Sebastian Faulks
Autor(a) de Birdsong
About the Author
Sebastian Faulks is the author of Where My Heart Used to Beat, which made the New Zealand Best Seller List 2015. (Bowker Author Biography)
Image credit: Sebastian Faulks, September 5, 2008
Séries
Obras por Sebastian Faulks
May Anthologies 1998: Stories 1 exemplar
Snow Country 1 exemplar
I fantasmi di Parigi (Italian Edition) 1 exemplar
The Line of Beauty 1 exemplar
Mount Low 1 exemplar
Associated Works
The Dylan Companion: A Collection of Essential Writing About Bob Dylan (1990) — Contribuidor, algumas edições — 94 exemplares
Forgotten voices of the secret war : an inside history of special operations during the Second World War (2008) — Introdução, algumas edições — 76 exemplares
Etiquetado
Conhecimento Comum
- Nome legal
- Faulks, Sebastian Charles
- Data de nascimento
- 1953-04-20
- Sexo
- male
- Nacionalidade
- Groot-Brittannië
- Local de nascimento
- Donnington, Berkshire, England, UK
- Locais de residência
- London, England, UK
France - Educação
- Wellington College
University of Cambridge (Emmanuel College)
Elstree School - Ocupações
- novelist
journalist - Prémios e menções honrosas
- Order of the British Empire (Commander, 2002)
British Book Award (1995)
Royal Society of Literature (Fellow) - Agente
- Gillon Aitken Associates Ltd
Membros
Discussions
Group Read, February 2014: Birdsong em 1001 Books to read before you die (Abril 2014)
Críticas
Listas
Backlisted (1)
A Novel Cure (1)
BBC Big Read (1)
Favourite Books (1)
My TBR (1)
1990s (1)
Unread books (1)
Allie's Wishlist (1)
Folio Society (1)
Women in War (1)
BBC Big Read (1)
Books I've read (1)
Best Spy Fiction (1)
Prémios
You May Also Like
Associated Authors
Estatísticas
- Obras
- 38
- Also by
- 11
- Membros
- 19,285
- Popularidade
- #1,130
- Avaliação
- 4.2
- Críticas
- 594
- ISBN
- 468
- Línguas
- 16
- Marcado como favorito
- 63
- Pedras de toque
- 875
As a 00 agent he brought the same sensibilities. Enjoy today, do your best to see tomorrow, and regret nothing seems to be his motto for living, something the films have drained away replacing them with quips and gadgets. Self-reliance was probably Bond’s greatest virtue, something the movies retained but never truly heralded.
With that said, it is nice to return to a Bond adventure that harkens back to the original books. Yes, there is the travel to “exotic” locations and women and danger, but there is also the mission. I’ve read in various reviews that the Bond books and movies all run to a trope in that there is a “Super Villain” who plans “Super Evil” of some type, is assisted by a cadre of henchmen that try to stop Bond, and there are beautiful women (in the Fleming novels usually just a single beautiful woman) who are dangerous to one degree or another.
Of course these things are present. The 00 section is reserved for when killing is the probably only answer to the problem presented by the mission. Only a supreme evil needs such a drastic response. These books do not enlist a bad guy who has been diddling with his taxes or stealing boxes of paper clips from work. In order to send a 00 agent out there has to be a great threat to national security, and even world security. So when you pick up a Bond book you will always find what you expect. It is just in the manner of how the threat is presented and the reaction of Bond that differs.
Here the threat is drugs. Drugs are a self-inflicted horror that is easy to get into but difficult to remove yourself from. This is the minor threat presented by Dr. Julius Gorner, industrialist and evil mastermind (if you can call trying to get every young person in England addicted) that is soon overshadowed by his true plan for the destruction of Great Britain, and perhaps more of the world. Like all super evil beings, Gorner likes to win at every thing he does. There is a tennis match Bond participates in that somehow has been rigged in Gorner’s favor. There is the beautiful woman, one of a set or twins, who helps Bond with the match.
While Poppy seems to fall into trouble, Bond and her sister Scarlett do some terrain hopping trying to save her and the world. In all truth a Bond book doesn’t need a great, pristine new plot. The tropes of the past will carry us through the story. What is needed are twists and turns, unexpected betrayals and loyalities, a good bad person, a least one outstanding henchman, vivid depictions of localities (made more difficult to render properly when the date of the writing drifts further and further away from the time setting for the book) and a proper world view. Bond is always better when he relies on his own skill set, his tenacity, and often his charm rather than the movie gizmo’s and gimcracks that would have Flemings rolling his eyes in disbelief.
Is Devil May Care the best of the Bond books? Probably not, but it is a good, thrilling read that will leave the audience satisified. And really, isn’t that all we ask of a book, or our literary heroes?… (mais)