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Human Remains and Mass Violence: Methodological Approaches
Jean-Marc Dreyfus and Elisabeth Anstett
Book
This book outlines for the first time in a single volume the theoretical and methodological tools...
IW
Illegible Will: Coercive Spectacles of Labor in South Africa and the Diaspora
Book
In Illegible Will Hershini Bhana Young engages with the archive of South African and black diasporic...

Insurgent Democracy: The Nonpartisan League in North American Politics
Book
In 1915, western farmers mounted one of the most significant challenges to party politics America...

Brett Anderson recommended Turn on the Bright Lights by Interpol in Music (curated)

Paul Weller recommended Revolver by The Beatles in Music (curated)

Ben Watt recommended The Bravest Man in the Universe by Bobby Womack in Music (curated)

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Awix (3310 KP) rated Forever And A Day in Books
Oct 20, 2020 (Updated Oct 20, 2020)
Pastiche thriller featuring you-know-who. It's 1950, and agent 007 is killed in action while investigating drug dealing in the south of France. The head of the secret service decides to send in a newly-promoted operative to investigate the death, a young chap by the name of Bond...
Horowitz's novel tries to do the same thing as the movie version of Casino Royale - to show how Bond becomes Bond. At this he is only really marginally successful, as Bond starts the novel as a pretty icy brute and ends only more icy and brutal. That said, the book evokes the Fleming formula rather well: there is the usual mixture of globe-trotting, good living, maniacal snobbery, action, torture, and sex in just about the right proportions. Some may complain that some contemporary politics have snuck into what's essentially an escapist fantasy - one villain is a bouffant-haired American tycoon with wandering hands, who thinks America should put its own interests first, while another gets a big speech about the smallness and insignificance of Britain, and its reliance on a close relationship with Europe if it wants to prosper. Nevertheless, fun, pacy stuff and very readable.
Horowitz's novel tries to do the same thing as the movie version of Casino Royale - to show how Bond becomes Bond. At this he is only really marginally successful, as Bond starts the novel as a pretty icy brute and ends only more icy and brutal. That said, the book evokes the Fleming formula rather well: there is the usual mixture of globe-trotting, good living, maniacal snobbery, action, torture, and sex in just about the right proportions. Some may complain that some contemporary politics have snuck into what's essentially an escapist fantasy - one villain is a bouffant-haired American tycoon with wandering hands, who thinks America should put its own interests first, while another gets a big speech about the smallness and insignificance of Britain, and its reliance on a close relationship with Europe if it wants to prosper. Nevertheless, fun, pacy stuff and very readable.