Finished all the books. My ranking.

Spent the last seven months reading all the books, between the Fleming originals, Colonel Sun, the Gardner and Benson novels, and the efforts of several stand alone authors & Anthony Horowitz' duo-logy.

With 40 books obviously the quality would be wild, but after Fleming the books are insanely varying in effort and quality. I did find them all enjoyable in some way (you have to enjoy a book somewhat to at least finish it)

These are the results of my ranking, things might move and the ratings of Gardner and Benson's efforts probably should rank lower but I enjoyed most of them -{ :


1. On Her Majesty’s Secret Service | 1963 | 10/10
2. You Only Live Twice | 1964 | 10/10
3. From Russia With Love | 1957 | 10/10
4. Moonraker | 1955 | 10/10
5. Casino Royale | 1953 | 9.5/10
6. Solo | 2013 | 9.5/10
7. For Your Eyes Only | 1960 | 9.5/10
8. Dr No | 1958 | 9/10
9. Goldfinger | 1959 | 9/10
10. Trigger Mortis | 2015 | 9/10
11. Thunderball | 1961 | 8.5/10
12. Live and Let Die | 1954 | 8/10
13. The Man with the Golden Gun | 1965 | 7.5/10
14. Colonel Sun | 1969 | 7.5/10
15. Octopussy and the Living Daylights | 1966 | 7.5/10
16. Diamonds Are Forever | 1956 | 7/10
17. Forever and A Day | 2018 | 7/10
18. Icebreaker | 1983 | 7/10
19. For Special Services | 1982 | 7/10
20. License Renewed | 1981 | 7/10
21. SeaFire | 1994 | 7/10
22. The Man with the Red Tattoo | 2002 | 7/10
23. Doubleshot | 2000 | 7/10
24. Nobody Lives Forever | 1986 | 6.5/10
25. Zero Minus Ten | 1997 | 6.5/10
26. Devil May Care | 2008 | 6/10
27. Carte Blanche | 2011 | 6/10
28. Cold Fall | 1996 | 6/10
29. Scorpius | 1988 | 5.5/10
30. Death is Forever | 1992 | 5.5/10
31. The Man from Barbarossa | 1991 | 5/10
32. Brokenclaw | 1990 | 4/10
33. No Deals, Mr. Bond | 1987 | 3.5/10
34. Win, Lose or Die | 1989 | 3/10
35. Hight Time to Kill | 1999 | 3/10
36. Never Send Flowers | 1993 | 2/10
37. The Facts of Death | 1998 | 2/10
38. Never Dream of Dying | 2001 | 1/10
39. Role of Honor | 1984 | 1/10
40. The Spy Who Loved Me | 1962 | 1/10

Comments

  • caractacus pottscaractacus potts Orbital communicator, level 10Posts: 4,109MI6 Agent
    welcome Philip Jeffries

    what do you like about some of those non-Fleming books that cause you to rank them higher than some of the Flemings?
    and is the Spy Who Love Me really worse than the absolute worst of the continuation novels?



    ...and, the really important question...
    are you named after David Bowie's character from Twin Peaks?
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  • PhilipJeffries8PhilipJeffries8 Posts: 4MI6 Agent
    I might bump up TSWLM's score up higher -- as I enjoyed it plenty reading it initially, but because of the plot (2/3s missing Bond, and when he shows up it's really just a gangster story) it's the last book I'd grab if I was in the mood for a Bond adventure.
    I actually did read the movie novelization and found it pretty solid, very Fleming-esque.

    As for the novels I thought beat Fleming in places for me -- Trigger Mortis is a really fun adventure that fits right in with Goldfinger. Horowitz nailed the right tone that most of the continuations get close to but no cigar. |
    Colonel Sun is somewhat similar, being written in the same era and by Fleming's friend. It's a bit more mean spirited and Bond working with the soviets is definitely different for the time.

    Solo on the other hand is extremely different for a Bond story, however I loved Boyd's prose, characterization and the setting.
    I could see Bond fans not digging it, but I loved the moral ambiguity of it.

    AND YES! :)) Next to Bond, Twin Peaks is my favorite franchise. And, for his brief appearance, Jeffries is one of my favorite characters.
  • caractacus pottscaractacus potts Orbital communicator, level 10Posts: 4,109MI6 Agent
    ha ! I knew I'd seen that name somewhere before.
    So you wont mind if I point at you and say in an overdubbed Louisiana accent "Who do you think that is there?!!?"
    1502682244-who-do-yall-think-that-is-there.jpg
    ... and an appropriate name for a spy-themed forum, since Bowie is playing an FBI agent, albeit a rather weird one.
    We have a Twin Peaks thread here, mostly discussing The Return, you should share some of your thoughts.

    40 books in seven months is an impressive feat (though time undoubtedly moves differently in The Red Room). If you read Christopher Wood's novelization, where would you place that one? did you also read the Moonraker novelization?
  • PhilipJeffries8PhilipJeffries8 Posts: 4MI6 Agent
    "overdubbed Louisiana accent" :)) :))

    Thanks for the heads up. I'm gonna give that thread a look through and see what I can add.

    Hmmm, for TSWLM... I might put it between Licence Renewed and SeaFire. It's pretty solid. Haven't gotten to Moonraker yet, though I plan to get through all the novelizations (at much more leisurely pace).

