On this date in 1964 Ian Fleming, former WWII naval intelligence officer, journalist and author of the James Bond thrillers, died. He was 56.
I became an Ian Fleming aficionado when I was a pre-teen in
the early 1960s after watching the late, great Scot actor Sean Connery portray
Ian Fleming’s iconic character James Bond in the first two Bond films, Dr.
No and From Russia With Love.
Watching
the two great cinematic thrillers led me to join a book club and receive the introductory offer
of a 9-volume set of Ian Fleming’s novels, which were the first nine books in
my now quite extensive library. Reading the first two Fleming novels, I was
pleased to discover that the novels were darker and more complicated that the
films.
A short time later, I heard on the radio in my father's car that Ian Fleming had died.
Years later, in the early 1980s, I was thrilled to spend a week with my wife at Fleming's villa Goldeneye in Jamaica, where he wrote all of the James Bond thrillers.
As History.com notes, Ian Fleming led an interesting, if all too short, life:
On August 12, 1964, the British author and journalist Ian Fleming,
creator of James Bond, the world’s most famous fictional spy, dies of a heart
attack at age 56 in Kent, England.
Fleming’s series of novels about the debonair Agent 007, based in part on
their dashing author’s real-life experiences, spawned one of the most lucrative
film franchises in history. Ian Lancaster Fleming was born into a well-to-do
family in London on May 29, 1908. As an adult, he worked as a foreign
correspondent, a stockbroker and a personal assistant to Britain’s director of
naval intelligence during World War II–experiences that would all provide
fodder for his Bond novels.
You can read the rest of the piece via the below link:
James Bond creator Ian Fleming dies - HISTORY
You can also
read my Counterterrorism magazine piece on Ian Fleming's war
and two of my Crime Beat columns on Ian Fleming via the below
links:
Paul Davis On
Crime: My Crime Beat Column: A Look Back At Ian Fleming's Iconic James Bond
Character
Paul Davis On Crime: My Crime Beat Column: The Ian Fleming and James Bond Phenomenon
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