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Title:
Diamonds Are Forever
Series: James Bond
#4
Author: Ian Fleming
Rating: 3 of 5
Stars
Genre: Thriller
Pages:
205
Words: 72K
Publish: 1956
There
is a reason why the movies have overshadowed these books. For about
75% of the book, it was just boring, boring, boring.
Bond
gets involved with the American Mob and diamond smuggling and one
train blows up after Bond gets beaten up. That’s it. I know I’m
jaded in terms of thrillers and adventures, but seriously, that’s
it. Cold War thrillers are just so slow and move/countermove and then
counter/counter/countermove. Blah, blah, blah. It’s not bad story
telling or anything, it’s just a style that has, thankfully,
passed.
If
I was still doing my food comparisons for books, I’d liken this to
a peanut butter and jelly sandwich on white bread.
★★★☆☆
From
Grokipedia
James
Bond is assigned by M to infiltrate and dismantle a major diamond
smuggling pipeline that is costing Britain millions in lost dollar
earnings, running from the mines of Sierra Leone through London and
into the United States. [3] The
pipeline begins in Sierra Leone, where African miners conceal rough
diamonds in their mouths during staged dental visits to a corrupt
Afrikaner dentist, who extracts the stones and transports them by
motorcycle to a remote thorn bush rendezvous; there, a German
helicopter pilot collects the diamonds (worth around £100,000 per
shipment) and flies them toward Dakar, from where they are forwarded
through cut-outs to London. [3] In
London, the stones are handled by the House of Diamonds, a front for
Jack Spang (alias Rufus B. Saye), who packages them for couriers to
smuggle to the U.S. end operated by his brother Seraffimo
Spang. [3]Bond
impersonates Peter Franks, a known diamond courier arrested by
Special Branch, and meets Tiffany Case, the organization's American
go-between, at the Trafalgar Palace Hotel in London. [3] She
briefs him on smuggling the diamonds concealed inside six Dunlop 65
golf balls in his golf bag and provides expense money before he
departs. [3] Bond
flies to New York via BOAC Stratocruiser, clears customs without
issue, and checks into the Hotel Astor as instructed. [3] He
meets Shady Tree, a hunchbacked intermediary for the Spangled Mob,
who pays him part of his fee and directs him to Saratoga Springs to
collect the remainder by betting on the fixed horse Shy Smile in the
Perpetuities Stakes. [3]In
Saratoga Springs, Bond reconnects with Felix Leiter, now a
Pinkerton's detective investigating the same mob, and they
collaborate to sabotage the fix. [4] Shy
Smile, a ringer substituted for the original horse, appears to win
but is disqualified after its jockey deliberately fouls another
horse, thwarting the payout. [3] Bond
is then rerouted to Las Vegas to win his fee at the rigged blackjack
tables of the Tiara Hotel and Casino, owned by Seraffimo
Spang. [3] Tiffany
Case, dealing blackjack, arranges for Bond to win $5,000
legitimately, but he defies orders by continuing to play roulette and
winning more, drawing the mob's attention. [3]Bond
is captured by the killers Wint and Kidd, taken to the ghost town of
Spectreville, and severely beaten by Seraffimo Spang's men after his
imposture is discovered. [3] Tiffany
Case, disillusioned with the mob, helps Bond escape; they flee on a
hand-pumped rail car while setting Spectreville ablaze. [3] Seraffimo
pursues them in his antique steam locomotive, the Cannonball, but
Bond shoots him through the cab window, causing the train to derail
and crash in flames, killing Seraffimo. [3] Bond
and Tiffany escape with assistance from cab driver Ernie Cureo, who
is wounded during a violent car chase in Las Vegas. [4]They
travel to New York and board the Queen Elizabeth for England, but
Wint and Kidd follow aboard with orders to assassinate them. [3] Bond
confronts the pair in their cabin, kills Wint with a thrown knife and
Kidd with his Beretta, then stages the scene as a murder-suicide
stemming from a gambling dispute. [3] Bond
then flies to Freetown, Sierra Leone, where he ambushes the
pipeline's African end. [3] Jack
Spang, piloting the helicopter himself after murdering the regular
German pilot, arrives at the thorn bush rendezvous, but Bond fires a
Bofors anti-aircraft gun, striking the tail rotor and causing the
helicopter to crash in flames, killing Spang and destroying the
smuggling operation. [3]
Main characters
The main characters in Ian
Fleming's Diamonds Are Forever revolve around James Bond and the key
figures he encounters in his investigation of the diamond smuggling
network.James Bond, the seasoned British Secret Service agent
designated 007, adopts an undercover persona as a criminal to
infiltrate the smuggling operation. [5] His usual
detachment gives way to rare emotional vulnerability in his evolving
relationship with Tiffany Case, where he assumes a supportive role
and develops genuine concern for her well-being. [5]Tiffany Case
is a tough, quick-witted American woman serving as a professional
diamond courier for the Spangled Mob. [5] Her backstory
includes profound trauma: at sixteen, she was gang-raped by mobsters
after her mother's San Francisco bordello failed to pay protection
money, prompting her to run away, struggle with alcoholism, and later
enter the criminal world under Seraffimo Spang's
influence. [5] Tiffany projects a cold, self-reliant
demeanor marked by sharp dialogue, defiance, and competence, yet her
psychological complexity reveals melancholy, mood swings, and a
protective wariness toward men rooted in her past. [5] She
forms an eventual alliance with Bond that blossoms into a romantic
relationship characterized by cautious intimacy and mutual
trust. [5]Felix Leiter, Bond's longstanding American ally, has
left the CIA after debilitating injuries in a prior case and now
works as an operative for the Pinkerton detective agency. ) He
provides crucial assistance to Bond in Saratoga Springs and maintains
a loyal partnership. )The Spang brothers, Jack (known as ABC) and
Seraffimo, lead the Spangled Mob, the U.S.-based syndicate
orchestrating the diamond pipeline. Jack oversees operations
strategically, while Seraffimo handles more direct enforcement.Mr.
Wint and Mr. Kidd are homosexual professional assassins working for
the Spang organization, distinguished by their contrasting physical
builds—Wint tall and ginger-haired, Kidd shorter and
dark-haired—and their methodical, unconventional killing
techniques.Supporting figures include Shady Tree, a crooked comedian
functioning as a key contact and fence in the smuggling chain; Ernie
Cureo, a Las Vegas taxi driver who becomes Bond's reliable local
ally; and M, the head of MI6, who assigns Bond the diamond smuggling
investigation.
