f1gear.com - all the online shopping any formula one grand prix motorsport enthusiast could ever want!
 Search
 Advanced SearchView Cart   Checkout   
 Location:  Home » F1 Books » Authors » Ian FlemingJanuary 9, 2009  
Categories
F1 Fan Store
F1 DVDs
F1 Video Games
F1 Software
F1 Books
F1 Toys
F1 Videos
Motor Racing Magazines
Motorsport Apparel
Car Electronics

F1 Resources
Formula One
F1 History
F1 Drivers
Grand Prix
Motor Racing
Motorsport News
F1 Calendar
F1 Collectibles
F1 Links
F1 Posters

Related Categories
• Authors
Arts & Literature
Biographies & Memoirs
Subjects
Books
• General
Biographies & Memoirs
Subjects
Books
• General AAS
Biographies & Memoirs
Subjects
Books
• Sports & Entertainment
Industries & Professions
Business & Investing
Subjects
Books
• Contemporary
Literature & Fiction
Subjects
Books
• General AAS
Literature & Fiction
Subjects
Books
• Paperback
Binding (binding)
Refinements
Books
• Printed Books
Format (feature_browse-bin)
Refinements
Books



Ian Fleming
Ian Fleming
enlarge
List Price: $19.95
Buy New: $13.57
You Save: $6.38 (32%)
Buy New/Used from $13.57

Avg. Customer Rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars(based on 3 reviews)
Sales Rank: 830577
Category: Book

Author: Andrew Lycett
Publisher: Orion Publishing
Studio: Orion Publishing
Manufacturer: Orion Publishing
Label: Orion Publishing
Languages: English (Original Language), English (Unknown), English (Published)
Media: Paperback
Number Of Items: 1
Pages: 496
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.8
Dimensions (in): 7.7 x 5 x 1.3

ISBN: 1857997832
Dewey Decimal Number: 809
EAN: 9781857997835
ASIN: 1857997832

Publication Date: April 1, 2009  (In 82 Days)
Shipping: Eligible for Super Saver Shipping
Availability: Not yet published

Similar Items:

  • From Russia with Love (James Bond Novels)
  • Octopussy and The Living Daylights (James Bond Novels)
  • Doctor No (James Bond Novels)
  • Live and Let Die (James Bond Novels)
  • You Only Live Twice (James Bond Novels)

Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
Andrew Lycett's direct access to Fleming's family, friends and contemporaries has enabled him to reveal the truth behind the complicated facade of this enigmatic and remarkable man. With an extraordinary cast of characters, this is biography at is best - part history, part gossip and part an informed reassessment of one of this century's most celebrated yet mysterious personalities. 'A fascinating historical work' Sunday Express


Customer Reviews:

4 out of 5 stars A great read for the serious Fleming fan   September 16, 2008
  1 out of 1 found this review helpful

This was a fantastic read. It took me a couple of chapters before I got into the flow of the book (hence why I rated this a 4 star not 5 star rating), but once the biography picked up where the Bond novels begin, I found myself rereading the Bond novels along with the biography. By reading the biography this way, it will enhance your reading pleasure. Lycett's book will unravel the "how and why" Ian wrote what he did as well as suggest who the real people were behind the villains and characters-including 007 and how the number came to being. It also goes into the explanation of how Ian approached the movie industry and why Dr. No ended up being the first of the books to be turned into a cinematic experience. The little details that Lycett added to this book only enhanced the end product. Upon finishing it (and the novels), I felt I knew a great deal about the man who created one of the greatest literary and cinematic fictional characters of modern times.


2 out of 5 stars overly long, tedious, not very readable   August 23, 2008
  2 out of 2 found this review helpful

I had already read the John Pearson biography of Ian Fleming (Alias James Bond-The Life Of Ian FLeming.) when I picked up this Andrew Lycett biography. Because blurbs and reviews of this biography praised it for the access Lycett had, I was looking forward to something more about Fleming's internal life and motivations and more details and first-person accounts of the interesting experiences Fleming did have. I was severely disappointed.

In the Acknowledgements section of this book Lycett thanks Pearson "for material he collected for his book The Life of Ian Fleming." The influence of the Pearson material seems prevalent throughout. Pearson seems to have set the standard for the depth of investigation and the extent of informed speculation, and there are even trivialities that are related in such a way that it seems Lycett and Pearson were writing from the same material. In fact, I would go so far as to say that Lycett almost seems to have simply removed the whitewash from Pearson's book.

