Got a pristine library copy of this book from 1993, complete with a swell dust cover. Seems like it's never been read.
I've been a Bond fan since I first saw Dr No as a kid, but I never much cared for the original Fleming novels. He basically wrote travelogues with the occasional car chase or gunfight. Mostly he seemed to just want to write about the exotic places he wants to go, or the kinds of cigarettes or meals he enjoys, or the fancy clubs and beaches he's been to, etc. It's very dense and pointless detailing that makes his stories drag. And Bond tends to be a bit wimpy most of the time, too. I preferred the John Gardner books since he actually wrote spy/military thrillers and gave Bond the same treatment. Turns out Fleming would draft the actual story with the first draft, and then pad them with travelogue shit in later drafts; he died before he could give the second draft treatment to this one, so the story is told straighter than his other books, which I unfortunately think is a blessing.
Anyway,
Golden Gun is one of two Fleming books I actually really like (the other being
Octopussy and the Living Daylights). Even the openings to most of his other books are drab and focus too much on the locale or something. This one starts right off with the Secret Service trying to figure out if the guy trying to contact them claiming to be James Bond is indeed James Bond, who has been missing, presumed dead, for a year. You get plunged right into the inner workings of the Secret Service's screening service for anyone trying to get in touch with them, and see how they handle rogue/missing agents suddenly returning, how they establish their identity and credentials, etc. And no sooner is Bond finally allowed in to see M, Bond then tries to
assassinate M, because it turns out Bond has been brainwashed by the Russians over the past year. After Bond is un-brainwashed, instead of sending him to prison for 20+ years, M sends him on a mission to kill Scaramanga, The Man with the Golden Gun, a guy who is apparently hot shit with a pistol and essentially unkillable, aka "suicide mission". Better to die in the field than rot in prison, maybe prove he's still useful if he survives. All of that in just the first two chapters.
Scaramanga himself is a pretty nasty and irredeemable dude, too. You can't wait to see him get his comeuppance.
This is one case where the book is definitely better than the movie. Most of the time I've actually found the opposite to be true, despite what book nerds frequently claim (definitely not the case for Jack Reacher, though). Movies can usually take a bloated story and condense it into something more palatable and economical (LotR), or take a book that comes off like a bad comedy and turn it into a badass action movie (Where Eagles Dare), etc.
jkas789, on 18 April 2021 - 08:52 AM, said:
I honestly just wanted to brag about my latest acquisition.
IT IS FINALLY MINE BOYS LETS GOOOOOOO-
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I used to watch the show and thought I read something about the characters being based on the creators' D&D party. Weren't they serialized in a magazine or something?