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High Time to Kill
 
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High Time to Kill (Hardcover)

by Raymond Benson (Author)
4.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)

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From Publishers Weekly

James Bond has always been a figure of fantasy and Benson, in his routine fourth Bond novel (after The Facts of Death) wisely keeps him fantastic. An international mercenary terrorist gang called the Union pilfers the British secret formula for Skin 17, the only aircraft material that can withstand a speed of Mach 7. Besides its technological importance, Skin 17 is a triumph for the lagging British military, so spymaster M needs Bond to get it back, and to find the turncoat who helped the Union steal it. The terrorists hide the formula for Skin 17 on a microdot implanted inside the pacemaker of a Chinese national, who dies a few days later when the airplane he's flying in is hijacked and crashes on Kangchenjunga, third-highest mountain of the Himalayas: hence this novel's title. Bond, of course, is dispatched to retrieve the microdot. En route to a blood-filled, ice-encased climax, Agent 007 indulges his old tastes for dangerous women and beautiful cars. Thanks to Q, the violence features some deliciously nasty weapons, including a gadget-laden Jaguar XK8. Benson's prose, including the dialogue, is wooden, but the action he provides is fast and furious and Bond fans will note the narrative scores "a first for Bond... sex at 7,900 meters"Aa high point in a novel that otherwise is middling all the way.
Copyright 1999 Reed Business Information, Inc.

From Library Journal

Bond has a new enemy: a crime organization called the Union, which thrives on military espionage.
Copyright 1999 Reed Business Information, Inc.

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Customer Reviews

3 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
4.3 out of 5 stars (3 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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5.0 out of 5 stars Perfect fusion makes this one of the BEST Bond novels., Nov 25 2003
By John Cox (Studio City, CA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: High Time To Kill (Paperback)
HIGH TIME TO KILL is a unique James Bond adventure. It's very experimental in its use of a single setting in the second half of the book, while still deftly adhering to the classic James Bond formula. No "continuation novel" demonstrates a better understanding of what makes a classic Bond story (and HIGH TIME TO KILL surpasses even some of Fleming books in this regard). Most of my feelings come from the second half of the book when Bond is on the mountain. This is unlike anything we've ever seen Bond participate in before - yet all the Bondian ingredients are in firmly in place: Villain, sidekick, Bond girl, contest, breathtaking (literally this time) locales, exotic culture, set-piece showdown and coda. But every one of these "classic" elements (which in the movies have drifted toward clichés) feels 100% fresh because it's all set within the context of a reality-based high concept idea: Mountain climbing. The overlaying believaility of the concept elevates the characters and makes the book truly suspenseful in a FROM RUSSIA WITH LOVE sort of way. Even the almost always fumbled "this time it's personal" element works perfectly here. We understand that the villain is driven by his competitive masculine/sexual ego (a subtext of almost all Bond villains), but the possibility of altitude sickness motivates his classic Bond Villain megalomania in a completely believable way. The ice axe throwing competition between Bond and the villain is as gripping as any casino face off. Bond catching a glimpse of Bond Girl Hope Kendell undressing in her small tent is much sexier, IMO, than a Halle Berry bursting from the sea like a Bond Girl Jack in the Box. Bond's sidekick, a Sherpa, is indispensable in a way most of the Bondman sidekicks are not. The "gadgets" this time are all real, but still exotic (cutting-edge climbing equipment, the oxygen tent), and what better test of 007's stamina than a savage mountain climbing expedition? There is a return to the idea of 007 as a master of the extreme sport in this book that is very much a part to the world of Ian Fleming's James Bond. In fact, I think Fleming would have eventually written a book just like HIGH TIME TO KILL.

There's more, but suffice to say HIGH TIME TO KILL is the perfect fusion of the high-concept Bond formula and the completely believable and fascinating world of high-altitude mountain climbing. If you're looking to sample a non-Fleming James Bond novel, THIS is the one to get.

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4.0 out of 5 stars It's lost a little bit of the original Bond films and books, Jun 21 2003
By A Customer
This has lost the original Bond ways. For one thing, the book starts as a foul mouth convention and soon turns into bloody combat rather than real action scenes. Alot of it is more like adventure and has an odd plot: The Union is a criminal orginization that takes on jobs to rich. When England made the special airplane hull called Skin 17, the Union set out to get it. The microdot was put in a pacemaker to be sent to the buyers of the microdot but when the carrier's plane crashes in the Himalayas, Bond and a group of climbers head out to recover it. The climbers, though, are infested with undercover Union killers who plan to meet with another expedition so they can do the microdot business. Bond finds out and foils it but in the midst, gets hurt alot. This is even wierder than On Her Majesty's Secret Service!
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4.0 out of 5 stars great one, July 18 2002
By A Customer
This review is from: High Time To Kill (Paperback)
excellent book. very intriging and introduces a vicious and powerful enemy....the 1st book in a trilogy...
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