When not reading Fleming - I would recommend ?

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  • DragonpolDragonpol https://thebondologistblog.blogspot.com
    edited March 2018 Posts: 17,787
    Dragonpol wrote: »

    What did you think of the film version, @PussyNoMore? I've been slowly collecting the books and have ordered a DVD of the 1960s film version. I know there was another one in 2002.

    PussyNoMore hates few things in life but this abomination of a movie is one of them.
    It had nothing at all to do with O'Donnell's script or characters. Peter detested it as did the fans.
    Defenders of the movie call it a camp classic. PussyNoMore calls it a crass piece of nonsense.
    Ironically, the 2002 straight to DVD piece, 'My Name Is Modesty' isn't too bad. It's a low budget affair that Miramax rushed out to retain the Blaise movie rights but it is a faithful interpretation of Modesty's back story. O'Donnell also quite liked it.
    As previously mentioned, there is an article about this and more up on literary007.com and Pussy finds himself in total harmony with that author's opinions.

    Thank you - I gathered it wasn't well received by the fans.

    Could you provide a link to that piece? It sounds fascinating!
  • Posts: 520

    Dragonpol wrote: »

    Could you provide a link to that piece? It sounds fascinating!

    If you go to literary007.com it is the first article on the home page titled ‘Ian Fleming’s Literary Legacy’

  • Posts: 520
    Agent_99 wrote: »
    To give you a rough idea of my vintage, @PussyNoMore, I got into Bond, and spy fiction in general, in the early 90s, when I was in my early teens.

    Good timing on more than one level; it's just the right age (IMHO) to be introduced to this world of very exciting, but actually mostly harmless, sex and violence, and it was a period when you could pick up paperbacks from the 60s, 70s and 80s for 10p at jumble sales, so I soon had a vast and motley collection.

    I got rid of a lot during various house moves but always hung on to Modesty. Also Adam Diment; I didn't go a bundle on them but the covers and titles are so wonderful/dreadful.

    Interesting that you mention house moves. One of the things that PussyNoMore discarded that he’s spent his whole life putting back together was a complete collection of Fleming/Cape first editions!
    It’s fascinating that you kept Diment. There is an amazing story behind this author that PussyNoMore continues to research.
    In terms of the books themselves, ‘The Dolly Dolly Spy’ was actually rather unique at the time and sold like the proverbial hot cakes. Things went quickly downhill thereafter.


  • Posts: 520
    PussyNoMore has just finished Joseph Kanon’s novel, ‘The Defector’ and would declare it an absolute triumph.
    Set in the Soviet Union during the early ‘60s it centres around a US double agent who, having defected some twelve years earlier, is now using his plan to publish his biography via his brother’s NYC based publishing company to set the record straight - or is he?
    This is really a novel about betrayal and the corrosive effect it has on everybody touched by it.
    It is deftly plotted and Karon does a brilliant job of describing life for traitors that were obliged to come in from the cold and the mistrust they provoked from all sides. He also skilfully weaves real characters into his story giving it a real smell of authenticity.
    Although it is certainly not without action, it is a realistic spy story that will appeal to fans of Furst,
    Kerr and Le Carre.
    This is the first Kanon novel that PussyNoMore has read he is certainly up for more.

  • Agent_99Agent_99 enjoys a spirited ride as much as the next girl
    Posts: 3,104
    One of the things that PussyNoMore discarded that he’s spent his whole life putting back together was a complete collection of Fleming/Cape first editions!

    Oh nooooo. In my experience getting rid of stuff always eventually leads to regret and heartache, but there's only so much space and there's always more stuff to acquire...

    I ditched all my Helen MacInnes except The Venetian Affair and now I seem to be buying them all again in exactly the same awful 70s edition. At least it keeps me donating money to various charities.
  • ThunderpussyThunderpussy My Secret Lair
    Posts: 13,384
    I Always enjoy a Clive Cussler novel.
  • Agent_99Agent_99 enjoys a spirited ride as much as the next girl
    Posts: 3,104
    Agent_99 wrote: »
    Expo 58 by Jonathan Coe. Period spy comedy set at the 1958 Brussels World's Fair.

