Goldeneye: Where Bond was Born - Ian Fleming's Jamaica by Matthew Parker
For
two months of every year, from 1946 to his death eighteen years
later, Ian Fleming lived at Goldeneye, the house he built
on a point of high land overlooking a small white sand beach
on Jamaica’s stunning north coast.
For Fleming, Jamaica’s colour and heat presented a welcome
break from the greyness of post-war London. He loved the physical
beauty of the ‘great green island’, the flowers,
the dancing hummingbirds. He relished its sensual and unbuttoned
atmosphere; an imperial backwater that harked back to the empire’s
glory days. Fleming threw himself into the hedonistic Jet Set
party scene along the north coast of the island: Hollywood giants,
and the cream of British aristocracy, the theatre, literary society
and the secret services, spent their time here drinking, bed-hopping
and delighting in the luxurious excess that would find its way
into Fleming’s novels.
"I am going to live in Jamaica.
Just live in Jamaica and lap it up, and swim in the sea
and write books." - Ian
Fleming
|
Writing Casino Royale, Fleming established a routine at Goldeneye
that would carry him through every James Bond novel ever written.
He rose to take breakfast, staring out to sea, then wrote, swam,
wrote some more. Although neither Ian nor his near neighbour
and close friend Noel Coward smoked marijuana, many visitors,
including the likes of Graham Greene, did. Fleming’s particular
vices were strong liquor, cigarettes and women.
Fleming’s favourite place was the Goldeneye reef, where
he spent hours floating, observing and shark hunting. These adventures
underwater, in a place of both beauty and danger, inspired some
of his very best Bond scenes. Goldeneye tells the story of Fleming’s
time on this extraordinary island and explores how its spirit - its
exoticism, its unpredictable danger, its melancholy, its love
of exaggeration and gothic melodrama - infused Fleming’s
novels and led to his greatest creation of all: James Bond.
About The Author
Born in Central America, Matthew Parker spent part of his childhood
in the West Indies, acquiring a life-long fascination with the
history of the region. Since graduating from Oxford, he has worked
as an editorial consultant on a number of works of history, and
written three bestselling books. He now lives with his family
in east London.
Datastream
Title: Goldeneye: Ian Fleming in Jamaica
Author: Matthew Parker
Publisher: Hutchinson
Format:
Hardback
Price: £20.00
Relase Date:
14th August 2014 (UK)
ISBN: 9780091954109