MI6 Book Club - Casino Royale
Aug. 1st, 2015 09:00 am
Welcome to the first MI6 Cafe book club! Get your drinks, snacks and any notes you have and gather round for Book Club!
If you want any resources for the Casino Royale book, please find the link to the resources in the sidebar on the right! Please check the schedule to find out what we're discussing this week!
Book Club is designed to be a place where you can go beyond the Bond movies and delve into another medium with our favourite secret agent. There is no set discussions, if you have anything interesting you want to discuss about your reading experience, comments on the text, or even how reading the book might have changed your view on the characters in the movies then do share!
How this works
- Reading of Casino Royale starts now!
- On the 8th of August there will be a discussion post for chapters 1-13
- On the 15th of August there will be a discussion post for chapters 14-27 and the book as a whole
- The discussion post at the halfway point is for the specified chapters only! Please don't post spoilers for the rest of the book in the first one, or in the comments on this post, for that matter
The Bond books were written in the 1950s and 60s, and contain examples of things that are not exceptable today. Casino Royale contains examples of:
- g*psy slur used
- discussion of rape
- racism
- sexism
- smoking and excessive alcohol consumption
- violence
- suicide
- torture
- drug use (mention)
- car accident
- death
Some Questions to get us started!
1) What do you expect to be different in the book from the movies?
2) Is this your first time reading any of the Bond books?
3) Has reading the book so far inspired you to change the way you approach Bond in fandom?
Happy discussing!
no subject
Date: 2015-08-01 09:31 am (UTC)2) Is this your first time reading any of the Bond books? I've read I think the first half of the series already. Some of them I've only read once, others I've got on my bookshelf and have read quite a few times.
3) Has reading the book so far inspired you to change the way you approach Bond in fandom? Once I started reading the books it really changed the way I looked at James Bond as a character. I'm really interested to see if other readers have a similar reaction...
What are first time readers expecting from the books? Do you think what you learn from the books will bleed into your headcanons for the movieverse?
Castillon
Date: 2015-08-02 09:28 am (UTC)What am I expecting? I guess I want to find out what made these books so popular! What kind of stories did Fleming tell that helped make Bond such a powerful fictional character? And I'd love to just get some more details in a worldbuilding kind of way. See more of Tanner, how MI6 functions in the books, that sort of thing. At times I'm a total magpie when it comes to headcanons, so I'm perfectly happy to pick and choose traits from Bond's book character to potentially apply to movieverse Bond as well.
Since you've read several Bond books already, what makes them worth a reread for you?
-Castillon
Re: Castillon
Date: 2015-08-02 09:50 am (UTC)otherwise, well, they're good books, and Fleming has this thing he does, where the last sentence or two of each chapter isn't a cliffhanger, but they make you want to find out what happens next right now
Re: Castillon
Date: 2015-08-04 05:34 am (UTC)-Castillon
Castillon
Date: 2015-08-02 09:20 am (UTC)2) I've read "The Spy Who Loved Me" and enjoyed it very much! But of course that is an atypical one, being told from the Bond Girl's POV. So Casino Royale is my first Bond-POV Bond book!
3) Just the first chapter or two are a goldmine of character information about what Fleming describes as the practical realities of being a spy, so that's been interesting to see. (Another book/movie difference: Movies don't usually have the luxury of showing the more mundane levels of spycraft.) I'm also intrigued by the small moments showing Bond's relationship with M. IDK, there's just lots of good stuff going on!
A note about currency: Early in the book, Bond notes that he has a capital of 23,000 pounds. A quick Google search put a 1950 pound as having the same buying power of 20.5 pounds in today's money; if that holds up, then 23,000 1950 pounds would be 471,500 in today's pounds. So, you could round up to about 500,000 pounds if you wanted a round number. In today's money, that's about $750,000, the exchange rate being about 1.5 pounds to the dollar.
Re: Castillon
Date: 2015-08-02 09:53 am (UTC)3) yes, this I love so much
I worked out that a 1000 franc tip Bond gives in the first chapter is about USD$25 now, I think, which put all the money talk in perspective...
Re: Castillon
Date: 2015-08-04 05:36 am (UTC)-Castillon
no subject
Date: 2015-08-02 12:22 pm (UTC)2. Nope, I've read about half of the Fleming books and more than half of the Gardner books and also the Young Bond series by Charlie Higson.
3. The books are, on a whole different level than the movies. it's really what i try to tell people. sure the movie and the books have the same name and same characters but that's usually it. you have to have an open mind on what they decided to cut from the book to put in the movie and you have to omit certain things from the book that will go into the movie. I enjoy both and can try and keep them separated [and fail miserably]
no subject
Date: 2015-08-02 12:43 pm (UTC)3) yes, exactly!
no subject
Date: 2015-08-02 04:29 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2015-08-02 11:22 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2015-08-03 11:16 am (UTC)Castillon
Date: 2015-08-04 06:07 am (UTC)-Castillon
Re: Castillon
Date: 2015-08-04 06:52 am (UTC)Re: Castillon
Date: 2015-08-04 08:38 am (UTC)-Castillon
Re: Castillon
Date: 2015-08-04 08:58 am (UTC)he looks like Fleming, eats like Fleming, drinks like Fleming, smokes like Fleming, womanises like Fleming, has a WW2 history like Fleming...
... but Bond is the better version, the version Fleming would have liked to be
Re: Castillon
Date: 2015-08-04 09:14 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2015-08-04 09:13 pm (UTC)Basically, I agree with the general opinion that books are more serious. And I like that we get to read what Bond thinks, and why he does things he does, and also all the details that never make it into the movies (like the scrambled eggs).
2) Is this your first time reading any of the Bond books?
Nope, I read all of them a couple of years ago, and some of the post-Fleming ones as well. But it's going to be my first time reading Casino Royale in the original. So it's going to be really cool copmparing it with the translated one.
3) Has reading the book so far inspired you to change the way you approach Bond in fandom?
Fandom often paints Bond as less serious or funny or with all the focus on tragic backstory, and books remind me that Fleming's Bond was a bit different.
Castillon
Date: 2015-08-07 03:42 am (UTC)See you at the book club tomorrow! :D