With all of the royal rebranding occurring – from the King’s cypher on the Beefeaters’ uniforms on the Tower of London, his head on stamps, cash and banknotes, and, in the end, modifications to British passports and put up packing containers – it’s no shock the nation’s most well-known undercover agent must also be up to date for the reign of King Charles III.
So in a easy, deeply satisfying twist, Ian Fleming’s On Her Majesty’s Secret Service, revealed 50 years in the past, has been reimagined by Charlie Higson with a superb new story entitled On His Majesty’s Secret Service.
Written in a month-long burst of creativity for the Coronation, and revealed yesterday in help of charity, there could possibly be just one mission for 007: foiling a bid to assassinate the king and change him with a usurper.
“None of this was my idea,” chuckles the creator and Fast Show star.
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Daniel Craig as James Bond (Image: Danjaq/Eon Productions/Kobal/REX/Shutterstock)
“Charles is apparently a big fan of the Bond books and there was that great moment at the 2012 Olympics where the Queen and 007 came together – our two greatest cultural icons united – so that was the obvious place to start.”
The authentic plan was for royalties to assist The Prince’s Trust and Camilla’s Reading Room literacy charity, however Higson’s regicidal plot – that includes a rich, eccentric and anti-‘woke’ wannabe king referred to as Athelstan of Wessex, allegedly a descendent of Alfred the Great – dominated out an official tie-in.
“They said it was probably best not to do a story about trying to stop the Coronation… at which point I thought, ‘But that’s the story, it’s got to be the story’,” continues Higson.
“It’s On His Majesty’s Secret Service; it’s being published two days before the coronation. Otherwise, Bond just goes on a mission as usual, working for ‘King and Country’. This just felt like such a great story, so rich in possibilities. They didn’t argue, and no one had any problems with it; the charities just couldn’t be associated.”
Instead, royalties from the brand new novella will go to the National Literacy Trust, which works with deprived kids, so everybody’s completely satisfied.
Talking to Higson, 64, an creator of bestselling grownup crime novels in addition to kids’s books, whose earlier foray into 007 territory was his Young Bond collection, that includes the spy as a boy in successful collection of youngsters’s books, his pleasure is infectious.
“The idea originally was to do a longish short story, perhaps 10,000 words, with a month to write it. I thought it would be such a fun idea,” he says.
“I’ve been making a podcast on the history of the British monarchy in time for the Coronation so I’ve been researching the history of the Royal Family and the slightly twisted line of succession from William I to Charles III.
Author Charlie Higson (Image: Getty)
“I was looking at modern royal scandals and how they compared to royal scandals of the past – which usually involved someone killing someone else. It had to be a story about someone with a rival claim to the throne. If the ideas hadn’t come quickly, I might not have said yes but the stars aligned.”
Higson’s story sends Bond undercover at a Hungarian fort the place disaffected conspiracy theorists, far-right hooligans and overseas agitators are awaiting their orders for a collection of assaults throughout London that “will make the [US] Capitol riots look like Aunt Fanny’s tea party”.
The plan had been to pad it out with an extract from On Her Majesty’s Secret Service however, within the occasion, it was pointless. On a roll, the Bond superfan wrote 10,000 phrases, then 20,000 and, lastly, delivered 40,000 – about the identical size because the shortest Fleming books.
The consequence – set, clearly, contemporaneously, and that includes maybe probably the most considerate 007 in print – reads New Scientist journal, eats kimchi (fermented greens), and drinks kombucha (fermented black tea) – is a blast.
Despite these considerably faddish pursuits – although the creator insists the super-fit spy would naturally do something to maintain his edge, together with taking an curiosity within the “gut instinct that gives you the non-thinking, split-second advantage” – his 007 stays ruthlessly unstoppable. In Higson’s phrases, he's “a fist, clenched and ready to strike”.
But how did he create one thing recent and attention-grabbing and nonetheless make 007 recognisable as Fleming’s Bond?
“I’d spent so long with 007 back in the day that it all came back,” he says.
“There was a lot of Fleming’s Bond that was valid and viable: he’s a loner, he’s a hard man and he protects himself by keeping people at arm’s length.
“But Bond always has to be about 35 – so I thought about a 35-year-old today. Their thoughts and their position in society are going to be very different to that of a 35-year-old in 1953; his world view, his attitude to other people and relationships.
Classic 007 sketch with the Queen for the London 2012 Olympics (Image: Getty)
“I didn’t want to write him as a slightly stuffy man out of time with fifties’ attitudes - the Jacob Rees-Mogg 007. I wanted him to be a contemporary young man.
“My feeling is, as long as James Bond does the things he does and you have enough of the iconography around him, then you can update him and modernise him.”
