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From Russia with Love (James Bond Novels) by Ian Fleming
Book Summary InformationAuthor: Ian Fleming Edition: Paperback Audio: English (Unknown); English (Original Language); English (Published) Published: 2002-12-31 ISBN: 0142002070 Number of pages: 272 Publisher: Penguin (Non-Classics)
Book Reviews of From Russia with Love (James Bond Novels)Book Review: Chess Match Turns Deadly For 007 Summary: 5 Stars
Though it ends with as sharp a period as any Ian Fleming ever made, the operative punctuation in 1957's "From Russia, With Love" is found in its very title, a comma. "From Russia" is not an end but a turning, from the lighter Bond adventures Fleming penned at the start of the series toward twistier, more complex yarns.
It's also one of the most captivating of Bond stories. It opens with an image of a well-built naked man lying face-down on a rose-hedged lawn. He looks dead but is very much alive, dangerously so, as we discover. Red Grant is not only powerful, he is madly homicidal, a combination that endears him to his Soviet masters. Grant's latest assignment, part of a larger operation to embarrass the British secret service, involves the killing of one of only three Britishers who hold the dread double-0 distinction and thus is kind of Grant's opposite number: 007.
"English spies we have captured speak highly of the man", one Soviet spymaster notes. "He is certainly much admired in his Service. He is said to be a lone wolf, but a very good-looking one."
To demoralize the British and reverse a string of losses, head Soviet spykiller General G. commands Bond not only be killed, but "killed with IGNOMINY". Enter Tatiana Romanova, a beautiful, mild-mannered government clerk who becomes both pawn and queen in the chess game against Bond.
The build-up is great, and once Bond enters the scene, like a matador the last to enter the bullring, Fleming kicks the story into an even higher gear. Buying the cover story that Tatiana has fallen in love with him from a file photo and wants to give him a secret Russian decoder, Bond travels to Istanbul and meets Darko Karim, the British secret service's chief Turkish ally. Fleming bathes us in atmosphere, and takes us from a gypsy catfight to a nighttime assassination to a hotel-room seduction in a classic example of "the Fleming Sweep."
"Near the airport a dog barked excitedly at an unknown human smell," Fleming writes. "Bond suddenly realized that he had come into the East where the guard-dog howls all night. For some reason the realization sent a pang of pleasure and excitement into his heart."
"From Russia, With Love" may well be Fleming at his least politically correct. Tatiana is little more than a plaything, while Darko Karim regales Bond with his un-Western notions of romancing a woman, which involves chaining her to a wall and feeding her table scraps until she falls in love with him. But this is part of "Russia's" dark charm, presenting such awful ideas so palatably in the form of Karim, one of the best characters in the 007 series with his fatalistic charm and suavity.
"Russia" comes up short only in the adventure department, with Bond little more of an active player here than he was in "Diamonds Are Forever" and getting a ludicrously detailed rundown of the enemy plot before his "liquidation". The ending is definitely improvable (and was in the subsequent screen adaptation, the best of all the Bond movies).
I'd call the earlier "Casino Royale" and later "On Her Majesty's Secret Service" the best Bond novels, but "Russia" lays down the groundwork of the entire 007 concept with unrivaled drama and passion. It can be seen today as the moment when James Bond went from diverting pulp fiction to essential cultural touchstone.
Summary of From Russia with Love (James Bond Novels)Name: Bond, James. Height: 183 cm, weight: 76 kg; slim build; eyes: blue; hair: black; scar down right cheek & on left shoulder; all-round athlete; expert pistol shot, boxer, knife-thrower; does not use disguises. Languages: French and German. Smokes heavily (NB: special cigarettes with three gold bands); vices: drink, but not to excess, and women. Every major foreign government organization has a file on British secret agent James Bond. Now, Russia's lethal SMERSH organization has targeted him for elimination. SMERSH has the perfect bait in the irresistible Tatiana Romanova, who lures 007 to Istanbul promising the top-secret Spektor cipher machine. But when Bond walks willingly into the trap, a game of cross and double-cross ensues, with Bond both the stakes and the prize.
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