "Sixtine"; to a French baker "16" would make her Madame Seize. Bond stands "well out of her line of vision" yet still manages to notice "a flicker of excitement in Sixtine's eyes".

    Then Bond has the bad luck to be caught out by a small, poor Corsican boy who went deaf aged six, but "could lip-read in three languages". What are the odds? Still, if you can put all that behind you, it is a fun read — the well-worked-out plot is nicely twisting, even managing a surprise at the end, and there's also some original, unpublished Fleming material in one chapter. Horowitz excels at action sequences and more than a third of the novel is taken up with car chases, shoot-outs, fights and explosions, so it's by no means all bad.

    The next book needs to get away from the Bond checklist and formulaic structure. Fleming was much freer with his creation. Bond is absent for the first third of From Russia, with Love; The Spy Who Loved Me is narrated by a Canadian woman trapped by gangsters in a New England motel, until a passing stranger (guess who?) chances to drop by and sort them out; in the short story Quantum of Solace, Bond merely listens to an account of an unhappy marriage.

    The character is so established that the novels no longer need the props and clichéd scenes. So, if Horowitz has had enough, they should try a more adventurous writer — Jon McGregor, David Peace, or Sarah Waters — that would stir 007 up, or should it be shake?
  • BarbelBarbel ScotlandPosts: 37,868Chief of Staff
    Not reading that, as I haven't read the book yet. But I will later!
  • RevelatorRevelator Posts: 604MI6 Agent
    Barbel wrote:
    Not reading that, as I haven't read the book yet. But I will later!

    Don't worry, it doesn't have any spoilers.
  • ThunderpussyThunderpussy Behind you !Posts: 63,792MI6 Agent
    I think Anthony Horowitz is a good solid writer, and is a safe pair of hands.
    "I've been informed that there ARE a couple of QAnon supporters who are fairly regular posters in AJB."
  • Number24Number24 NorwayPosts: 22,334MI6 Agent
    But I don't like the idea of the villan torturing Bond by sitting on him :))
  • Number24Number24 NorwayPosts: 22,334MI6 Agent
    Do you agree with the reviewer when he says the authors should take more chances and be less bound by tradition?
    I think he has a point. "High time to kill" wasn't perfect, but I liked how he set most of the novel during a climbing expedition.
  • ThunderpussyThunderpussy Behind you !Posts: 63,792MI6 Agent
    I hated " High time to kill " X-(
    "I've been informed that there ARE a couple of QAnon supporters who are fairly regular posters in AJB."
  • Number24Number24 NorwayPosts: 22,334MI6 Agent
    The writing was bad, the consept was good.

    But do you think the Bond authors should be less bound by tradition?
  • ThunderpussyThunderpussy Behind you !Posts: 63,792MI6 Agent
    Only my opinion, I don't mind change. After all everthing has to evolve to survive.
    Although you should never make the mistake of throwing out the baby with the bath water
    "I've been informed that there ARE a couple of QAnon supporters who are fairly regular posters in AJB."
  • Number24Number24 NorwayPosts: 22,334MI6 Agent
    Fleming tried to shake things up in TSWLM, FRWL and QoS. It would be nice if the continuation authors did that once in a while too.
  • BarbelBarbel ScotlandPosts: 37,868Chief of Staff
    To be fair, I think they have tried but within the limits that IFP have set them. Horowitz, IMHO, has been the most successful in the period since they stopped using one continuous author (and possibly even including them- Gardner did comment on the restrictions placed upon him).
    All of the continuation authors have been in the same situation: they are not Ian Fleming. While there is a definite Fleming formula (which I freely confess to loving), he didn't always stick to it as N24 alludes to above. It's the prerogative of an author to do so, of course, and sometimes the results were outstanding (FRWL) and sometimes more divisive (TSWLM). The continuation authors don't have that freedom.

    (And I'm done with this thread until I've read Horowitz's latest- I'm scared of spoilers!)
  • ShatterfangShatterfang Posts: 538MI6 Agent
    Being his first mission, the formula is needed, that he meet M for the first time, get his mission, carry it out. Anything beyond that should be up in the air. He could devote two-thirds of the book to the villain or the girl, but that was risky even when Fleming was doing it. You had better make sure to make a compelling villain. This day and age the girl would need to be action driven rather than a damsel-in-distress. The truth is the formula is what people have been craving for in the movies. the old ones could cram so much more adventure and plot into it, but now they are trying for every mission to be unique and somehow personal to bond. He has to either come back from the dead or meet his long lost brother or avenge his girlfriend's death.
  • Miles MesservyMiles Messervy Posts: 1,772MI6 Agent
    edited May 2018
    I hated Devil May Care, really enjoyed Carte Blanche (especially on the second read), and was so let down by Solo that, after deciding that they should stop setting Bond in the 50s/60s, I didn’t even read Trigger Morris until two months ago. But I actually liked Trigger Morris. It wasn’t spectacular, but if IFP insists upon doing period pieces, it was probably the best we can expect.

