James Fleming
The Name’s Zakhov
For years I’d known that a scathing review of Dr No, the first James Bond film, had been published in Russia. But where? No one could tell me. It was not until I took over the editorship of The Book Collector and made contact with James Bond book dealers that I discovered. The piece, by Yu Okov, had come out in Izvestiya at a period of extreme international tension. An article in Izvestiya was the equivalent of a statement by the Politburo. Someone at the top had decided to exploit the film antics of Bond as a way of mocking the West while at the same time deflecting the anger of the proletariat from their abysmal standard of living. (‘CUT KHRUSHCHEV UP FOR SAUSAGES’ read one home-made banner waved at a protest in June 1962.) Okov’s review soon reached Ian Fleming, who took it as a terrific compliment and persuaded Jonathan Cape, his publisher, to print it on the jacket of his new novel, On Her Majesty’s Secret Service. Jacket proofs were printed – and then, nothing. Until now only a handful of book collectors who got their hands on one of those early proofs have ever seen it. What had happened? This is what I explore in Bond Behind the Iron Curtain.
The answer is the Cuban Missile Crisis, which erupted barely two weeks after Dr No was released. Suddenly the possibility of a nuclear strike that would obliterate the world became all too real. Cape’s reps started to report hostile reactions to the jacket in bookshops. Why flaunt something from
Sign Up to our newsletter
Receive free articles, highlights from the archive, news, details of prizes, and much more.@Lit_Review
Follow Literary Review on Twitter
Twitter Feed
In 1524, hundreds of thousands of peasants across Germany took up arms against their social superiors.
Peter Marshall investigates the causes and consequences of the German Peasants’ War, the largest uprising in Europe before the French Revolution.
Peter Marshall - Down with the Ox Tax!
Peter Marshall: Down with the Ox Tax! - Summer of Fire and Blood: The German Peasants’ War by Lyndal Roper
literaryreview.co.uk
The Soviet double agent Oleg Gordievsky, who died yesterday, reviewed many books on Russia & spying for our pages. As he lived under threat of assassination, books had to be sent to him under ever-changing pseudonyms. Here are a selection of his pieces:
Literary Review - For People Who Devour Books
Book reviews by Oleg Gordievsky
literaryreview.co.uk
The Soviet Union might seem the last place that the art duo Gilbert & George would achieve success. Yet as the communist regime collapsed, that’s precisely what happened.
@StephenSmithWDS wonders how two East End gadflies infiltrated the Eastern Bloc.
Stephen Smith - From Russia with Lucre
Stephen Smith: From Russia with Lucre - Gilbert & George and the Communists by James Birch
literaryreview.co.uk