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Friday, April 21, 2023
Foreign Devil: My Washington Times On Crime Column On Richard Hughes, The Far East Correspondent Who Inspired Ian Fleming And John le Carre
Back in 2020 I wrote about an interesting man named Richard
Hughes (seen in the above photo), a Far East correspondent for the Sunday
Times who inspired both Ian Fleming and John le Carre. Both spy thriller writers
modeled a character after Hughes.
You can read the column via the below link or the below text:
Later this year Casemate will publish Edward Abel Smith’s “Ian
Fleming’s Inspiration: The Truth Behind the Books.”
“James Bond is possibly the most
well-known fictional character in history,” Casemate Publishing notes. “What
most people don’t know is that almost all of the characters, plots and gadgets
come from the real-life experiences of Bond’s creator — Commander Ian Fleming.
“In this book, we go through the plots
of Fleming’s novels explaining the real-life experiences that inspired them.
The reader is taken on a journey through Fleming’s direct involvement in World
War II intelligence and how this translated through his typewriter into James
Bond’s world, as well as the many other factors of Fleming’s life which were
also taken as inspiration.”
One friend who inspired Fleming was the
late Richard Hughes, who was a foreign correspondent for the British Sunday
Times. He was the inspiration for the fictional character Dikko Henderson in
Ian Fleming’s 1964 James Bond novel “You Only Live Twice.”
“He is a giant Australian with a
European mind and a quixotic view of the world,” the late Ian Fleming said of
Richard Hughes. In 1959, Fleming, then the foreign manager of the Sunday Times, was asked by the newspaper's editor to travel to foreign cities and write about them, as Fleming notes, "through a thriller-writer's eye." The newspaper articles were compiled into a book called "Thrilling Cities" in 1963.
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