JAMES BOND
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Talk of the Devil is a collection of rarely-seen journalism and other writing by Ian Fleming. It belongs to a special edition of his complete works published in 2008 by Queen Anne Press to commemorate the centenary of his birth. The edition is intended to celebrate Fleming not only as the creator of Bond but as an accomplished and vivid journalist, distinguished bibliophile and literary publisher. No uniform edition of Fleming’s complete works has appeared before. Talk of the Devil, the last of eighteen volumes, is edited by his niece Kate Grimond and nephew Fergus Fleming. |
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From the Preface: A few items have never been published, others have already appeared in print - as, for example, the articles that Ian Fleming wrote during his long association with The Sunday Times. In the latter case we have followed the original typescript rather than the published version, and where good lines were edited out we have put them back in. The title is taken from a notebook in which Fleming listed names and phrases that caught his fancy. Talk of the Devil, which was an early contender for DIAMONDS ARE FOREVER, caught our fancy too.” |
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At more than 400 pages
Talk of the Devil is the longest work ever to bear Ian Fleming’s name.
Its contents are divided into six sections: |
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Other notable entries
pre-dating Bond include an eye-witness account of the 1942 Dieppe Raid;
Fleming’s “Memorandum to Colonel Donovan” which laid down administrative
practice for the Office of Strategic Studies (O.S.S.), predecessor to the
C.I.A.; his contribution as Foreign Editor to the Kemsley Manual of
Journalism; and a lyrical description of Jamaica in 1947. |
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You then point to a
suitably large glass and ask them to pour the mixture in. Your behaviour
will create a certain amount of astonishment, not unmixed with fear, but
you will have achieved a very large and fairly good Martini.” |