"I LOVE ITS COLOUR, ITS BRILLIANCE, ITS DIVINE HEAVINESS… THE POWER THAT GOLD ALONE GIVES": FIRST ISSUE, PRESENTATION COPY FROM FLEMING'S AGENT
FLEMING, Ian. Goldfinger. London: Jonathan Cape, (1959). Octavo, original gilt-stamped black paper boards, original dust jacket. Housed in a custom clamshell box.
First edition of the seventh James Bond thriller, in an association copy from Fleming's literary agent.
"Written when Fleming was on top of his game," Goldfinger—in which Fleming's superspy thwarts Auric Goldfinger's plot to plunder Fort Knox—"is not only the longest entry in the [Bond] series but also one of the most exuberant, and garnered a certain degree of credibility in literary circles when author Anthony Burgess listed it in his Ninety-Nine Novels: The Best in English since 1939" (Gilbert, 230). Made into the 1965 film starring Sean Connery as Bond and Honor Blackman as Pussy Galore. Cloth in Gilbert's second state, without the extra skull detail: "both were available upon publication." The final letter of page 171, line 6 is broken (Gilbert notes that this was corrected for the second impression). Gilbert A7a (1.2). Biondi & Pickard, 45. Front free endpaper with label reading "Offered by Peter Janson-Smith Ltd. on behalf of the Author," the last two words inked by Janson-Smith; additional agency stamp to label. Janson-Smith, once referred to by Fleming as "a prince among agents," managed the literary rights to James Bond for 45 years. The text bears scattered small markings and textual corrections (for example, "six pairs of eyes" corrected to "three"), at least one of which has been confirmed as Janson-Smith's hand.
A near-fine binding in a very good, unclipped dust jacket with two small stains to front panel, mild toning to spine and minimal wear to spine ends. Page markings as above. A very good copy with a remarkable, uncommon association.