    Currently playing on Radio 4 Extra, read by Tim McInnerny: https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b039pfsw
  • Posts: 520
    PussyNoMore is currently reading ‘Red Sparrow’ by Jason Matthews and can’t recommend it highly enough.
    Don’t be put off by the movie, which is supposed to be pretty average, the book is fabulous.
    The first quarter reads like FRWL. Fabulous stuff!
  • edited July 2018 Posts: 520
    PussyNoMore has just finished reading Charles Cumming’s ‘The Man Inbetween’ and would heartily recommend it.
    It is a stand-alone novel and features a new protagonist, Kit Carridine, a spy novelist recruited by Mi6 for some daring do whilst at a book conference in Marrakesh.
    Very Ambleresque in tone and his best since ‘The Trinity Six’
    The Pussy gives it 4.5 out of 5.0
    Well worth the wonga.
  • PussyNoMore has just finished Henry Porter’s ‘Firefly’ and would declare it to be quite brilliant.
    It features a hunt for a Syrian refugee who has damning evidence on ISIS.
    He is being simultaneously pursued by ISIS and an Mi6 freelancer as he tries to reach Germany via the refugee trail. As you would expect, they have different plans for his future.
    Extremely topical. Porter takes on some big issues. It grips like a vice and his hero, Paul Sampson, is certainly a man for our times.
    The set pieces are absolutely brilliant and The Pussy thought the whole thing had shades of Forsyth’s ‘Day Of The Jackal’.
    Porter is an espionage master. He doesn’t churn them out but when they come they are well worth the wonga.
    Fabulous stuff and The Pussy gives it his cherished 5P rating.
    Ps. For those that love spy books and movies you should check out www.spybrary.com
    Finally there is a high quality site we can go to to get our fix.
    The podcasts are great and episode 51 features a fabulous interview with Charles Cumming
  • edited August 2018 Posts: 4,622
    PussyNoMore is currently reading ‘Red Sparrow’ by Jason Matthews and can’t recommend it highly enough.
    Don’t be put off by the movie, which is supposed to be pretty average, the book is fabulous.
    The first quarter reads like FRWL. Fabulous stuff!

    I read the sequel to Red Sparrow, Palace of Treason, and found it to be a top notch espionage thriller, so of course I watched the Jennifer Lawrence film too, which I thought was quite good.
    The movie's got a dark, but not dull tone.
    It did capture the vibe found in the second book I thought. This Red Sparrow business is nasty business.
    I think the movie does justice to the tone of the books
    I'll be picking up the third book in the trilogy, The Kremlins Candidate, in the next week or so.
    I will probably visit the original book at some point, but having seen the film, and with the original story rehashed quite a bit in book two, I do feel caught up with the origins.

    ==Matthews is a long-time senior CIA operative, which gives his narrative some extra heft.
    He casts Putin as a character, and as the big bad of the stories.
  • timmer wrote: »
    PussyNoMore is currently reading ‘Red Sparrow’ by Jason Matthews and can’t recommend it highly enough.
    Don’t be put off by the movie, which is supposed to be pretty average, the book is fabulous.
    The first quarter reads like FRWL. Fabulous stuff!

    I read the sequel to Red Sparrow, Palace of Treason, and found it to be a top notch espionage thriller, so of course I watched the Jennifer Lawrence film too, which I thought was quite good.
    The movie's got a dark, but not dull tone.
    It did capture the vibe found in the second book I thought. This Red Sparrow business is nasty business.
    I think the movie does justice to the tone of the books
    I'll be picking up the third book in the trilogy, The Kremlins Candidate, in the next week or so.
    I will probably visit the original book at some point, but having seen the film, and with the original story rehashed quite a bit in book two, I do feel caught up with the origins.

    ==Matthews is a long-time senior CIA operative, which gives his narrative some extra heft.
    He casts Putin as a character, and as the big bad of the stories.


    Timmer makes a good point about the movie.
    PussyNoMore was put off going to the cinema by some decidedly average U.K. reviews.
    He watched it when it became available on SKY and was pleasantly pleased. Watchable but perhaps not top notch. Certainly better than the critics suggested and as Timmer said, it certainly captured the tone of the book.
    The Pussy will read the sequels in due course.

  • PussyNoMore has just finished reading ‘The Man Who Sold Death ‘ by James Munro.
    Originally published in 1964, the book has just been re-released by Top Notch thrillers in the U.K. after an extensive period out of print.
    James Munro was a pseudonym for James Mitchell who went on to create the ultimate ant-Bond in the downbeat spy series ‘Callan’.
    Appearing just three months after the death of Ian Fleming, TMWSD introduced John Craig who was instantly tipped to be the literary character most likely to replace Bond.
    Craig, a decorated war hero of the SBS and successful arms smuggler is providing weoponry across the political hot spots when he is targeted by French army officers fighting against Algerian independence. When his home and friends are attacked he decides to take the fight to the enemy with the help of the sinister Loomis of Department K, a small and highly selective unit of Mi6.
    Craig was an absolutely fabulous creation and this, the first in a four book series is a true masterpiece of the genre and was the most successful launch of ‘64. A year that saw a plethora of new heroes try to grab Bond’s mantle.
    It is tightly plotted and brought us a hero that was truly new, different and better, just at the time that the Bond franchise was loosing its way and we were looking for something new.
    TMWSD is a real balls out thriller that will have you gripped from the get go. Craig is an entirely believable character who is as hard as nails and the book contains some phenomenal action sequences.
    Although The Pussy loved Callan, in retrospect he wished that Munro/Mitchell had put more effort into the Craig sequels and had continued with him. He was truly the Bond successor that got away and was undoubtedly a great influence on Adam Hall with his great creation ‘Quiller’ and on Andrew York’s hero, the less great Jonas Wild aka ‘The Eliminator’.
    That said, thanks to Top Notch we can all enjoy it today and enjoy it we must because this is absolutely mandatory reading for any self respecting Bond aficionado.
    PussyNoMore gives it his cherished five pussy rating.
  • Posts: 235
    I have read most of the Splinter Cell novels. Those are really good spy fiction books.
  • Agent_99Agent_99 enjoys a spirited ride as much as the next girl
    Posts: 3,104
    I know some of you are fans of the Spybrary podcast. I'm on the latest one, talking about Helen MacInnes with host Shane and spy author Merle Nygate: spybrary.com/66/
  • DragonpolDragonpol https://thebondologistblog.blogspot.com
    Posts: 17,787
    Agent_99 wrote: »
    I know some of you are fans of the Spybrary podcast. I'm on the latest one, talking about Helen MacInnes with host Shane and spy author Merle Nygate: spybrary.com/66/

