Having just finished reading 'SOLO', I could not but help feel that in many ways, it seemed like the literary 60's version of the 'Quantum of Solace' film.
We have a conspiracy to capture the resources of a Third World country (in Africa this time, not South America), with the connivance of certain Western powers. Bond goes rogue. And one of the 'Bond girls' is brutally murdered by the villain and left in a hotel room...which actually triggers Bond's brutal campaign of revenge...
Of course, Bond's attitude in the end does highlight how Fleming's incarnation of the character is different from the contemporary Craig version. While Craig's Bond is very much a product of the 21st century, and the era of increasing suspicions towards the policies and motives of even one's own government...Fleming's Bond is still very much a loyal servant of Queen and Country. He knows very well the moral ambiguity of his master's actions, but beyond a point he wouldn't think of questioning it and gets back to the job.