

James Bond: Polestar [Fleming, Ian, Lawrence, Jim, Horak, Yaroslav, McClusky, John] on desertcart.com. *FREE* shipping on qualifying offers. James Bond: Polestar Review: Bond, the comic strip...pretty darn cool! - North American comic strip fans have been cheated. The James Bond comic strip, which ran in England in the Daily Express, can now be found on American book shelves courtesy of Titan Books. What a run this strip had. From 1958 to at least 1983 (minus a couple of years), Bond was penned, by Ian Fleming, and Jim Lawrence. Many of the original novels can be found adapted into strip form, and several new stories advanced the Bond canon. "Polestar" includes the last 5 complete adventures written by Lawrence and illustrated by McLusky and Horak. Bond investigates the sun tan lotion business and finds himself going Batty in "Flittermouse". In what almost seems inspired by vampires, the dead return to life, and an evil Dr Cat meets his match. Lawrence/McLusky give us a delightful story packed with familiar characters like M, and Suzy Kew. As with every film, this 1983 entry includes Bond girls, technology, witty dialogue, and adventure. Polestar is set in the Canadian North and includes the Mounted Police as Bond becomes Jack Boyd, fugitive American rocket engineer. Frozen corpses mark the edges of Polestars domain, and Red Doe is on a mission of revenge. Bond (as Boyd) infiltrates Polestar and Doe `disarms' her mothers' past lover as a mission of world destruction comes to an end. As good as the story is, the art fails on two pages, seeming as a guest artist took over for 10 days. The other stories, Scent of Danger, Snake Goddess, and Double Eagle, are alll good stories, and with Horak illustrating the last two, end this book (and strip series) on a high note. In terms of art, Horaks' style is second to McLusky with his more realistic, less angluar renderings. The book includes two extra features. There is a visit to Goldeneye, and an article on the Chilean Bond comic books. Bond girl Valerie Leon provides the introduction with her unique take on the Bond franchise. Celebrate Bonds' year with Bond in print, Bond onscreen, and Bond in video games. Ian Fleming would be proud. [...] Tim Lasiuta Review: More 007 - Not as exciting as the films, but if you want to read more 007, then you will enjoy it. Or just read Trigger Mortis by Anthony Horowitz.
| Best Sellers Rank | #5,809,538 in Books ( See Top 100 in Books ) #5,114 in Historical & Biographical Fiction Graphic Novels #13,412 in Mystery Graphic Novels |
| Customer Reviews | 4.7 4.7 out of 5 stars (22) |
| Dimensions | 8.7 x 0.35 x 11.65 inches |
| Edition | Illustrated |
| ISBN-10 | 1845767179 |
| ISBN-13 | 978-1845767174 |
| Item Weight | 2.31 pounds |
| Language | English |
| Print length | 120 pages |
| Publication date | November 4, 2008 |
| Publisher | Titan Books |
T**A
Bond, the comic strip...pretty darn cool!
North American comic strip fans have been cheated. The James Bond comic strip, which ran in England in the Daily Express, can now be found on American book shelves courtesy of Titan Books. What a run this strip had. From 1958 to at least 1983 (minus a couple of years), Bond was penned, by Ian Fleming, and Jim Lawrence. Many of the original novels can be found adapted into strip form, and several new stories advanced the Bond canon. "Polestar" includes the last 5 complete adventures written by Lawrence and illustrated by McLusky and Horak. Bond investigates the sun tan lotion business and finds himself going Batty in "Flittermouse". In what almost seems inspired by vampires, the dead return to life, and an evil Dr Cat meets his match. Lawrence/McLusky give us a delightful story packed with familiar characters like M, and Suzy Kew. As with every film, this 1983 entry includes Bond girls, technology, witty dialogue, and adventure. Polestar is set in the Canadian North and includes the Mounted Police as Bond becomes Jack Boyd, fugitive American rocket engineer. Frozen corpses mark the edges of Polestars domain, and Red Doe is on a mission of revenge. Bond (as Boyd) infiltrates Polestar and Doe `disarms' her mothers' past lover as a mission of world destruction comes to an end. As good as the story is, the art fails on two pages, seeming as a guest artist took over for 10 days. The other stories, Scent of Danger, Snake Goddess, and Double Eagle, are alll good stories, and with Horak illustrating the last two, end this book (and strip series) on a high note. In terms of art, Horaks' style is second to McLusky with his more realistic, less angluar renderings. The book includes two extra features. There is a visit to Goldeneye, and an article on the Chilean Bond comic books. Bond girl Valerie Leon provides the introduction with her unique take on the Bond franchise. Celebrate Bonds' year with Bond in print, Bond onscreen, and Bond in video games. Ian Fleming would be proud. [...] Tim Lasiuta
W**S
More 007
Not as exciting as the films, but if you want to read more 007, then you will enjoy it. Or just read Trigger Mortis by Anthony Horowitz.
B**B
The book is in Mint condition. Excellent value for the price. Would definitely buy again
M**K
I am just old enough to remember these strips in the daily express,my grandfathers paper of choice.still much to enjoy in these classic and well drawn adventures more harking back to the novels than the films.A very pleasant and nostalgic read.
S**S
i always like james bond comics books in tamil and english. but this book was a good one for my personal collection. good graphic novel.
M**N
This book is the final book in the Titan James Bond newspaper strip series. Well, chronologically at least because this volume contains the last two stories from The Daily Star and a further three stories which did not feature in any UK newspaper. The introduction here is from Valerie Leon who featured in "The Spy Who Loved Me". A nice article follows about the birthplace of James Bond, Ian Fleming's house, Goldeneye, in Jamaica. Then we get an article about James Bond in comics from Chile! The final comics strips in there series are Flittermouse, Polestar, The Scent Of Danger, Snake Goddess, and Double Eagle. Which now means that every newspaper comic strip ever written, whether published or not, is now available from Titan Books. It's a terrific series which I have enjoyed immensely. Highly recommended.
S**L
Nice
TrustPilot
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