Plot
Kidnappers violently take the Secret Service chief M from his house and almost captureBackground and writing history
Ian Fleming, the creator of James Bond, died on 12 August 1964, eight months before the publication of his twelfth and final novel, '' The Man with the Golden Gun''. After his death the Fleming-family-owned Glidrose Productions (now Ian Fleming Publications) held the rights to his works and decided to publish the short story collection '' Octopussy and The Living Daylights'' on 23 June 1966. Glidrose took legal advice and found the Bond character could not be copyrighted. They decided that to avoid the possibility of other people publishing works about Bond, they would commission a sequel to retain their rights in the Bond product. Initially Glidrose approached the author James Leasor to write a continuation novel, but he declined. They then commissioned the writer Kingsley Amis. Fleming's widow, Ann, did not endorse any further Bond works, which she saw as cashing in on his work. She disliked Amis and said:Since the exploiters hope Colonel Sun will be the first of a new and successful series, they may find themselves exploited. Amis will slip 'Lucky Jim' into Bond's clothing, we shall have a '' petit bourgeois'' red brick Bond, he will resent the authority of M, then the discipline of the Secret Service, and end as Philby Bond selling his country to Spectre.'' The Sunday Telegraph'' asked her to review the novel, but her resulting criticism was so acerbic that it was never published as it was thought it could have been libelous. Amis was known by Glidrose to be an aficionado of Fleming's novels. In 1964 Fleming's publishers, Jonathan Cape, were concerned enough about the manuscript of ''The Man with the Golden Gun'' to ask Amis to read it and give his thoughts on whether it was viable for publishing. He was paid £35 15 shillings for his thoughts and advice, although his subsequent suggestions for alterations to the plot were not used. Cape had taken the step because they thought the novel was not up to Fleming's usual standard. In 1965 Amis wrote '' The James Bond Dossier''—a critical analysis of the Bond books under his own name—and '' The Book of Bond'', a tongue-in-cheek manual for prospective agents, published using the pseudonym Lt.-Col. William ("Bill") Tanner. The novelist Sally Beauman observed that it was "unusual, not to say unprecedented, for an established author to pick up the torch" in the way Amis did with the Bond novels, although she thought that "Bond stoo big, and too profitable, a property to be placed in the hands of an unknown". When deciding where to set the novel, Amis considered several locations, but was persuaded on Greece after he was invited to join friends who summered there every year. He later explained his thought process:
Greece? Yes—Bond never been, I never been, sounds good, islands just right. Also, Eastern Mediterranean a sphere of Russian expansion, British interests there too. (This was September 1965.) But Russia versus Britain too old-hat. Then Red China versus Britain and also versus Russia. So Bond could team up with Russian agent. Female. Tough, like all Bond’s girls. And Red China as villain is both new to Bond and obvious in the right kind of way. And Chinese master-villain would be fun ...In May 1967 Amis wrote to his friend, the poet Philip Larkin, and mentioned that he had finished writing the novel. Glidrose decided to publish Amis's novel under the pseudonym Robert Markham. Fleming's brother, the writer Peter Fleming, suggested the name "George Glidrose", but this was rejected and Markham chosen instead. The initial thought was that the Markham name would be used for all future Bond novels, regardless of who the author was, but ''Colonel Sun'' was the only one published under the name. ''Colonel Sun'' is set a year or so after the events depicted in ''The Man with the Golden Gun''. Although Fleming did not date the events within his novels, John Griswold and Henry Chancellor—both of whom wrote books for Ian Fleming Publications—have identified an in-universe timeline: Chancellor put the events of ''The Man with the Golden Gun'' in 1963; Griswold is more precise and considers the story to have taken place between November 1963 and the end of February 1964.