    Once NTTD was delayed I figured I might as well read past the Fleming novels. Thought it would take longer.
  • Agent KinoAgent Kino New YorkPosts: 202MI6 Agent
    Thanks for the share of your list. 7 months and 40 books! Wow. I struggle with 1 every few months.

    I haven't gotten to The Spy Who Loved Me yet but I can't believe that a Fleming made your absolute worst. Interesting.
    1. Goldfinger 2. Skyfall 3. Goldeneye 4. The Spy Who Loved Me 5. OHMSS
    Check out my Instagram: @livingthebondlife
    "I never joke about my work, 007."
  • Golrush007Golrush007 South AfricaPosts: 3,421Quartermasters
    I enjoyed looking through your ranking PhilipJeffries8. A few surprises there for sure!

    The biggest one for me is probably Solo being at #6. I enjoyed the novel but certainly not more than any of the Flemings.

    A pleasant surprise was to see that COLD/Cold Fall is not too close to the bottom of the ranking. That novel tends to be surrounded by nothing by negativity, however I was pleasantly surprised by it when I finally got to the end of the Gardner series.

    If I may add my own ranking, by way of comparison... Please note that I still haven't got round to reading all of the Benson novels so a few of them are missing from my list. ;%

    1. FROM RUSSIA WITH LOVE
    2. CASINO ROYALE
    3. DR NO
    4. ON HER MAJESTY'S SECRET SERVICE
    5. MOONRAKER
    6. LIVE AND LET DIE
    7. YOU ONLY LIVE TWICE
    8. THUNDERBALL
    9. GOLDFINGER
    10. FOR YOUR EYES ONLY
    11. DIAMONDS ARE FOREVER
    12. ICEBREAKER
    13. OCTOPUSSY AND THE LIVING DAYLIGHTS
    14. NOBODY LIVES FOREVER
    15. NO DEALS MR BOND
    16. COLONEL SUN
    17. TRIGGER MORTIS
    18. FOREVER AND A DAY
    19. FOR SPECIAL SERVICES
    20. THE SPY WHO LOVED ME
    21. LICENCE RENEWED
    22. THE MAN WITH THE GOLDEN GUN
    23. SCORPIUS
    24. COLD
    25. WIN, LOSE OR DIE
    26. ZERO MINUS TEN
    27. ROLE OF HONOUR
    28. HIGH TIME TO KILL
    29. NEVER SEND FLOWERS
    30. DEATH IS FOREVER
    31. SOLO
    32. THE FACTS OF DEATH
    33. DEVIL MAY CARE
    34. BROKENCLAW
    35. THE MAN FROM BARBAROSSA
    36. SEAFIRE
    37. CARTE BLANCHE

    When I re-read the novels the rankings to sometimes shift a bit, but this is how I see it at the moment.
  • SpectreOfDefeatSpectreOfDefeat Posts: 404MI6 Agent
    Out of interest, why did you place SeaFire so low? I always thought it was one of the more competent Gardners...

    On another note, nice to see Fleming's YOLT in the top ten...

    "The spectre of defeat..."

  • Golrush007Golrush007 South AfricaPosts: 3,421Quartermasters
    Out of interest, why did you place SeaFire so low? I always thought it was one of the more competent Gardners...

    On another note, nice to see Fleming's YOLT in the top ten...

    To be honest, I thought SeaFire was not bad but just a slightly less entertaining read than some of the others I read around that time. There is every possibility that a re-read would affect my ranking and put SeaFire higher on the list.
  • chrisno1chrisno1 LondonPosts: 3,601MI6 Agent
    PhilipJeffries8.
    Love the post. I did a similar task way back when Devil May Care was due for publication and created a couple of threads on here which reviewed the novels and gave them a score from 10. Young Bond too

    I never really ranked them as such.

    I was pleasantly surprised to see most of your opinions were similar to mine.

    I was surprised Solo was so high. I didnt enjoy it at all. Of the recent novels Carte Blanche ticked the boxes IMO, but I subscribe to the "many Bond's - same number" theory, so Deaver's premise worked for me. Like all modern authors though, he has no idea how to call a halt to his story. It does go on and on.

    I see you enjoy Horowitz. He's okay but I dislike the mining of Fleming's stories and timelines. It plays with what I consider sacred.

    Regards the Master I'm not surprised most of his novels top the list. However, I didn't like Moonraker. I found the stiff Britishness of it quite disturbing. Golden Gun is poorly described.

    I was pleased you picked the first three Gardner's as the best of his output. I agree entirely and Icebreaker would beat a few if Fleming's pieces. I would have bumped No Deals Mr Bond, one of Gardner's more worthwhile efforts. Glad you also hated Role of Honour - a truly dreadful sham of a book.

    I didnt like The Man with the Red Tattoo as much as you. Zero Minus Ten started Benson's tenure well, but only Doubleshot clinched it for me. Maybe I'm a sucker for twins!

    If I did the whole process again, I think I'd score Colonel Sun quite high, but the only books to receive a 10 would still be From Russia With Love, Dr No & You Only Live Twice.

    I didn't score anything for the abomination that is Never Dream of Dying. I'm not sure I ever want to read it again.

    I notice you didn't included any film adaptations. This is a pity as Chris Wood's JB, TSWLM is better written than most continuation novels. Also, why did you miss out Pearson's The Authorised Biography? That too in parts is exceptionally well written.

    Thanks again for the thread.

    You can still find my reviews on here somewhere if you have a few spare hours.
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