Midwinter always puts me in the mood for espionage. Maybe it’s because so many spy stories take place during the Cold War, and I’m cold. But it always seems like a good season for cloaks and daggers. In the past I’ve read Robert Ludlum novels (dull stories, great fight scenes), and over a three year span I read The Red Sparrow Trilogy by Jason Matthews, which has a weirdly Conservative bent for being so steamy.
Also, every chapter features food and ends with a recipe. No joke.
This winter I got an early start. When I wasn’t listening to Christmas mysteries, I was reading Ian Fleming before bed. I’ve never read an original James Bond novel before (though one bleak winter I listened to Carte Blanche by Jeffery Deaver). But last fall at a used booksale I found the three titles that make up the Blofeld Trilogy (Thunderball, On Her Majesty’s Secret Service, and You Only Live Twice), along with a Fleming biography. I didn’t realize it was a trilogy at the time, but all the better.
My copy of Thunderball is going for $125 on Amazon if they're new (sadly, mine is not).
Admittedly, I’ve only seen the OHMSS film adaptation. So I’m coming to the books without any preconceptions. Bond has never been a favorite franchise, but now that I’m getting into the novels I can see why Connery’s is considered the best portrayal. The book Bond is rough and cocksure when he needs to be, yet he’s also tender and sometimes worries. Fleming lets us into his head in a way films can’t, so what we find is a more human character.
I guess there’s an argument to be made for Craig, too.
The plots are simple enough to follow, even when I’m half asleep, though sometimes the technology is outside my historical knowledge. Bond does use some gadgets, but so far they tend to be more practical and realistic than what we might expect. Thunderball has a geiger counter hidden in a camera case, with a wire running to a wristwatch to show the readings. In OHMSS he’s forced to go undercover with no gadgets at all.
Fleming’s style is the big surprise!
As I dig into the old pulps and genre fiction of the past, I notice that many of today’s rules don’t apply. I don’t mean avoiding racial stereotypes (which they obviously do not). No, it’s the adverbs that leap stunningly from the page. Twitter tells us those are taboo. Fleming’s vice (after drink and cigarettes, of course) is the exclamation point. Now it looks juvenile. Perhaps then it was meant to thrill!
But are the books any good?
To his contemporaries, by which I mean other former spies who went on to write fiction, Fleming’s work was puerile fantasy. And I’ve read enough realistic spy novels to see the flaws and outright absurdities. Who cares? When you pick up a James Bond novel, you come to it with certain expectations. And while the books are distinct from what the films are known for, they’re still great fun.
I'm reading through the trilogy back-to-back-to-back, and then I may tackle the Fleming biography. I tend to read one a year, and now seems like a good time.