Silverfin is a young adult spy novel by Charlie Higson based on Ian Fleming's famous character James Bond. The book, which follows James Bond as a teenager in the 1930s, inspired a series of graphic novel adaptations, video games, and a travel guide.
Silverfin, the first book in the series, is followed by
Blood Fever,
Double or Die,
Hurricane Gold, and
By Royal Command. There are also two supplementary books: a travel guide,
The Young Bond Rough Guide to London, and
Danger Society: The Young Bond Dossier, essentially a guidebook to the world of Young Bond.
Silverfin is broken into three main sections and a prologue. The prologue begins with a young schoolboy fishing in Loch Silverfin. He cuts himself accidentally with a fishhook and is attacked by an aggressive eel. Suddenly, an eel-like man comes running toward the water and jumps in to save the boy.
The book then jumps into the first section, in which young James is beginning his schooling at Eton College, one of the most prestigious schools in England. At Eton, James makes two friends – Pritpal, the son of an Indian Maharajah, and Tommy Chong. The boys are also acquainted with notorious American bully George Hellebore, whose over-bearing father, Lord Hellebore, has been selling arms in the years following World War I. In a strange turn of events, Lord Hellebore is discovered to have known James's father, Andrew Bond, who was also an arms dealer for Vickers after the war.
Lord Hellebore arrives at Eton to fund and stage a three-part athletic tournament, which he intends his son, George, to win. The competition has three heats: swimming, running, and shooting. Lord Hellebore helps George cheat in various events, particularly the foot race, where he plans shortcuts for his son. James, noticing that George has an alternate route, follows him, using his speed to overtake him and win the race. George tries to trip James but fails. Ultimately, Andrew Carlton, another student is the winner of the tournament, which deeply disappoints Lord Hellebore.
In the second section of the book, James travels to Scotland on spring break to visit his Aunt Charmian and Uncle Max, who is dying of cancer. During this visit, the cause of James's parents’ deaths is revealed, and James learns more about his uncle's history as a spy during World War I. James also meets a few friends, including an older boy, Red, and a love interest, Wilder Lawless. James and Red travel to the nearby Hellebore estate, which includes Loch Silverfin. At the estate, the two meet Mike Moran, a Pinkerton detective investigating Lord Hellebore at the request of his wife, who suspects Hellebore of having killed his own brother, Algar, because he was having an affair with Lady Hellebore. The boys find Detective Moran dead in Loch Silverfin, with his body mostly eaten by the carnivorous eels.
During the final section of the book, James and his friend Red plan to infiltrate Hellebore's castle, but Red falls and breaks his leg, leaving James to go on alone. Hellebore captures James, interrogating him in a secret room inside his estate. Hellebore tells James about his Silverfin serum, which he has developed to enhance soldiers’ physical abilities by altering the function of their endocrine systems. He tells James that he tested the serum on himself and his brother, Algar, but because the drug was in its early stages, Algar was physically changed—turned into an eel-like man. Hellebore also admits to using the drug on his son George during the tournament at Eton. Hellebore eventually drugs James with the serum, but James uses his new strength to break out of his cell and swim through Loch Silverfin to escape, with a little help from his love interest, Wilder. Later, James recruits George, who has become rapidly more and more disgusted with his father's behavior, and the two boys return to the castle to destroy Hellebore's lab.
Hellebore finds the boys during their mission and threatens them with a shotgun. At the last moment, Algar appears, and he and Hellebore fight until both fall into the loch, where they are consumed by the eels.
At the end of the novel, James passes out due to a lung infection contracted during his swim. When he wakes up ten days later, he finds that his Uncle Max has died from cancer and that George Hellebore has moved back to America to live with his mother. James's Uncle Max leaves James his car in his will.
Charlie Higson is an English actor, comedian, singer, and author. He authored the first series of
Young Bond books, before relinquishing his role as the primary author to Steve Cole in order to work on an independent series of young adult horror novels. Higson was also the author of the graphic novel adaptation of the
Young Bond series and has written a number of other novels besides
Young Bond and the
Enemy series.