USA Character Blog: Robert McCammon’s Early American James Bond

On June 4, 2012, the USA Network website posted an article about the Matthew Corbett series on their “USA Character Approved Blog.” The article has been removed from their website, but a screenshot and the contents can be seen below.

Robert McCammon’s Early American James Bond

Written By Ron Hogan

Jun 4, 2012

Matthew Corbett is a professional “problem solver” in colonial Manhattan. He’s not quite a private investigator, because the cases he gets himself involved in tend to be bigger, and more bizarre, than simple murders–and The Providence Rider plunges him into his weirdest adventure yet. The mysterious criminal mastermind Professor Fell, whose plans Matthew has already thwarted on more than one occasion, summons his enemy and makes the proverbial offer you can’t refuse: Someone in the highest ranks of Fell’s underworld network is a traitor, and Matthew must figure out who it is… or those closest to him will suffer Fell’s wrath.

This is the fourth novel Robert McCammon has written about Matthew Corbett, so there’s no small degree of comfort and familiarity in his handling of the young problem solver and his supporting cast. But you can pick up The Providence Rider without having read any of the earlier books and still follow along perfectly well, just like you don’t need to watch the James Bond films in the order they were made to enjoy them. The comparison to Bond is an apt one, too. When Matthew is captured by one of Fell’s assassins and brought to his castle on a remote Bermudan island, it’s impossible not to think of a supervillain’s fortress, right down to the torture chambers and death traps. (The plot Fell wants Matthew to uncover even hinges on the 18th-century equivalent of a futuristic weapon.)

It’s great fun to see the action film dynamics play out in McCammon’s vividly detailed historical setting, especially with a Character Approved hero like Matthew to root for and a theatrically flamboyant archnemesis like Professor Fell. Best of all, there’s a promise at the end that Matthew will have his share of problems to solve in future stories…