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Tuesday, 30 July 2013
MEMORIES ARE FOREVER...
4 comments:
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The only thing I recall about that book is the icky torture scene with the corkscrew that really bothered me. I think it's because it's such an everyday item that made it so disturbing. Machine guns and stilettos might do more damage, but we didn't have one of those in a drawer in the kitchen.
ReplyDeleteFunnily enough, I don't remember that. It's normally the type of thing a teenage boy (as I was when I first read it) would recall.
ReplyDeleteAnother fun piece!
ReplyDeleteI am a huge James Bond fan.
KINGSLEY AMIS also wrote a great book about bond called “The James Bond Dossier” where he concentrated on the novels and connected them so well. It also had p[ages of “guides.” This was at a time when there were many books out about Bond, but he really nailed his subject. He also showed where he felt Fleming missed a few beats in character development.
In Colonel Sun Amis, in many ways, tries to “correct” some of those faults, mostly in the way he present “M” and his relationship with Bond.
I don’t know why he didn’t return to the Bond series, I believe it was planned for him to do another book or two. I guess they didn’t sell.
I also believe that the reason other authors have been given the assignment over the years is to keep their trademarks and copyrights all over the world.
I may have the James Bond Dossier, Barry, somewhere amongst my books on Bond. I also used to have James Bond's biography at one time, which I found interesting.
ReplyDeleteI read one of John Gardner's Bond books some years ago, but I have to say, I wasn't too impressed. It had a Scottish henchman called 'Caber', which just seemed ridiculous to me.
Your last remark is obviously true, but the easier way of saying it is so that the publishers can try and make money. That's the bottom line, eh?