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:)
They are quick recaps of the short stories inside the book:
"How the Cuban was rubbed out in Vermont": For Your Eyes Only
"How SMERSH got into SHAPE": From a View to a Kill
"Death in the Seychelles": The Hildebrandt Rarity
"Drugs in Venice": Risico
"Love and Hate in Bermuda": Quantum of Solace
I have a question. A few years ago, I started my collection of the Fleming Novels (I am French and wanted to start reading the original stuff). I bought about half of them in the 2010 Penguin edition with the nice Micheal Gillette's covers.
Now I am trying to complete this collection, but I can't seem to find the 2010 edition anymore.
Would you have any tips about where I could buy these books. I'd hate to have my Fleming collection with 2 different editions...
Great cover and what I find particularly interesting is the 007 logo.
Although 'The Saint' and 'The Toff' novels preceded the Bond novels with their use of logos it is certainly true to say that Fleming's PAN editions were one of the first to use this mechanic and it had a huge impact on book racks at the time.
One thing I could never understand was the use of a Luger as opposed to a Beretta or a Walther in the logo.
Your GOLDFINGER PAN cover is very interesting. I've always thought that the image of Bond in the background looked very like Ian Fleming. I wonder who influenced who?
I've just bought a set of these beauties. I won't embarrass myself by saying how much I payed but suffice to say @Villiers53, you have done very, very well!
EDIT: Found this cover for my Moonraker, apparently they're by Penguin as well. Here's the cover, now that I look at it it looks like a horizon rather than a laserbeam:
http://www.bondpix.com/shop/avactis-images/BK_MR_a.jpg
Funny you mention the Luger - it's been bugging me for years.
Fleming was very specific about guns and a Luger was way too heavy to be a concealment weapon. How PAN chose it for the logo is a mystery. If anybody out there knows - please enlighten us!
I'm going to have the rest ASAP
Robert Laffont Editions (in my mothertongue, French)
Both recent additions to the collection.
Congratulations. For different reasons I think these two editions have very interesting art.
TSWLM because the cover is just fabulous with the rose and Fairbanks dagger (shame about the book).
OHMSS because Chopping broke his code of juxtopositioning items of danger & death with items of beauty. His portrait of a hand sketching a coat of arms is more reminiscent of a biography than a thriller albeit what lay inside is the second best Bond book and one of the greatest thrillers of all time - go figure!
Just a thought about the logo - this design was pre- Dr.No the movie and the most recognised Walther prior to the M insisting that Bond (Connery) abandon his Berreta in favour of the PPK was the P38. This model has a similar outline to a Luger - maybe that was the model that PAN mistakenly took for the logo? I'd love to know.
I'll post some updated pictures soon of my collection.
@Villiers53 Interesting thoughts on the PAN 007 logo. Maybe that fellow at Illustrated 007 would know something about it.
Matthew Shaw @RealShaw 27m
Sat in the Dorchester hotel for breakfast this morning - some kind of launch going on for new James Bond novel. No sign of Daniel Craig yet
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:)
There's a few editions there which I don't have. What edition is the first book in the top row? It's a hardback, but not, I think, a UK Hardback.
Looking through that edition and all I have is...
-Hardcover with battered dust jacket
-It's a book club edition
-the publisher is The Macmillian Company, New York
-Printed in the USA
-Unknown year when it was published
-I have the same kind of edition for Thunderball and You Only Live Twice
*UPDATE* This edition was released in 1954 or 1965... still unsure
But I've noticed the prices from secondary sellers on sites like amazon have gone sky high. For example the copies of Goldfinger currently listed on amazon UK are between £85 and £130.
So are these books mega rare? Is it because the had a small print run? (I don't know if they did or not.) Are they actually worth this kind of money?
Also own John Pearson's James Bond: The Authorized Biography of 007 and Roger Moore's My Word Is my Bond.
I really like those 2008 Penguin centenary editions. They're colorful and fresh. Some of the Pan paperbacks over the years have had some really interesting covers as well, I always enjoy covers that I think can add something to my view of the book or the character of Bond. All in all, I've got at least three copies of each Fleming novel, in various forms and releases, and at least one of each of the continuation novels, most of them from the time they were first released.
FlemingsBond.com
There is also a version with a Christopher Hitchens intro (Omnibus) and Andrew Taylor (Vintage)