Tuesday, June 9, 2026

A Guide to Bond Part 2: Live and Let Die

Casino Royale, as we have seen, has a bunch of pernickety quirks distributed through its various editions – becoming an expert in Casino requires a huge amount of attention, never mind trying to become an expert on the publishing history of Ian Fleming’s work as a whole! When it comes to the second Bond novel – Live and Let Die - there are no fewer points of difference and weird printing issues to take on board. In fact, there’s a strange printing mishap concerning the early paperback edition that will have you reaching for a tape measure every time you encounter one of these copies! With that stated, let’s jump in…

*****

Live and Let Die (1954)

“There are moments of great luxury in the life of a secret agent. There are assignments on which he is required to act the part of a very rich man; occasions when he takes refuge in good living to efface the memory of danger and the shadow of death; and times when, as was now the case, he is a guest in the territory of an allied Secret Service.”

*****

Published by Jonathan Cape Ltd., London

Printed by Lowe and Brydone (Printers) Ltd., London, on paper made by John Dickinson & Co.

Bound by A.W. Bain and Co. Ltd., London

Octavo; hardcover, with gilt spine titling and an upper board decoration; 240pp. First edition dustwrapper designed by Ian Fleming and executed by Kenneth Lewis.

Plot Synopsis:

Gold coins believed to have been part of a pirate hoard amassed by Henry Morgan have been turning up in the Harlem district of New York and also in Florida, and have been used to finance various Cold War initiatives linked to S.M.E.R.S.H. British Military Intelligence under M, traces these doubloons to a certain “Mr. Big”, aka. Buonaparte Ignace Gallia, a voodoo practitioner and night-club owner. Bond is sent to investigate him.

Teaming up with CIA operative Felix Leiter, the two infiltrate a night-club owned by Gallia, but are soon identified and captured. Gallia has the two assessed by his pet psychic Solitaire (so-called because she eschews the company of men), who lies and announces the spies to be no threat to the operation. Nevertheless, Gallia has one of Bond’s fingers broken, in retaliation for which he later kills three of the villain’s men; Leiter is released unharmed by virtue of being in the custody of a fellow jazz enthusiast.

Solitaire later breaks with Gallia and contacts Bond: together they head to St. Petersburg in Florida, meeting up with Leiter once more. There, they scout one of Gallia’s warehouses and, while doing so, Solitaire is kidnapped by Mr. Big’s minions. Bond departs to track her down while Leiter goes back the warehouse once more: while there he is captured and partially fed to a shark, losing an arm and a leg. He is dumped for Bond to find at one of their safe houses with a note attached to him that reads “he disagreed with something that ate him”. Bond attacks the warehouse and determines that Gallia is smuggling the gold doubloons out by burying them in the substrate of various fishtanks which he offers for sale: the fish are all poisonous breeds to prevent any casual investigation of the contents. Gallia’s henchman “The Robber” attacks Bond after this discovery – Bond outwits him and feeds him to some sharks.

Bond then repairs to Jamaica to where Gallia has fled and picks up the trail. He gets some quick instruction about the mysteries of SCUBA diving from fisherman Quarrel and the head of the local MI6 division John Strangways, and swims out to infiltrate Gallia’s yacht. He is captured and reunited with Solitaire but not before he manages to attach a limpet mine to Gallia’s hull. After starting to drag the couple across a reef to inflame the appetites of the local sharks and barracuda, the mine detonates and, while being rescued by Quarrel, they watch the yacht explode leaving Gallia to be devoured by the very fish he threatened them with.

The Book:

Live and Let Die was written by Fleming at his estate – Goldeneye – in Jamaica and was completed before Casino Royale went to press. The plot draws heavily on Fleming’s knowledge of Jamaica, and the United States generally, and informs much of the action. It was originally a much more serious book entitled The Undertaker’s Wind in reference to a local meteorological phenomenon in Jamaica known for clearing away ‘bad influences’ from the island.

Casino Royale was fairly well received by the critics and, on the strength of this, a larger print run for the second book was commissioned. In this case and initial print run of 7,500 copies was produced and quickly sold through, with, again, many copies ending up in library collections. A second print run was undertaken before the end of the year of release. The book was issued in the US in 1955 – a year later – but sales were much slower. In the US, chapter five, which was originally entitled “N______ Heaven”, was eventually retitled to something less offensive and may well have been the cause for the initial lacklustre sales. Sales across the board may not have justified continued levels of production, however: the May 1956 third impression was restricted to only 999 units and, consequently, copies of this release are more highly sought-after than the first impression.

