In 1984, Benson wrote
The James Bond Bedside Companion, a book dedicated to Ian Fleming, the official novels, and the films. The book was updated in 1988 and has since been re-released digitally without further updating. It was nominated for an
Edgar Award by
Mystery Writers of America in the Best Biographical/Critical Work category. In 1985, he worked as a designer and writer on the computer game
James Bond 007: A View to a Kill. He followed this in 1986 with work on a computer game version of
Goldfinger and co-authoring the
You Only Live Twice II module of the popular
role-playing game James Bond 007. In 1996,
John Gardner resigned from writing Bond books.
Glidrose Publications promptly chose Benson to replace him. As a James Bond novelist, Raymond Benson was initially controversial for being American, and for ignoring much of the continuity established by Gardner. The author did much to placate these concerns, however, and promptly embarked on regular tours to promote his novels in the UK, as well as occasional trips to mainland Europe. Several signing sessions were held at the offices of his UK publisher
Hodder & Stoughton, and at London booksellers Murder One and James Bond specialists
Adrian Harrington Ltd. In total, Benson wrote six James Bond novels, three
novelizations, and three short stories. He was the first Bond author since Ian Fleming to write short stories (published in
Playboy and
TV Guide magazines and collected in anthologies published in 2008 and 2010). Glidrose changed its name to
Ian Fleming Publications commencing with Benson's novel,
High Time to Kill. Benson resigned from writing Bond books in 2003. • "
Blast from the Past" (short story, 1997) •
Zero Minus Ten (1997) •
Tomorrow Never Dies (novelization, 1997) •
The Facts of Death (1998) • "
Midsummer Night's Doom" (short story, 1999) • "
Live at Five" (short story, 1999) •
The World Is Not Enough (novelization, 1999) •
High Time to Kill (1999) •
DoubleShot (2000) •
Never Dream of Dying (2001) •
The Man with the Red Tattoo (2002) •
Die Another Day (novelization, 2002) •
The Hook and the Eye (Felix Leiter Novel, 2025) Benson's novel
The Man with the Red Tattoo inspired the government of Japan's Kagawa Prefecture in 2005 to erect a museum (the "007 Man with the Red Tattoo Museum", dedicated to the book) and honor Benson with the title of Goodwill Ambassador. In 2008
High Time to Kill,
Doubleshot,
Never Dream of Dying and an extended version of his 1997 short story "Blast from the Past" (a sequel to Fleming's novel,
You Only Live Twice) were grouped and released as an omnibus called
The Union Trilogy: Three 007 Novels. A second anthology entitled
Choice of Weapons was published in 2010 and contained
Zero Minus Ten,
The Facts of Death,
The Man with the Red Tattoo, and the short stories "Midsummer Night's Doom" and "Live at Five". In April 2014, Benson and former Bond author
Jeffery Deaver collaborated—the first such collaboration between former Bond continuation authors—as co-editors of
Ice Cold--Tales of Intrigue from the Cold War, an anthology sponsored by
Mystery Writers of America containing short stories about the Cold War. On August 12, 2023, Ian Fleming Publications announced that Benson's first novel,
Zero Minus Ten, would be reprinted in the U.K. along with other continuation authors' works. Subsequently, on January 29, 2024, Ian Fleming Publications announced the publication of an e-book omnibus,
James Bond: The Raymond Benson Years, containing his six original 007 novels. On March 26, 2025, Ian Fleming Publications announced the first-ever
Felix Leiter novel (James Bond's American friend and ally), written by Benson.
The Hook and the Eye will be set in Fleming's 1950s timeline and published first as a serial e-book followed by a print publication in 2025. ==Other works==