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Devil May Care (James Bond)

Devil May Care (James Bond)

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Author: Sebastian Faulks
Publisher: Doubleday Books
Category: Book

List Price: £12.70
Buy Used: £7.93
You Save: £4.77 (38%)



Used (9) from £7.93

Rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars 43 reviews
Sales Rank: 290031

Media: Hardcover
Number Of Items: 1
Pages: 304
Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.2
Dimensions (in): 9.3 x 6.4 x 1.2

ISBN: 0385524285
Dewey Decimal Number: 823.914
EAN: 9780385524285
ASIN: 0385524285

Publication Date: May 31, 2008
Availability: Usually dispatched within 1-2 business days
Shipping: International shipping available
Condition: Brand New, Perfect Condition, Please allow 4-14 business days for delivery. 100% Money Back Guarantee, Over 1,000,000 customers served.

Also Available In:

  • Hardcover - Devil May Care
  • Paperback - Devil May Care (Random House Large Print (Cloth/Paper))
  • Hardcover - Devil May Care (James Bond)

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Editorial Reviews:

Amazon.co.uk Review
A variety of authors have written 007 novels since the death of Bond's creator, Ian Fleming -- and the results have been mixed, to say the least. As 'Robert Markham', Kingsley Amis penned the very first post-Fleming Bond, and this attempt by a novelist better known for his 'literary' work was judged a success. Now, after a decade of less successful entries by such writers as John Gardener, we have another serious writer, Sebastian Faulks (author of such acclaimed novels as Birdsong), taking up the challenge.

Devil May Care has already collected a jaw-dropping amount of publicity, with even the Royal Navy helping to put the book firmly at the top of the best-seller charts (Bond is, of course, a naval commander), and few books have had such wind under their sails (the relaunch of the movie franchise with the re-make of Casino Royale and Daniel Craig's second Bond film, Quantum of Solace, is all part of the ever-accelerating momentum). Of course, this also gives the book farther to fall if it misses the mark.

Faulks' author credit on the book ('Sebastian Faulks writing as Ian Fleming') is both revealing and encouraging - the author has reportedly said that he undertook the task with total seriousness, and he has tried to work within the parameters of the Ian Fleming formula (Faulks re-read all the extant Bond novels and stories) rather than the more glossy film incarnation. Among several very canny moves by the author is his decision to keep his 007 in the 1960s rather than catapulting him into the 21st century (as other ersatz Fleming novels - and, of course, the films -- have done. So how successful are the results?

Fleming aficionados can relax - this is a sterling job of recreation, and a novel that functions with total authority in its own right. The evocation of time and place (or places, notably Paris and the Middle East) is impeccable, as are the plotting and detail (as colourful and violent as anything in Fleming); there is a satisfyingly unpleasant larger-than-life villain, Julius Gorner, with a grotesque deformity of the kind Fleming often gave such characters (the chapter 'The monkey's hand' gives this away) and grandiose, evil ambitions. Best of all, this is Ian Fleming's James Bond - not a superman -- worried about his health and his physical powers (which he fears may be on the wane). Delicious stuff in fact. Now... can Faulks be persuaded to write another such novel? --Barry Forshaw.


Customer Reviews:   Read 38 more reviews...

4 out of 5 stars d.m.c.   July 6, 2008
this is the first bond book ive read, i really enjoyed the storyline it starts off slow but soon picks up. fast and pulsating its hard 2 put down, its more like the old bond films which i like the storyline is very good. the book concentrates on the story being in the middle east and france and on 1 villian j.gorner with a dodgy monkey hand and his sidekick chagrin, who bond and scarlett try 2 stop an evil plot 2 blame the british 4 a near disaster. bond must b pissed in this book he drinks more booze than an alcoholic, the only thing i didn't like is all the dodgy french words with bonds time in paris. any 1 who reads this book will find a good read not a bad debut by sebastian faluks.


4 out of 5 stars CARRY ON.   July 4, 2008
D.M.C is a great read,but Amis's Colonel Sun is better.Nice effort though, even with the very predictable scheme cooked up by the main villian.It's just a shame he's not writing a second outing.


4 out of 5 stars Cracking good job   July 4, 2008
 0 out of 1 found this review helpful

Looking back it makes total sense that Sebastian Faulks would carry on the Fleming tradition. Other writers have had a go at writing Bond; Charlie Higson has a fine series of books about Bond-as-a-teenager, and John Gardner and Kingsley Amis both attempted Bond novels in the 70s and 80s but Gardner's work was too derivative of the movies, while Amis' (published under the pseudonym 'Robert Markham') was dull, bad-tempered and cynical.

Faulks has a lot of kudos as a Major Writer but actually I think I think that he's been a master of pastiche all along. His WW1 novel 'Birdsong' is an OK book, but most of its power comes from Faulks' ability to mimic the tone and atmosphere of various kinds of elegiac WW1 writing, from Fredric Manning to Siegfried Sassoon. It was essentially a pastiche of the kind of novel that WW1 veterans wrote. More recently, Faulks did a very funny series of pastiches for Radio 4, including pop songs as written by Charles Dickens and, sure enough, an episode where James Bond goes to the supermarket. Faulks' knack for this kind of thing makes him the ideal guy to write this novel and he doesn't disappoint.

I have always preferred the dour, wary Bond novels to the somewhat kitschy Bond movies, probably because I read the novels when I was really young (around 10) and assumed that they were just realistic novels about adult life. Faulks captures the uptight and stoical character of Fleming's Bond very well; he sets this book directly after Bond's ambiguous redemption in 'The Man With The Golden Gun', and so Bond is still haunted by the attempt he made on M's life while brainwashed by SMERSH. The villain is genuinely creepy and dislikeable, while the girl - bolshy, alluring and mysteriously as driven as Bond himself - is actually an improvement on Fleming's sometimes rather droopy women.

I greatly enjoyed the book, although as a holiday read it left a little to be desired in that I finished it before I actually arrived at my destination. But perhaps that's a tribute to its unputdownableness. It's to be hoped that Mr Faulks will have another go; I much prefer him doing this sort of exuberant stunt to writing his comparatively joyless 'serious' fiction.






2 out of 5 stars Devil May Care - but I don't!   July 2, 2008
 2 out of 3 found this review helpful

I watched the first Bond film as an open-mouthed 13 year old in 1962 having sneaked into the cinema because I was under-age! I then set about reading the entire catalogue of Ian Fleming's Bonds having been brought up on Blyton Dickens and Christie. It was seen as the next logical step. From there I graduated to MacLean and Le Carre, Forsythe and Clancy. Ian Fleming's Bond adventures were ideal material for a 13 year old and therein lies the problem with this latest incarnation.

I am no longer the wide-eyed 13 year old but the book is written in that vein and I found it shallow and badly plotted. Robert Goddard is my current "must-read everything he's ever written" and I'm afraid Mr Faulkes comes nowhere close to Goddard's plotting skills and character creation. I did read Faulke's "Birdsong" and whilst I found it enjoyable it could not compare to Goddard's "In Pale Battalions" as an anti-war novel.

I feel Mr Faulkes has created this manuscript with one eye firmly placed on the screenplay rights.

On the whole - below average!



3 out of 5 stars No Mr Bond, I expect you to die!   July 1, 2008
...But of course we can't let him! Seriously, this book is a good read. Faulks is an excellent writer and captures the essence of Fleming's bond to a T. The story itself is a little predictable, and that's why I've given a 3-star, not 4-star rating. Otherwise, I had connery as bond in my mind's eye the whole way through the novel.