This is the very first book in The Man From U.N.C.L.E. novel series and I’ve been itching to get to it ever since I finished watching all four seasons of the TV show a couple of weeks ago. I was heartened to learn that these books are not just reincarnations of specific episodes but rather complete, stand-alone stories. I found it to be a fun read with a lot of good background presented on the main characters, especially Solo and Mr. Waverly that you really can’t do easily in a TV show. It also provided some good intel on the U.N.C.L.E. headquarters building that was only hinted at on TV. Illya Kuryakin, does have a small role here but is mostly confined to lab work. This tells me that the book was conceived and written based on the TV script outlines of the first couple of episodes before the popularity of David McCallum’s character elevated the role.
“The Man From U.N.C.L.E.” TV show first aired on September 22, 1964. It was a time of turbulence in American history, with news headlines including reports of a place called Vietnam where US Government forces had just inflicted “heavy casualties” on Communist forces invading South Vietnam. The Warren Commission was on the verge of announcing its verdict that Lee Harvey Oswald had acted alone. In the South, the Heart of Atlanta Hotel was asking the US Supreme Court to overturn the 1965 Civil Rights Act. This was the backdrop from which this TV show sprang and a series of paperback novels were generated as part of an aggressive and ingenious marketing plan for its time. Cold War themes prevail throughout the novel.
Noted mystery writer, Michael Avallone was recruited to write the series but after great success with this first novel, (for which he was paid a measly $1000) his handshake deal to write the rest was undercut and other writers were signed to do the rest. However this novel’s healthy reception and success opened doors for him and he went on to write over 200 novels, many of them TV and movie tie-ins.
So, all in all, this was an excellent first start to the series. I think it stands well on its own even for readers who have never watched the TV show. Note that the cover of the book I read (pictured) simply bears the title "The Man From U.N.C.L.E.". I suppose it's because this was the first. Later printings changed it to "The Thousand Coffins Affair". With different authors writing the other books, I look forward to seeing how they compare.