Showing posts with label Mata Hari. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mata Hari. Show all posts

Friday, November 12, 2021

Flashback Friday: Devil May Care, the Latest James Bond Thriller

12 Years Ago Today I wrote this review of a new James Bond sequel released on what would have been Ian Fleming's 100th birthday.

The James Bond character has become an iconic part of Western culture. Invented by writer Ian Fleming in the heat of the Cold War, Bond was the quintessential British spy, fighting evil wherever it is found, using state-of-the-art gadgets created by the best technical minds in the service of good, doing it all with a flash and style that women swoon over and men strive to emulate. At least in the books his women swoon. In those Cold War days there was a lot of fear, and readers of the Bond books could take comfort in knowing our side was doing what it could to save the world. These were the days of Spy vs. Spy comics in Mad magazine and fallout shelters in basements. More than once over the years I've heard a speaker at a writers conference reference Ian Fleming as an example of how to make fiction come to life. Attention to detail is key.

My father, an avid reader, was himself a fan of the Bond series. Fleming was already internationally famous when John F. Kennedy stated that From Russia With Love was on the short list of his favorite books, which naturally put Fleming firmly on the map in this country.

When I was about fourteen my mom saw that I was reading From Russia With Love and she said, "Oh Eddie, you're not reading that, are you?" 

Mata Hari in 1906. One of history's
most famous spies.
Around page 20 there was a scene with a tall blond Russian fellow, the arch-villain pathological killer, getting a back rub while lying naked beside a pool. She'd put the book down at that point and never picked it up again. I, on the other, could not put the book down, but agreed to let her make an appeal to my dad who assented that the books were not salacious and I was "old enough."

Bond did bed his women, but Fleming spent more time building tension in his stories than getting male readers to drool to distraction.

I bring all this up because another Bond novel was released last year on the 100th anniversary of Fleming's birthday. This book, Devil May Care by Sebastian Faulks, is a very good read. I've not looked at a Bond book since high school (and I read every one of them that dad had available -- Goldfinger, Diamonds Are Forever, Moonraker, Dr. No, For Your Eyes Only, The Spy Who Loved Me, etc.) Faulks doesn't tinker with the style or create new characters. This is James Bond, and M and Miss Moneypenny, and those really evil, wholly dedicated bad guys.

A few critics call Faulks' book a joke because it is simply a parody of what a Bond book would be. But to some extent you could say the same about Fleming's later Bond books, and certainly many of the films were, well, knock-offs made for the fun of it. If you keep this perspective, Devil May Care is a fun read.

Since we're talking spy stuff, I will put in a plug here for the International Spy Museum in Washington D.C. Spies and spying are as old as the days of Moses, actually. Remember when Israel, wandering in the wilderness for forty years, sent twelve spies into Canaan to check out the situation there? The Revolutionary War had its share of spy business, as did the Civil War, and every conflict since. If you have kids, and enough time, be sure to add the International Spy Museum to your list of things to see and do in D.C. on your next visit.

Postscript: What kind of spying is going on in our world today? Do governments still use exotic dancers or is it all high tech now? Do you ever wonder how much Alexa is listening in or where the information Facebook and Google have been gathering on you is ending up?  

Wednesday, August 11, 2021

Almost Wordless Wednesday: Nothing But Trouble

Trouble in the city, trouble in the farm
You got your rabbit's foot, you got your good-luck charm
But they can't help you none when there's trouble.
Trouble, trouble, trouble
Nothing but trouble.
--Bob Dylan

The images here are from old Detective magazines courtesy Claude Angele Boni & sent to me from France, the first one being Diamond Joe, who's featured in a song on Good As I Been To You (1992)

Diamond Joe

This is a story about LANDRU, a famous French killer.
He used to invite rich women for dinner, poison them,
then burn them in a big furnace. He did it for a long time
before they caught him.

One of the 20th century's most famous spies.


Al Capone had an international reputation.


Sing Sing Prison




DIAMOND JOE  
Now There's a man you'll hear about
Most anywhere you go,
And his holdings are in Texas
And his name is Diamond Joe.

 And he carries all his money
In a diamond-studded jar.
He never took much trouble
With the process of the law.

FULL LYRICS to this traditional ballad HERE.

* * * 
Regarding Trouble, my favorite line in the song, 
as born out by these Detective stories:
Go all the way to the other side of the world, you’ll find trouble there
Revolution even ain’t no solution for trouble
* * * 
Keep on keepin' on, friends.

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