The Bond of Fleming’s first novel is in some ways still very much the 007 of Fleming’s 11 subsequent novels (and assorted short stories), as well as the 25 official movies in the canon (and one outlier), but it’s also remarkable to think that this tough, pulpy, yet inarguably gripping novel was ground zero for a pop culture franchise and phenomenon that has come in many ways to represent-and be associated with-glamour, privilege, wealth, exoticism, and global jet-setting.įleming made a card game the centerpiece of his book “When I wrote the first one in 1953, I wanted Bond to be an extremely dull, uninteresting man to whom things happened,” Fleming told The New Yorker in 1962, two years before his death.
Fleming’s own habits of drinking, smoking, gambling, and womanizing provided much of the rest. Fleming had worked as a journalist earlier in his life and s erved extensively in British intelligence during World War II, two aspects of his background that provided lots of context and material for Bond’s exploits. It was 70 years ago last week (April 13, 1953, to be exact) that author Ian Fleming published Casino Royale, the first novel to feature his soon-to-be-iconic British secret agent, James Bond.