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The Killing Zone is an unauthorised James Bond novel by Jim Hatfield. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] It was privately published in paperback in 1985 under the guise that it was officially sanctioned by Glidrose Publications (later Ian Fleming Publications), the company that held the rights to publish James Bond literary works.
This was the second time that a book of Hatfield's had been challenged. In 1985 he had written an unofficial James Bond novel, The Killing Zone, [2] which – although purporting to be officially sanctioned by Glidrose, Bond's literary copyright holder – was a vanity novel. [3] [failed verification]
The Killing Zone is planned pop-up imprint from DC Comics curated by Geoff Johns, formally announced at San Diego Comic-Con 2018. It was set to begin publishing in May 2019; as of yet not much else is known about The Killing Zone and what books will be under this pop-up imprint.
A copyright page with the printer's key underlined. This version of the book is the eighteenth printing. The printer's key , also known as the number line , is a line of text printed on a book's copyright page (often the verso of the title page , especially in English-language publishing) used to indicate the print run of the particular edition.
The Killing Zone (1988) Endangered Species (1993) Blood Line (1995) The Leaning Land (1997) Devlin Kirk Series. Suicide Season (1987) Parts Unknown (1990) Body Guard (1991) Touchstone Agency Mysteries. Body Slam (2014) Crude Carrier (2014) As "Tom Sehler" When Reason Sleeps (1991) Fables. The Frogs of Sawhill Ponds, Vol. 1; The Frogs of Sawhill ...
Judge Dredd: The Killing Zone: Dave Stone: July 2002 5: Judge Dredd: The Big Shot! David Bishop: July 2002 6: Judge Dredd: Trapped on Titan: Jonathan Clements: September 2002 7: Judge Dredd: Get Karter! David Bishop: October 2002 8: Judge Dredd: I Love Judge Dredd: Jonathan Morris: November 2002 9: Judge Dredd: Dreddline: James Swallow: March ...
DoubleShot, the second novel in Raymond Benson's Union trilogy, again sets James Bond, 007 against the evil terrorist organization called the Union. Still smarting from their last encounter with 007 when he foiled their plans to get Skin 17 in High Time to Kill, the Union has decided that Britain and James Bond are their new number one priority, and targets.
Kirkus Reviews dismissed the book as "a ragged quickie that's cartoon caper/sleuth action most of the way through (like an old episode of TV's The Avengers). Virtually no humor, virtually no suspense, and virtually no charm or sexiness in old 007 - making this by far the weakest of Gardner's somewhat pre-sold fabrications, with some extra ...