    That said, I’m totally up in the air about this book because I’m so burnt out by origin stories. Do we need to know why Bond likes knitted ties, shaken martinis, and scrambled eggs? I don’t think so, but I’ll reserve judgement. I’m still looking forward to reading it.
  • ThunderpussyThunderpussy Behind you !Posts: 63,792MI6 Agent
    "I've been informed that there ARE a couple of QAnon supporters who are fairly regular posters in AJB."
  • ShatterfangShatterfang Posts: 538MI6 Agent
    Of the one-term authors, 3) Carte Blanche, 2) Trigger Mortis, 1) Solo, though I confess to not having read Devil May Care or Colonel Sun yet.

    <spoilers>
    Carte Blanche was okay but too drawn out. I remember the villain is really into recycling and they make the state of decay a fetish so he gets off to his wife getting older over time. Haha.

    Solo - the only criticism i have is that like Carte Blanche, it makes the mistake of assuming it will get a sequel and sets up mysteries that never come to fruition. A great character study for Bond in his later years that reads like a Noir rather than action.

    Trigger Mortis has great action but the plot points don't connect. Pussy Galore and Goldfinger's leftover henchmen have nothing to do with the plot to kill Sterling Moss, and the plot to kill Sterling had nothing to do with the plot to detonate a rocket over a crowded populace. Mr. Sin is a classic villain that suffers from Dr. No syndrome. His sob story is actually based on a true story that I remember from somewhere like the Rape of Nanking. The dumbest part is when Bond takes time out from stopping Armageddon to non-lethally pacify a henchmen who claims to have a family and was just following orders. This speaks nothing for the Nazi party.
  • caractacus pottscaractacus potts Orbital communicator, level 10Posts: 4,109MI6 Agent
    ...I confess to not having read Devil May Care or Colonel Sun yet..
    Colonel Sun is the only one you really should read, all the rest are for completists. There are so many better books out there and life is too short.
    Solo - the only criticism I have is that like Carte Blanche, it makes the mistake of assuming it will get a sequel and sets up mysteries that never come to fruition.
    is this true? did the three authors who only got one book each think they would be invited back for a sequel? was Horowitz finally asked back for a second because he was the only one generally deemed a success? ironically his second book by definition cannot possibly be a sequel.
    Trigger Mortis has great action but the plot points don't connect. Pussy Galore and Goldfinger's leftover henchmen have nothing to do with the plot to kill Sterling Moss, and the plot to kill Sterling had nothing to do with the plot to detonate a rocket over a crowded populace.
    I like the episodic structure, it is one of the clever things I think Horowitz achieved. Murder on Wheels is a leftover from For Your Eyes Only, so Horowitz's completed version is more like one episode out of a book of further short stories. He just finds a tenuous way to link his three stories together.
  • Arbogast 777Arbogast 777 Minneapolis Posts: 595MI6 Agent
    I was just able to order the U.K. version from the US store with a May 31 delivery date...


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  • Number24Number24 NorwayPosts: 22,334MI6 Agent
    Ny birthday is on June the 6th, so I'm hoping one of my sisters will make the book gift :007)
  • ThunderpussyThunderpussy Behind you !Posts: 63,792MI6 Agent
    I hope you've dropped a few heavy hints ;)
    "I've been informed that there ARE a couple of QAnon supporters who are fairly regular posters in AJB."
  • Number24Number24 NorwayPosts: 22,334MI6 Agent
    I have to wait until they start asking what I'd like. You know how subtle I am ;%
  • ShatterfangShatterfang Posts: 538MI6 Agent
    it is hard to say because i still like all of them that i have read and wouldn't say life is too short to read them. <spoilers> yep, Carte Blanche sets up the Steel Cartridge syndicate as a mystery organization and that Monique Declaroix Bond may or may not have worked for the secret service, as a steel cartridge is placed on her death indicating the mountain climbing fall was no accident. And in Solo there is a big heroin plot that is never fully wrapped up and a very good disfigured villain Kobus Breed lives to get revenge another day. Though Ian Fleming said in the Diamond Smugglers that not everything is neatly resolved in spy fiction.
  • DrFragmentDrFragment South Coast Of EnglandPosts: 49MI6 Agent
    I have kept up with all the continuation authors from Amis right through to Horowitz, so I guess I am a completest. In my opinion Horowitz works for me. Maybe its the fact that he has Fleming material to work from. I really enjoyed Trigger Mortis and look forward to Forever And A Day. Bond in the 50 & 60s really works for me. Didn't enjoy Jeffrey Deaver, not a Bond novel at all. I would personally love to see a new Bond movie set in the 1950s, early 60s, just as Fleming created him.
    "Mm... Royal Beluga, north of the Caspian."
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