The binding of this book is a solid black cloth-effect hardcover with gilt spine titling: the title is printed horizontally at the top, Fleming’s name is printed horizontally beneath this, separated by a four-square dingus; the publisher’s logo is at the spine heel. The upper board displays an image of a gold doubloon in gold, referencing the pirate treasure at the heart of the book’s mystery. The format is octavo, roughly 171mm x 129mm, and there are 240pp., without decorative endpapers or adverts. The title page has the publisher’s logo in the centre just below the author’s name. This format remained in production (with the necessary adjustments to the publication details page and lists of other books by Fleming facing the title page) for the entire run of the hardcover release.

The Dustwrapper:

Having turned his hand to the design of his first book, it was obviously thought that Fleming should follow up that effort by designing the sequel. This is very similar to the dustwrapper of Casino Royale, in that it relies exclusively on typography for its appeal. The ‘wrapper is a vibrant fuchsia colour with gold lettering on the upper panel: the letters of the title are blocky and cast heavy shadows, each graced with a flowing leaf image. Below the title appears the author’s name and the legend “author of CASINO ROYALE”. Although Fleming designed the cover, the job of executing it was given to Kenneth Lewis: both are uncredited on the first edition issue, but their design credit does appear on the ‘wrappers thereafter. The lower panel of the first edition ‘wrapper, contains a list of reviews of Casino Royale from the Times Literary Supplement and other lofty organs, with the title of the book in the same purple colour of the front panel.

Like Casino Royale, some or all of the corners of the dustwrapper are clipped: this was done, I presume, to make the book seem less asymmetrical if the purchaser clipped the price off the front flap when gifting the book to another. A true, un-price-clipped, first edition, first state dustwrapper of this book clearly shows the price – “10s 6d net” - on the bottom corner of the front flap.

Pan Paperback releases:

(It’s worth noting that other publishers picked up the book towards the end of the Twentieth Century – this paperback overview focusses only on the Pan releases and excludes, for example, the Fontana Bond editions produced by William Collins and the Penguin releases. As well, there are some holes in the collection – specifically in terms of the “White Model” and “Still Life” issues. Where I do not have specific bibliographic details – page number counts or the presence of adverts, for instance – I have designated these unknown quantities with Xs.)

Live and let Die – A James Bond Adventure

Published by Great Pan/Pan Books Ltd., London

First printing, 18th October 1957

Fifth printing, 1960

Great Pan Books, No.GP83

Octavo; paperback; 247pp. “Painted Pans” edition: cover by Rex Archer

Rex Archer seemed a better fit for Bond after the Enid Blyton daubings of Roger Hall’s Casino efforts. Here we see a properly brunette and seaweed-draped Bond – albeit with a weirdly proportioned arm - dragging Solitaire from shark-infested waters while a yacht explodes in the distance. This was Archer’s first stab at a Bond novel, and it stood him in good stead for a repeat performance. This format remained unchanged through the first five printings.

An interesting event took place during the first printing (1957) of this initial paperback version. The printery that took on the job of producing the first edition of the paperback version, loaded the press with the wrong paper – more expensive, bulkier paper which had been reserved for another job. Many copies of the text block were printed (it’s theorised between 250 to 500) before the mistake was discovered. Rather than pulp them all back down again, a decision was made to just incorporate the thicker text blocks with the others and hope that no-one would notice. Accordingly, they were all glued into wrappers, trimmed, and sent out for distribution.

Of course, people did notice. For starters, the expensive paper was less prone to browning, or tanning, than the cheaper paper and, after awhile, the difference began to be spotted by collectors and dealers. As well, the text blocks of the expensive paper are thicker overall that the cheap ones, the difference being about half a centimetre or more in variation. Some collectors began asking specifically for the ‘thicker’ copies and they became a focus for those in the know. Anecdotally, a bunch of these were sent overseas to the US markets, and there seem to be more of them to be had over there. Regardless, the so-called “thick paper copies” of Live and Let Die are much sought after and can command up to three or four times the value of a standard copy.

Live and Let Die – Harlem’s Prince of Darkness! A Satanic Foe for James Bond

Published by Great Pan/Pan Books Ltd., London

Sixth printing, October 1961;

Great Pan No.GP83.

Octavo; paperback; 247pp. “Painted Pans” edition: cover by Pat Owen.