The whitewash is mostly related to sexual matters. For example, Pearson makes it clear that Fleming seduced many women, but Lycett relates the seduction of the wife of one Fleming's friends, soon after the marriage, in which Fleming was supposed to be best man. Likewise, Pearson surgically removed Blanche Blackwell from Fleming's life and obscured many unsavory facts about Fleming's wife Ann. Lycett puts these matters on display, but there is no probing of them for understanding. Fleming was involved with a number of Jewish women, made literary connections with progressives and communists, and lived by choice in Jamaica, but was pseudo-conservative, staunchly pro-British and pro-empire. How were all these things related in Fleming's psychology?

The parallels between the Pearson and Lycett biographies also extend to the things left out. Take, for example, the occult and homosexuality. Fleming's novel "Live and Let Die" makes his interest in these two topics clear. Pearson mentions in passing a personal connection with (bisexual occultist) Aleister Crowley. The book jacket to the Lycett mentions Fleming's interest in astrology. The Lycett book contains a quote from Fleming's wife Ann referring to his "homosexuality." But neither Pearson or Lycett discusses these connections with any depth. Astrology does not even appear in Lycett's extensive index, despite its appearance on the jacket.

On the flip side, as other Amazon reviewers have noted, Lycett's book suffers from an overabundance of useless detail. There are so many small ones--and Lycett writes so implicatively--that "important" facts are often glossed over. For example, in a web article, I found Lycett referring to Lisl Jokl as Fleming's first love, although that fact is totally lost in the biography. It's hard to understand what Lycett's motivation was in writing. There is no Fleming studies industry that is going to benefit from so much detail, and it is a mistake from a literary perspective. Contrary to what some other reviewers have written, Fleming did not live an interesting life. In fact, much of the book is filled with the tedium of betrayals, double-betrayals, law-suits, failed business ventures and the like. And the interesting parts, such as Fleming's dinner with JFK, are often given surprisingly little attention. Pearson dealt with all the boredom in Fleming's life by writing thematically rather than strictly chronologically, showing how Fleming's life influenced the James Bond novels. That was a much better technique.

Another drawback to Lycett's book is his scant use of quotation. Pearson quotes a paragraph from a doctor's report on Fleming's heart, whereas Lycett deals with the same episode by summarizing in his own words. That technique is fine for short and/or topically-oriented works, but in a "definitive biography" of great length, an author needs to let the cast speak in the their own voices as much as possible. This can get frustrating, as in Lycett's very meager treatment of Operation Golden Eye (of interest to 007 fans, of course): "His letter to [Admiral] Godfrey from the British Embassy on his return to Lisbon underlined his extraordinary autonomy and initiative." What? What did he write to Admiral Godfrey?

My sense is that most people who would be interested in reading this book would end up skimming large portions of it or getting bogged down and not finishing. Although I understand that the desire of 007 fans to ogle isn't justification for exposing people's lives in a biography, one has to ask why a biography of Ian Fleming would have been written were it not for 007. To my mind, although Lycett's book is large and, in some ways, more honest than Pearson's, a definitive biography of Ian Fleming is yet to be written.



4 out of 5 stars The Man Behind 007 & The Bio Behind the Myth   January 17, 2007
  4 out of 4 found this review helpful

This biography is worth reading for two very good reasons:

The most obvious is to get a look at the man who created one of the greatest iconic figures of the 20th Century. "Bond, James Bond" is usually on every list of popular and enduring characters from the previous century and his simple introduction is normally cited as the most memorable movie line in cinema history. The 007 machine is still very much alive in the 21st Century with all of Fleming's adventures in print and the secret agent still drawing millions at the box office with last year's "Casino Royale."

The second fascinating reason for reading this biography is the author's frank and open access to Fleming's family and friends. A great deal is revealed through their interviews as well as their diaries and letters.

When I read through the reviews for the hardcover edition, I found some complaints about the constant name-dropping throughout the book, but that was their world. Ian's wife Ann seemed to live to socialize and while most of the names probably mean very little to most readers today, some still jump out--from mobsters like Lucky Luciano to real intelligence figures like Allen Dulles, former CIA boss.

This is a sharp, genuine look at Bond's creator after decades of mythmaking about the life of Ian Fleming.

As the quote on the cover says, "This is an exemplary biography, beautifully written, fast-paced and extremely perceptive."


In Associaton with Amazon

All Trademarks and Copyrights owned by their Respective Owners. Not affiliated with any official Formula One organization | Contact: f1gear @ gmail.com