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Raymond Benson

Auteur de Zero Minus Ten

60+ oeuvres 2,432 utilisateurs 90 critiques 2 Favoris

A propos de l'auteur

Raymond Benson is the author of Never Dream of Dying, Doubleshot, High Time to Kill, The Facts of Death, and Zero Minus Ten, and the novelizations of The World Is Not Enough and Tomorrow Never Dies. A director of the Ian Fleming Foundation, he lives and works in the Chicago area.

Comprend les noms: Raymond Benson

Séries

Œuvres de Raymond Benson

Zero Minus Ten (1997) 220 exemplaires
High Time to Kill (1999) 192 exemplaires
Never Dream of Dying (2001) 184 exemplaires
The Facts of Death (1998) 183 exemplaires
Doubleshot (2000) 178 exemplaires
The Man With the Red Tattoo (2003) 156 exemplaires
The Black Stiletto (2011) 142 exemplaires
The World Is Not Enough (1999) 133 exemplaires
Tomorrow Never Dies (1997) 128 exemplaires
Die Another Day (2002) 126 exemplaires
The James Bond Bedside Companion (1738) 94 exemplaires
Metal Gear Solid: The Novel (2008) 88 exemplaires
Ice Cold: Tales of Intrigue from the Cold War (2014) — Directeur de publication — 71 exemplaires
James Bond: The Union Trilogy (2008) 57 exemplaires
The Black Stiletto: Black & White (2012) 37 exemplaires
Hitman: Damnation (2012) 32 exemplaires
Hunt Through Napoleon's Web (1656) 24 exemplaires
Dark Side of the Morgue (2009) 23 exemplaires
Sweetie's Diamonds (2006) 18 exemplaires
A Hard Day's Death (2008) 17 exemplaires
Blues in the Dark: A Thriller (2018) 16 exemplaires
A Murder of Mysteries (2014) 9 exemplaires
In the Hush of the Night: A Novel (2018) 8 exemplaires
Evil Hours (2004) 5 exemplaires
Face Blind (2003) 3 exemplaires
The Voice of Freedom (2011) 2 exemplaires
Chicken Pick-Up 2 exemplaires
On the Threshold of a Death (2009) 2 exemplaires
The Plagiarist (2010) 2 exemplaires
Hitman : potępienie (2012) 1 exemplaire
Artifact of Evil (2012) 1 exemplaire
Torment: A Love Story (2018) 1 exemplaire
Dying Light - Nightmare Row (2016) 1 exemplaire
Barrakuda művelet (2009) 1 exemplaire
Rape 1 exemplaire
Torment (2011) 1 exemplaire
Countdown (1998) 1 exemplaire
Rape Single Issue 1 exemplaire

Oeuvres associées

Tom Clancy's Splinter Cell, Tome 1 : Cellule dissidente (2004) — Auteur, quelques éditions738 exemplaires
James Bond in the 21st Century: Why We Still Need 007 (2006) — Contributeur — 25 exemplaires
Boondocks Fantasy (2011) — Contributeur — 23 exemplaires

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Critiques

For more reviews and bookish posts please visit: https://www.ManOfLaBook.com

Zero Minus Ten by Raymond Benson is the first novel by the author featuring Ian Fleming’s James Bond. Mr. Benson is a published author and the first American to write a James Bond book.

Agent 007 is given ten days to investigate a series of terrorist attacks in Hong Kong before it is going to be transferred to China. At the same time, a nuclear bomb has gone off in the Australian outback.

Bond investigates Guy Thackeray, a British shipping magnate, and Li Xu Nan, a head of a Chinese Triad. With the help of T.Y. Woo, a contact in Hong Kong, Bond manages to put Li Xu Nan in his debt and go to Australia to investigate Thackeray’s company, EurAsia.

I have enjoyed most of Ian Fleming’s Bond books, as well as the James Bond graphic novels. I’ve read this book a while ago though and these are my thoughts from that time.

Zero Minus Ten by Raymond Benson an O.K. Bond screenplay, but a bit disappointing book. It seems to me the author was writing the book with a movie in mind, what happened to the aging secret agent going through a mid-life crisis? What happened to the kinky, chauvinistic, alcoholic, cold-blooded killer we all know and love?

