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Encyclopedia > Colonel Sun
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1978 reprint by Panther Books.

Colonel Sun was the first James Bond novel published after the death, in 1964, of the character's creator, Ian Fleming. Published in 1968 by Glidrose Publications, it was written by "Robert Markham", a pseudonym created by Glidrose for British novelist Kingsley Amis. Glidrose had intended publishing a continuation series of James Bond novels written by different authors under the Robert Markham name, but Colonel Sun was the only novel published.


Discounting the screenplay novelizations, and James Bond: The Authorized Biography of 007 (1973), by John Pearson, Colonel Sun was the last, new James Bond novel published until Licence Renewed, by John Gardner, in 1981.


Plot summary

After his superior officer in MI6, M, is violently kidnapped from his house, Quarterdeck, James Bond follows the clues to Vrakonisi, an Aegean island of Greece, where he teams with Ariadne Alexandrou, a Greek Communist agent working for the Soviet Union. Together, they plan to rescue M while thwarting the complex military-political plans of People's Liberation Army Colonel Sun, the Chinese agent sent to sabotage a Middle East détente conference, of which the Soviets are hosts, and implicate Great Britain.


Although Amis, reportedly, requested Colonel Sun not be filmed, the novel may have inspired elements of several James Bond films, i.e. the Greek setting of For Your Eyes Only (1981), the kidnapping of M in The World Is Not Enough (1999), and the name of the North Korean villain of Die Another Day (2002), Colonel Tan-Sun Moon.



Author: Publisher: Hardback: Paperback: Alternate titles:
Kingsley Amis (writing as Robert Markham) Glidrose Publications (UK) 1968 | (US) 1968 (UK) 1970 | (US) 1969
Preceded by: Octopussy and the Living Daylights
Followed by: James Bond: The Authorized Biography of 007

Comic strip adaptation

Colonel Sun has the distinction of being the only non-Fleming James Bond novel adapted as a comic strip by the British newspaper, the Evening Standard, and also syndicated worldwide. The strip ran from December 1, 1969 to August 20, 1970; adapted by Jim Lawrence with artwork by Yaroslav Horak.


  Results from FactBites:
 
colonel - information on colonel at Answers.com (1122 words)
Colonel (IPA: [ˈkɝnəl] or [ˈkɜːnəl]) is a military rank of a commissioned officer, with the corresponding ranks existing in nearly every country in the world.
The rank of Colonel is one of the oldest in existence, dating as far back to the time of the Roman Empire.
By the time of the late 19th century, Colonel was a professional military rank and typically held by an officer in command of a regiment.
Colonel Sun; Reviews & Ratings - CBn Forums (3073 words)
Colonel Sun is one of the better non-Fleming novels: exciting, violent, excellently written, and with a version of 007 closer to the original than any of the follow-up books.
Colonel Sun is primarily a realistic and often violent tale with an lack of gadgetry.
Colonel Sun is a bit reminiscent of Doctor No, but aside from his lengthy chatter pre-torture, he's a deviously successful villain and comes to a good end.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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