    Congratulations @Agent_99! I've listened to a few episodes and will be sure to listen to this one too!
  • Agent_99Agent_99 enjoys a spirited ride as much as the next girl
    Posts: 3,104
    I'm just working up the courage to listen to it myself. Ugh, I hate recordings of my own voice!
  • DragonpolDragonpol https://thebondologistblog.blogspot.com
    Posts: 17,787
    Agent_99 wrote: »
    I'm just working up the courage to listen to it myself. Ugh, I hate recordings of my own voice!

    Me too. Your voice is lovely though. I have kind of been asked to go on that podcast some time.
  • Agent_99Agent_99 enjoys a spirited ride as much as the next girl
    Posts: 3,104
    Thank you! Definitely do the podcast - it was so much fun geeking out about spy fiction. Would you be discussing Gardner?
  • DragonpolDragonpol https://thebondologistblog.blogspot.com
    Posts: 17,787
    Agent_99 wrote: »
    Thank you! Definitely do the podcast - it was so much fun geeking out about spy fiction. Would you be discussing Gardner?

    Yes, it sounds like fun. The presenter Shane Whaley has asked me a few times on Facebook about being a guest on the podcast. He says they've not had an Ulsterman on it yet. Yes, it would probably be on Gardner.
  • Agent_99Agent_99 enjoys a spirited ride as much as the next girl
    Posts: 3,104
    I know another of his followers is a big Benson fan. It would be good to have a Bond continuation novel episode!
  • DragonpolDragonpol https://thebondologistblog.blogspot.com
    edited January 2019 Posts: 17,787
    Agent_99 wrote: »
    I know another of his followers is a big Benson fan. It would be good to have a Bond continuation novel episode!

    Yes, that would be nice. I recall a literary Bond episode of the podcast where the continuations got a mention near the end, but I think that's been about it.

    Shane did say that if anyone wanted they could do an episode on Gardner or some of the other continuation authors so we may eventually see it! Even an episode on Gardner's many non-Bond spy novels from Boysie Oakes to Herbie Kruger and beyond would be a good idea too.
  • Posts: 14,816
    Reading Le Carré at the moment. He's been mentioned here before I'm sure. A great writer, but the anti-Fleming and writing the anti-Bond.
  • brinkeguthriebrinkeguthrie Piz Gloria
    Posts: 1,400
    The Vince Flynn/Kyle Mills "Mitch Rapp" novels are excellent IMO
  • Agent_99Agent_99 enjoys a spirited ride as much as the next girl
    Posts: 3,104
    I've just read my first Quiller novel, The Tango Briefing, and enjoyed it a great deal, especially the first-person narration and the throwaway references to Secret Service protocol.
  • Agent_99 wrote: »
    I've just read my first Quiller novel, The Tango Briefing, and enjoyed it a great deal, especially the first-person narration and the throwaway references to Secret Service protocol.

  • Quiller is really special. Fabulous books that are certainly on a par with Bond.
    PussyNoMore loves Quiller !
  • I am currently reading ‘White Hot Silence’ by Henry Porter and it’s quite brilliant.
  • The Pussy has just finished ‘The Agent Runner’ by Simon Conway and absolutely loved it.
    Conway won the 2010 IF Silver Dagger for ‘A Loyal Spy’ which was also very good.
    If Fleming were with us today PussyNoMore feels this is very much the type of novel he would be writing !
  • edited November 2022 Posts: 21
    Has anyone read Counter Paradise by Nichol Fleming (Ian Fleming's nephew)?
    Is it any good? Its a spy thriller novel from 1968.
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