Thursday, May 10, 2018

YOU ONLY LIVE TWICE




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You Only Live Twice, Ian Fleming, New American Library, 1964, 218 pp
 
 
This was the last James Bond novel written fully by Ian Fleming. Any Bond novel published after 1964 was either finished by editors or written by other authors. It took the #8 spot on the 1964 bestseller list.

I did not know this when I began to read the book. I saw most of the movies over the years but the only other Bond book I have read is On Her Majesty's Secret Service, back in February. Everything about You Only Live Twice is so different from the other book that I wondered if I was reading the same author.

007 was in a slump after the tragedy that ended On Her Majesty's Secret Service. He had flubbed a few missions and was clearly off his game. M, Bond's boss, decided to shake up his spy and revitalize him by sending the man on an "impossible mission" to Japan. (Is that the origin of the name for the Mission Impossible series?)

Off James went to meet up with the head of the Japanese Secret Service, where he proceeded to languish as he learned Japanese culture. It was literally more than halfway through the book before he saw any action. The mission finally started at about 50 pages from the end. So different, though Bond did finally annihilate his old enemy, Ernst Stavro, in a thrilling and dangerous sequence.

Now that I have combed the internet for background and learned that Fleming died just a few months after the book was released, it makes more sense. The author was giving his summing up, complete with deep philosophical questions about life, love, and happiness. Or was he? The last chapter implies that Bond has a few more adventures. Perhaps he meant to provide a hand off to those franchise authors who would take over? Curious.


(You Only Live Twice is available in paperback by order from Once Upon A Time Bookstore.)

6 comments:

  1. How interesting. I didn't know that some of the books in the series were not written by Fleming. Perhaps he left sketches of future installments among his papers and the others took it from there? I'm starting to feel like I really should tackle this series sooner rather than later. I've seen a few installments on sale on Amazon but I didn't feel tempted, maybe if I see them again...Did this book have an entirely different 'feel' than the previous one? You mention that he was (maybe?) philosophizing a little?

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    1. Very different feel! That is why I had to go searching the internet, to find out why.

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  2. I think I've only read one of these books and I'm not even sure which one it was. I just remember a slim paperback with a gaudy cover. It may have been Casino Royale. I mix them up with the movies, several of which I did see back in the day. Ian Fleming was quite an interesting man and certainly a prolific writer.

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    1. All I knew was the movies until recently. It is a curious study, comparing them.

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  3. Hmm. That mission is very late in the book! Glad the action finally gets underway. Without action, James is like a fish out of water ....

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    1. Yup, it wasn't the James I expected.

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