FLEMING, Ian.
Diamonds Are Forever.
London: Jonathan Cape , 1956.
$60,000.00
In Stock
Item Number: RRB-150781
+$450
"What do you intend to do with those diamonds": First Edition of Diamonds Are Forever; inscribed by Ian Fleming to friend and colleague Lionel Berry
First edition of the fourth novel in Ian Fleming’s James Bond series. Octavo, original black cloth. Association copy, inscribed by the author on the front free endpaper, "To Lionel from Ian with affection." The recipient is most likely British Conservative politician and newspaper proprietor Lionel Berry, 2nd Viscount Kemsley, was professionally and socially connected to Ian Fleming through their shared involvement in the British press in the immediate postwar period. They likely met at Kemsley Newspapers, the media group owned by Berry’s father, William Berry, 1st Viscount Kemsley, which was a major force in mid-twentieth-century British journalism. Fleming’s appointment as Foreign Manager in 1945, drawing on his wartime naval intelligence experience, placed him in senior managerial circles where he would have worked with Berry. Their professional association subsequently developed into a personal friendship. Very good in a very good dust jacket. Light toning to the first and last few leaves and text block edges. Three small, neat repairs to the verso of the jacket. Jacket design by Pat Marriott. Diamonds Are Forever was the first of the Bond novels to feature a pictorial dust jacket, and the first to be illustrated by Pat Marriott. The three previous jackets, all executed by Ken Lewis, featured simple typographic and patterned designs. Housed in a custom full morocco clamshell box.
The fourth novel in the James Bond series, Diamonds Are Forever was first published by Jonathan Cape in March 1956 with an initial print run of 12,500 copies which sold out quickly. The novel centers on Bond’s investigation of an international diamond-smuggling operation linking Britain, Africa, and the United States, situating its narrative within postwar concerns about transnational crime, commerce, and mobility. Fleming adopts a restrained, procedural approach that emphasizes institutional detail and logistical realism, a method frequently noted by contemporary reviewers as central to the series’ credibility. It was the basis for the 1971 film bearing the same name directed by Guy Hamilton starring Sean Connery, Jill St. John and Charles Gray.
Diamonds Are Forever.
$60,000.00
In Stock








