What do you think?
Rate this book


303 pages, Hardcover
First published May 1, 1991
Gardner distinguishes THE MAN FROM BARBAROSSA from his previous ten outings in a number of unique ways. Along with updating some of the chronological references, making it unlikely Bond was operating as a 00 agent in 1960s, it is consciously set outside the typical world of Bond. Here, 007 takes his orders not from M but the KGB. This is a world on the brink of war, filled with more political manoeuvring than straight-up action...
...The last time that a Bond book attempted to take a completely experimental approach with the Bond formula was Fleming’s own The Spy Who Loved Me, a book told entirely from the perspective of a woman who only had a brief connection to Bond. Some fans have compared the two books, and there is much to be said for this. Like The Spy Who Loved Me, this volume is also the most sexually explicit of the Bond stories to this point, with several distinct sex scenes that would make the fans of the film series blush.