Despite his many authentic thrives, nonetheless, there's a ‘Fleming formula’ to be adopted. “It’s a formula I used for the ‘Young Bond’ series and it’s one of the reasons I was able to write this as quickly as I did,” he says.
“The best Bond stories start when Bond goes into M’s office, M gives him a file and says, ‘This is the villain, this is what he’s up to, I want you to infiltrate his organisation and sort him out’. Bond’s given a mission and off he goes with his fists and a gun.
“There’s a bit of sparring with the villain, who has a slightly monstrous sidekick and a great lair; he meets a girl, he gets close, he’s captured, tortured, he escapes, he kills the villain and ends up with the girl. That’s the classic structure and it works.”
He provides: “The fun, which is also the difficulty, is ringing the changes. How do you make a new villain interesting?”
Fleming strayed simply as soon as from his personal system, he explains, in The Spy Who Loved Me, advised from a feminine perspective.
“It was interesting but not what Bond fans wanted and perhaps his writing as a woman was not done particularly well. A lot is her backstory; 007 arrives quite late and messes things up. Fleming was trying to say, ‘Bond is not this flawless hero, we shouldn’t be applauding him, he’s a grubby killer’. After that he went back to the classic formula.”
Indeed, his subsequent e book was On Her Majesty’s Secret service, thought-about by followers to be certainly one of his finest. But the creator, who died aged 56 in August 1964, was trapped by his creation.
“He would tell his publishers he’d like to do something different, and they’d go, ‘Great idea Ian, but can you squeeze in another Bond first?’ He only wrote his children’s book, Chitty-Chitty-Bang-Bang, because he was recovering after a massive heart attack, and his doctors warned him not to do Bond.”
Craig and the King (Image: Getty)
Higson, who lives together with his household in north London, makes it sound simple, and, in reality, the brand new e book zips together with a stunning lightness of contact, however that’s to not dismiss his writing. His Bond Girl, by the way, is an Icelandic magnificence named Ragnheidour.
“It’s pronounced ‘Hragon-hader’,” he explains. “While I was writing, they asked me if I could record the audiobook, at which point I thought ‘I’ve got an Icelandic woman, a guy from South Africa and the character Kenny, the sidekick’s sidekick, was originally a Geordie. I tried reading his lines as a Geordie and it was so poor I changed him to a Scot. But, remember, it’s Charlie Higson reading – not a man of 1,000 voices.”
So how does this former punk rocker – after college in Norwich, the place he met Fast Show collaborator Paul Whitehouse, he sang in a band referred to as The Higsons earlier than discovering his ft as a decorator after which comedy author and performer – justify a pro-monarchy plot?
After all, a fellow ex-punk, Nick Cave, drew ire in some republican quarters this week after revealing he’d been invited to tomorrow’s coronation and, having an “inexplicable attachment” to the Royal Family, totally supposed to go. Wouldn’t Higson naturally facet with these making an attempt to carry down the Royal Family?
“I am neither a monarchist nor a republican,” he asserts proudly.
“If I was trapped by a rabid monarchist who was trying to persuade me I should pledge my allegiance to the king, I could easily come up with an anti-monarchist argument.
“Likewise, if a raging republican cornered me saying they should all be rounded up and executed, I could give an equally good defence of the Royal Family.”
On His Majesty’s Secret Service by Charlie Higson is out now (Image: )
It’s clear he has a sneaking suspicion of the monarchy, a part of the entire “mad eccentricity of Britain and British life”, and finds the character of the pageantry and regalia surrounding it fascinating. However, he provides: “Essentially Bond works for MI6 who work for the Government who ultimately answer to the Crown.
“His mission is to protect Charles but it’s also to stop there being massive chaos and civil unrest.”
If Higson has one remorse, it’s that the announcement of the official dish – Coronation Quiche – had been made earlier. Athelstan, who believes England has gone to hell in a handcart, would’ve hated it.
“It would perfectly fit his argument about how, following the Norman invasion, the poncey French have subjugated the English so completely we’re going to have this foreign vegetarian dish,” he says.
“Food was always an important part of the original books. Bond was this fantasy figure who did things a bank clerk in Croydon couldn’t. Readers lived vicariously.
“Fleming always tried to have him eat something that would seem exotic for the folks back home.
“Like when he eats an avocado – they were called avocado pears at the time, so Fleming made the mistake of having him eat one for dessert in Casino Royale.”
As for the Coronation itself, he’ll in all probability have it on within the background, he admits.
“It’s quite an extraordinary piece of social theatre. I’m 64 and I haven’t had a coronation during my lifetime which is pretty unusual. As a unique event it’s amazing.
“We could go round in circles about the value – what it costs versus what it might bring into the country – but it’s unquantifiable in the end. However, for a lot of British people, it will be a representation on the world stage of what we are and that will include those people who are against it.
“And it was ever thus.”
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