I do enjoy the Bond movies, like many I’ve seen them before reading the books. However, the literary Bond is quite different from the movie Bond. This book is taking place in the movie universe, ignoring the changes made by other authors to the literary character.

The narrative is missing the amalgam of details and storytelling, instead focusing a lot of it on action scenes for the big screen – which doesn’t usually translate well to books. Some of the writing becomes sloppy and superficial at times. In other books, we got into Bond’s head, this time we’re witnessing everything from the outside – like in a movie.

On the other hand, the heavy details in the book take the reader completely out of the story. I tried to understand how to play mahjong, but the description was convoluted. I did, however, appreciate the history lesson and context of Eastern politics.

I liked the story, it’s solid even if it is predictable, and I enjoyed reading the book, I guess it’s not the Bond I’m used to. If you are looking for a nice, light, Sunday afternoon read, this is it.
… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
ZoharLaor | 2 autres critiques | Jan 6, 2023 |
Metal Gear Solid is my favorite video game of all-time. It's an intense and intelligent sci-fi espionage thriller with a gritty, dark atmosphere, a complex story that weaves through deep conspiracy theories and philosophies, unique and memorable characters, and it has just enough silly camp and self-awareness to make it absolutely fun alongside being totally compelling. Hideo Kojima's masterpiece is a work that truly transcends the video game medium into interactive cinematic art.

Unfortunately, the Metal Gear Solid novelization is garbage. Raymond Benson doesn't understand the characters at all and most of the action and whatnot just reads like a transcription of someone playing the video game, which isn't very interesting when I'm trying to read a book. Reading about how Snake keeps sneaking around grabbing stray hand grenades in boxes and a billion different guns just doesn't work when the prose is bad and boring.

There's also the aggravating fact that Snake keeps spouting off cringy, totally out-of-character one-liners that most of the time don't even make sense, such as:

"Merry Christmas," Snake said as he delivered two power-house punches, left and then right, into the guards' faces. The soldiers plopped to the floor. "I forgot to tell you — Christmas is early this year."

Or he just has really dumb thoughts all the damn time, like when he finds the Kevlar vest and thinks: You don't find too many of these in Cracker Jack boxes! There's one particularly mind-blowingly awful moment in the sequence where he's running from the Hind-D helicopter between two towers that are being increasingly engulfed in flames and basically thinks "these towers are on fire, but at least it's not as bad as 9/11!" I just...what the actual fuck.

The only time it's actually any good is when he's just copying the cutscenes and dialogue verbatim, but none of that is even actually his own creation so he doesn't even get any points there, especially when in most of these moments he's throwing in his own shitty dialogue and prose, completely ruining any tension or drama in the scenes.

This book is an embarrassment to the legacy of Kojima's creation, and the fact that he was brought back to write the Sons of Liberty novelization is absolutely amazing (and I hate myself for feeling the need to read it at some point as well).
… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
Revolution666 | 3 autres critiques | Nov 14, 2022 |
Cette critique a été écrite dans le cadre des Critiques en avant-première de LibraryThing.
A great and very timely read! I enjoyed this book very much. The plot surrounds a double murder which takes place during the COVID quarantine. The characters tend to be a little quirky but endearing. I would have liked to see a different ending, but the way the author wrapped things up was fine.
 
Signalé
jeanie0510 | 12 autres critiques | Oct 17, 2022 |
Cette critique a été écrite dans le cadre des Critiques en avant-première de LibraryThing.
*I received a free copy of this book in exchange for an honest review.* I enjoyed Raymond Benson's novel The Mad, Mad Murders of Marigold Way. Benson does a great job of creating characters and building tension. The story is filled with twists, but I was totally shocked by the big twist AFTER the end (i.e., when you think you've figured it all out, but then you learn you were misdirected the whole time). I was not a fan of the narrative device of having each chapter introduced by an unseen and unnamed but all knowing narrator. I thought that was unnecessary and broke the flow of the storytelling. I think I may have a little COVID PTSD, as I feel uncomfortable with books that focus on the uncertainty and fear of the earliest days of the pandemic and lockdown.… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
JSBancroft | 12 autres critiques | Oct 3, 2022 |

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Statistiques

Œuvres
60
Aussi par
3
Membres
2,432
Popularité
#10,553
Évaluation
½ 3.4
Critiques
90
ISBN
251
Langues
11
Favoris
2

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