Carte Blanche—The New James Bond Novel
By Jeffery Deaver (Simon & Schuster, 2011)
I’m not sure how many there are like me out there, but I find I get at least as excited when a new James Bond book comes out as when a new James Bond movie does.
There’s the same urge to experience the sensation immediately. (I was out of town, nowhere near a book store when Carte Blanche came out mid-June, so I forwent a hardcover first edition. But I was reading the Kindle edition at 12:01 a.m. on the release date.)
The same fear that this time whoever’d been entrusted with the franchise had gone too far.
The same relief at the end when you realize all is well and they’ve really got this thing down to a science.
There’ve been around two dozen James Bond movies, give or take the first couple of Casino Royales, but close to 40 official Bond novels:
12 novels and two short story collections by Bond’s creator Ian Fleming. (The short stories were reissued as a single volume in 2008 to tie in with the film Quantum of Solace.)
14 novels and two movie novelizations by John McDonald.
Six novels, three movie novelizations and three short stories by Raymond Benson.
Colonel Sun by Robert Markham (Kingsley Amis).
Some might also include the five Young Bond novels by Charlie Higson, the three installments in the Moneypenny Diaries series by Samantha Weinburg (Kate Westbrook), and maybe even the four “Israel Bond (Oy Oy 7) parody novels by Sol Weinstein.
Carte Blanche, by bestselling thriller writer Jeffery Deaver, takes a major stylistic turn from the previous Bond novel, Sebastian Faulk’s Devil May Care. (Sometimes you think coming up with an appropriately Bond-sounding title must be half the battle when writing one of these novels.) Both are internationally bestselling authors, but
The sensation is in the sameness. Longtime fans’ satisfaction with both the Bond books and films is how true they’ve generally remained to the original Ian Fleming formula:
A major international criminal plot is revealed, one which threatens civilization as we know it.
James Bond gets involved, either through his work as an agent or by sheer dumb luck.
The supervillain is identified, and plays Bond in a sporting match, at which Bond catches the villain cheating.
An early stage of the plot is foiled, and one of Bond’s associates or paramours is killed or severely injured.
For Bond, the mission gets personal.
Bond is censured or disbelieved by his superiors and must finish the mission essentially by himself.
He does so, and the world is saved.
Familiar and reassuring formula aside, there’s still an exhilaratingly frustrating range of quality in the 58 years of Bond lit and 40 or so of Bond flicks. Sometimes the world crisis, or the supervillain is a little too obviously ripped from recent headlines—a media magnate, say, or (in this book) a recycling entrepreneur—and a little too eager to create popular paranoia about any fast-growing industry.
Carte Blanche’s geographical crisis, however, seems perfectly timed: Bond helps liberate Sudan, among other things.
Deaver includes most of the elements from the plot checklist above, notably excluding the sore-loser sports-cheating scene. (They’re running out of fresh sports anyhow; Faulks had to settle for tennis.)
This is something like the fourth or fifth Bond novel which tries to subtly suggest that Bond is not as sexist, classist, racist, Empiricist, alcoholic or nicotine-addicted as he was in the Cold War days. There’s just no way to suggest that subtly. Mention it at all and you’ve drawn too much attention to it.
Personally, I’d read all the Fleming Bonds by the age of 12 (As good as the Charlie Higson Young Bond pastiches are, I would’ve scoffed at the need for a PG-rated OO7). Instead of buying into the idea that he was some sort of heroic ideal, all that fussing over his martinis and sleeping with women who were clearly looking to kill him made me accept the concept fallible heroes, anti-heroes,. The thought that I’d start smoking, or hitting women, because James did seemed ludicrous.
Deaver shows Bond’s tastes growing out of a desperate need for balance, moments of calm in an endless stream of unpredictable excitements.
Deaver’s all slam-bang suspense, with ticking clocks and deadlines and showdowns. He describes the lead-up to a showdown minute by minute, inch by inch, as if he’s writing High Noon II and not James Bond XXXVI. At least this means he’s good at careful description, which helps when he gives Bond enough breathing time to order a martini or luxuriate in his automobile.
I happily went along for the ride.