Development
Inspirations
Amis and his wife Jane spent September 1965 holidaying on the Greek island of Spetses; he used the experience to provide the background to ''Colonel Sun''. He followed a tradition set by Fleming of using the names of people he knew or had met during his researches for the book and he drew on the names of people he met in Greece for the novel. The boat Bond uses—''The Altair''—was the name of the boat Amis and his wife used on holiday; Ariadne's fictitious colleagues, "Legakis" and "Papadogonas", were friends who helped Amis in Greece; and the doctor who treats Bond in chapter two was named after Amis and Jane's own doctor.Characters
Raymond Benson—the author of continuation Bond novels—considers Amis's version of Bond to be close to that developed by Fleming. Benson describes this personality as a natural continuation of the Bond developed in the final three Fleming novels. In all three novels, the events take a toll on Bond: he loses his wife in '' On Her Majesty's Secret Service''; he loses his memory in Japan in '' You Only Live Twice''; and he is brainwashed in Russia, is de-programmed by MI6 and almost dies from Francisco Scaramanga's poisoned bullet in ''The Man with the Golden Gun''. Benson also sees a humourless side to Amis's version of the character, one which Fleming used in his earlier novels. The main villain of the novel is Colonel Sun Liang-tan ( zh, c=孙良坦, p=Sūn Liángtǎn). Sun is a member of the Special Activities Committee of the Chinese People's Liberation Army as well as a sadist and skilled torturer. Benson calls him "very worthy of inclusion in the Bond saga". Sun desires power over an individual and the ability to hurt them solely for the sake of causing pain. After Bond has been captured, Sun explains to him his approach to torture:You must understand that I'm not the slightest bit interested in studying resistance to pain or any such pseudo-scientific claptrap. I just want to torture people. But—this is the point—not for any selfish reason, unless you call a saint or a martyr selfish. As de Sade explains in '' The Philosopher in the Boudoir'', through cruelty one rises to heights of superhuman awareness, of sensitivity to new modes of being, that can’t be attained by any other method.The cultural historian Jeremy Black sees similarities between Sun and Fleming's Chinese villain Julius No from the 1958 novel '' Dr. No''. In both books the characters are shown as having a disregard for human life. The reviewer John Dugdale, in a 2018 retrospective review, called Sun "the most repellent racial caricature of all, a descendant of Fu Manchu and other fiendish orientals". The role of M in the novel changed from the one the character had played in Fleming's works. Instead of being the figure who instructs Bond on his mission, he becomes the cause of the mission. The cultural historians Janet Woollacott and Tony Bennett consider that as M does not give Bond's mission its necessary ideological perspective, Bond's "duel with Colonel Sun becomes little more than a personalised feud". Amis did not like the character of M and, as one reviewer pointed out, had "spent a chapter running him down" in ''The James Bond Dossier''. Benson considered that M's character evokes an emotional response from the reader because of the change from his usual, business-like manner to a semi-catatonic state after being kidnapped and drugged.
Themes
Benson observes an increased level of political intrigue in ''Colonel Sun'' compared to the earlier Bond novels. Bond acts in concert with the Russians against the Chinese, which Benson sees as demonstrating the theme of peacekeeping between nations. Black considers the novel reflects the realities of the late-1960s as China had developed hydrogen bomb capability in 1967 and the Sino-Soviet split that took place across the 1960s culminated in 1969 with the Sino-Soviet border conflict. Reflecting this, the novel shows a shift in the balance of world power away from two-party Cold War politics. Black observes an emotional and social sadness throughout ''Colonel Sun''. The social sadness is a reaction to the culture of modernity and mourning what was being lost in its place. In England Amis describes "the ugly rash of modern housing – half-heartedly mock-Tudor villas, bungalows and two-storey boxes with a senseless variegation of planking, brick and crazy paving on the front of each and the inevitable TV aerial sprouting from every roof"; in Greece he writes:In thirty years, he reflected, perhaps sooner, there would be one vast undifferentiated culture, one complex of super-highways, hot-dog stands and neon, interrupted only by the Atlantic, stretching from Los Angeles to Jerusalem; possibly, by then, as far as Calcutta, three-quarters of the way round the world. Where there had been Americans and British and French and Italians and Greeks and the rest, there would be only citizens of the West, uniformly affluent, uniformly ridden by guilt and neurosis, uniformly alcoholic and suicidal, uniformly everything.This treatment by Amis is similar to Fleming's nostalgia in describing Paris in " From a View to a Kill". Benson identifies Bond's desire for revenge as a central theme of the novel. The plot centres on Bond's need to avenge the death of the Hammonds and M's kidnapping. Benson describes this as particularly striking: "Bond is particularly brutal in achieving his goal ... The revenge is very satisfying. This is Bond at his toughest."
Publication and reception
Publication history
Jonathan Cape published ''Colonel Sun'' on 28 March 1968; the book was 255 pages long and priced at aReception
''Colonel Sun'' received mixed reviews from the critics; Benson considers this is because of the different styles between Amis and Fleming. Many of the critics reviewed the novel not just on its own merits, but also in comparison to Fleming's works. Roger Baker, writing in ''Adaptations
''Colonel Sun'' was serialised on a daily basis in the '' Daily Express'' from 18 March 1968 to 30 March 1968. The novel is the only non-Fleming Bond work adapted as a comic strip by the ''Daily Express''. It was written by Jim Lawrence, drawn by Yaroslav Horak and published from 1 December 1969 to 20 August 1970; it was subsequently syndicated worldwide. In December 2005 Titan Books reprinted ''Colonel Sun'' and included ''River of Death'', another original James Bond comic strip story published before the ''Colonel Sun'' strip in 1969. Titan reissued the strip in ''The James Bond Omnibus Vol. 003'', published in 2012. Elements of ''Colonel Sun'' have been used in the series of Bond films by Eon Productions: the kidnapping of M was used as a plot device in the 1999 film ''See also
* Outline of James BondNotes and references
Notes
References
Sources
Books
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* * * * * * {{Kingsley Amis 1968 British novels Fiction about the People's Liberation Army Fiction set in 1965 James Bond books Jonathan Cape books Novels by Kingsley Amis Novels first published in serial form Novels set in Greece Novels set in the 1960s Novels set in the Mediterranean Sea Novels set on islands Works about Chinese military personnel Works originally published in the Daily Express Works published under a pseudonym