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Meet the man

A black and white headshot of Ian Fleming sitting at a desk, wearing a suit and bow tie, holding a cigarette, smiling.

Ian Lancaster Fleming was born in London on 28th May 1908 and educated at Eton College before spending a formative period studying languages in Europe. His first job is with Reuters news agency, followed by a brief spell as a stockbroker. On the outbreak of the Second World War, he is appointed assistant to the Director of Naval Intelligence, Admiral Godfrey, where he plays a key part in British and Allied espionage operations.

After the war, Ian joins Kemsley Newspapers as Foreign Manager of The Sunday Times, running a network of correspondents who are intimately involved in the Cold War. He marries Ann Rothermere in 1952, and his son Caspar arrives the same year. Ian’s sets out to write ‘the spy story to end all spy stories’ and his first novel, Casino Royale, is written at GoldenEye, his home in Jamaica, where he spends a few months each year. Published in 1953, the book introduces James Bond, Special Agent 007, to the world. The first print run sells out within a month.

Following this initial success, Ian publishes a Bond title every year until his death. ‘I agreed to do one a year for them. Every season now, after the Christmas holidays, I head for GoldenEye with a packet of notes and put old Bond through his paces. Takes two months – January and February. Book’s in the mail by March.’

His own travels, interests and wartime experience give authority to everything he writes, with Raymond Chandler hailing him ‘the most forceful and driving writer of thrillers in England.’

Ian’s fifth James Bond adventure, From Russia With Love, is particularly well received and sales soar when President Kennedy names it as one of his favourite books. Ian oversees the transfer of his 007 novels to screen, starting with Dr. No in 1962, with Sean Connery starring as Bond.

On 12 August 1964 Fleming dies of heart failure in England, aged just 56. A few months later, Chitty Chitty Bang Bang, a children’s story about a magical car written for his son Caspar, is published and goes on to become a well-loved film.

With sales of over 100 million copies, Ian’s novels continue to connect with readers around the world, and his characters, gadgets and stories are part of the global cultural landscape. Ian Fleming’s legacy lives on.

'REMEMBER HIM...

...with his foot on the accelerator, laughing at absurdities, enjoying discoveries, absorbed in his many interests and plans, fascinated and amused by places and people and facts and fantasies, an entertainer of millions, and for us a friend never to be forgotten.’

William Plomer, Ian's long time friend and editor

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