Wednesday, 24 February 2016

From Russia With Love - a real cliff hanger!

I think this might be my favourite James Bond book to date. This may come as a bit of a surprise, particularly because our hero doesn't really make an appearance in From Russia With Love until about a quarter of the way through! Instead, in the opening chapters of this fifth outing for Bond, we follow the fortunes of Red Grant, a man who discovers that not only is he good at killing people, but he positively revels in it. The only place where he can find as much of this work as he can get is with SMERSH - the Russian organisation that is out to kill all foreign spies. Determined to cut the British Secret Service down to size, SMERSH get their best people to come up with a plan to rid them of their best and most famous spy (yes, Mr Bond) in the most public and embarrassing manner they can come up with. Enter a chess master who comes up with the plan, and the gloriously disgusting Rosa Klebb to implement it using Red Grant as her assassin of choice. So then, what could possibly be the best way to entice Bond into a compromising position ... well, a beautiful girl (Tatiana) bearing gifts (a Spektor cypher machine) who claims that she wishes to defect. Finally, Bond enters the action, happy to have something to do. Off to Turkey we go for the rendezvous and it is from this point on that the pace really picks up and we get to see Bond in all his glory. The characterisations in this book are great, both heroes and villains, and there are some thrilling action sequences, especially on the Orient Express. Will Bond get the girl? Will he get the cypher machine? And will he escape from the evil clutches of SMERSH? Ian Fleming produced a great book that is tense, excellently paced and ends on a complete cliff hanger ... if you only ever read one Bond book, this is the one! I can highly recommend the audio version narrated by Toby Stephens who does a fabulous job ... is he the only actor to have played a Bond villain (on film) as well as Bond himself?

My STAR rating: FOUR.

Length: 384 print pages.
Price I paid: £2.92.
Formats available: print; unabridged audio download; ebook.

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