17F: The Life of Ian FlemingP. Owen, 1993 - 232 páginas Through his fictional creation, James Bond, Ian Fleming achieved world-wide fame. Fleming has been seen as the archetype for Bond, the jaunty, womanizing secret agent, a somewhat self-indulgent Englishman given to rich man's pursuits. In this book Donald McCormick, who knew Ian Fleming well, sets out to disprove the stereotype playboy image. Fleming was one of four brothers. His father, a Conservative MP with a Scottish background, was killed in the Army in 1917, when Ian was nine. Consequently his mother, a dominant personality, exerted a strong influence on him. After Eton, Fleming went on to Sandhurst, but withdrew to try for the Foreign Office. He failed to enter the latter and subsequently worked in the City. In the war he came into his own and served with distinction, notably as Personal Assistant to the Director of British Naval Intelligence, with the rank of commander - signing his memoranda with the code-name '17F'. After the war he became foreign manager for Kemsley Newspapers. Following his much-acclaimed first novel, Casino Royale, published in 1953, Bond books appeared regularly until his death in 1964. Donald McCormick reaches far and wide in this illuminating account of Ian Fleming's remarkable life, covering his wartime exploits and successful journalistic career as well as his marriage to Anne Rothermere and life at Goldeneye, his house in Jamaica. He shows Fleming as steadfast and loyal to others, but also as a restless man always seeking new talents in himself. Fleming's command of pace and innate romanticism, vital ingredients in his fiction, were ever present too in his many lifetime relationships and activities. |
Dentro del libro
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Página 122
... newspapers being serviced . No other newspaper proprietor in the whole of the United Kingdom had control of so many journals as Lord Kemsley at that time . James Gomer Berry , the first Lord Kemsley , was an unusual man to get along ...
... newspapers being serviced . No other newspaper proprietor in the whole of the United Kingdom had control of so many journals as Lord Kemsley at that time . James Gomer Berry , the first Lord Kemsley , was an unusual man to get along ...
Página 124
... Newspapers editors after it had been duly edited , on the understanding that it was for background information only and not to be quoted directly . Some of the material obtained from ' Sitreps ' was undoubtedly passed on to branches of ...
... Newspapers editors after it had been duly edited , on the understanding that it was for background information only and not to be quoted directly . Some of the material obtained from ' Sitreps ' was undoubtedly passed on to branches of ...
Página 132
... newspapers in Australia , Canada and South Africa as well as NANA , the North American Newspaper Alliance , a consortium of newspapers working together to acquire rights they could not afford separately . This was an organization set up ...
... newspapers in Australia , Canada and South Africa as well as NANA , the North American Newspaper Alliance , a consortium of newspapers working together to acquire rights they could not afford separately . This was an organization set up ...
Contenido
Introduction | 9 |
The Ghost of a Dead Father | 21 |
From the City to the NID | 37 |
Derechos de autor | |
Otras 11 secciones no mostradas
Términos y frases comunes
Admiral Godfrey Admiralty adventure Alan Schneider Aleister Crowley American Anne Fleming asked astrological became Bond stories Bond's Britain called Camp X Canaris Casbah Casino Royale Caspar character chief Christine Granville Churchill code-name contacts correspondent Dennis Wheatley Donovan early espionage Eton eventually fact film Flem Fleming Papers Fleming wrote Foreign Office French friends gence German Gibraltar girls given Goldeneye Hess Hitler Hughes Ian and Anne Ian Fleming Ian's Ibid idea ing's interest Ivar Bryce Jamaica James Bond Kemsley Newspapers knew later letter Live London Lord Kemsley memorandum Mercury Moonraker Moscow mother Naval Intelligence Navy Nazis never Noël Coward Norman novel occult once operation Peter Fleming play published Reading University reports Reuters Rothermere Russians Second World secret agents Secret Service seemed Soviet Stephenson suggested Sunday Tangier tion told took U-boats underwater Vanessa Hoffmann Vesper wartime wife William Plomer writing