Promising as Rex Archer might have been, he soon fell by the wayside in the face of Pat Owen and that artist’s skill at capturing the zeitgeist and the tone of the novels. In this version we see a bedraggled Solitaire clinging to Bond in his torn shirt, while an exploding yacht forms the backdrop. Not much variation between the two images but Owen’s captures the Sixties vibe far better. Again, we have the banner crossing the bottom edge of the front cover and trying to highlight Bond as a trademarked figure – this would change in the following releases. In fact, it’s said that the image of the spy on the banner was taken from the managing director of Pan Books at the time, who thought himself a bit of a player! As usual, the price appears printed on UK copies of the book; export copies had no price as they would be stickered appropriately when they hit their respective markets.

Live and Let Die – Harlem’s Prince of Darkness! A Satanic Foe for JAMES BOND

Published by Great Pan/Pan Books Ltd., London

Seventh printing, April 1962;

Eighth printing, 1962.

Great Pan No.GP83.

Octavo; paperback; 247pp. “Painted Pans” edition: cover by Pat Owen.

The front cover banner of Bond got ditched fairly early and was replaced by a banner with an image of a Walther PPK and three bullets, all against Bond’s call sign of “007”. The main cover image of this printing retained Owen’s 1961 design; the eighth printing was left unpriced, so that overseas vendors could sticker them at local rates.

Live and Let Die – Harlem’s Prince of Darkness! A Satanic Foe for JAMES BOND

Published by Pan Books Ltd., London

Ninth printing, January 1963;

Eleventh Printing, July 1963

Pan Books, No.X233

Octavo; paperback; 247pp. “Painted Pans” edition: cover by Pat Owen

The launch of the “X series” under the Pan Books imprint saw another printing, again with the cover art of Pat Owen. These releases all had printed prices and clearly displayed the new ‘X’ numbering. The decision was probably taken after the announcement that Raymond Hawkey would be coming in to revolutionise the marketing of the material. This meant that text blocks on hand in storage would not be reprinted, but new covers would be; until Hawkey’s new wrappers had been designed, the old covers held sway, but with the new numbers.

Live and let Die

Published by Pan Books Ltd., London

Eleventh printing, July 1963;

Twenty-first Printing, 1966

Pan Books, No.X233

Octavo; paperback; 247pp. (+1 page of adverts). “Hawkey” edition: cover design by Raymond Hawkey

The “X series” was soon overtaken by Ray Hawkey’s re-working of the entire franchise. These editions had the name of James Bond emblazoned boldly at the top of the front cover, in an effort to make the series stand out from the rest of the paperbacks at the stationery stores. The covers in this range have a largely blank cover against which is displayed an object that has relevance to the plot. Here we have a background of untrammelled sand, emerging through which are the bones of a human hand clutching a few gold coins. There is some overlap here – the first Hawkey printing is referred to as the eleventh printing although that was supposedly the last impression of the “X series”; this is because the new Hawkey covers replaced the Pat Owen covers over the already-printed text blocks. The back cover of this printing has the Cecil Beaton portrait of Fleming appended.

Live and let Die

Published by Pan Books Ltd., London

Twenty-second Printing, August 1969

Pan Books, No.X233

Octavo; paperback; XXXpp. (+Xpp. of adverts). “White Model” edition.

The “White Model” edition of this novel is fairly by-the-numbers: a girl standing in front of a large golden coin with a shark approaching from the background. I presume that the long black robes being worn are a nod to the supernatural voodoo elements which the book skates around but never really bites down hard upon. Like Casino Royale, this book was printed only once in this format and so all copies have the original monochrome Pan logo in the top left-hand corner of the front cover; these printings also have the Horst Tappe portrait of Fleming on the back cover along with an ISBN.

*****

NB: Because of the release of the movie based on this title, there was no “Still Life” version of the book produced by Pan. Instead, they went straight to a movie tie-in printing and stayed with that version until a new issue became necessary.

*****

The Movie:

Released in 1973, “Live and Let Die” saw Roger Moore take over the reins as the new portrayer of Bond. Having played the Saint in various cinematic vehicles previously, it was obviously decided that he could play a similar character in the ongoing franchise.

The movie broke from the 1960s aesthetic by playing broadly and for laughs – with extended car and other vehicle chases, in the style of “Benny Hill” - under the guidance of British director Guy Hamilton. Today the palpable racism doesn’t sit well alongside the cornball humour and sexist pandering of the otherwise lacklustre plot.

Movie Tie-in Releases:

Live and Let Die

Published by Pan Books Ltd., London

Twenty-third printing, 1973;

Pan Books No.X232.

Octavo; paperback; 248pp. Robert McGinnis, cover design.

In 1972, interest in the Bond franchise was running high as Roger Moore was due to replace Sean Connery as James Bond. Filming was conducted in the UK and the US across 1972, and stocks of the novel were allowed to run down in the lead-up to a marketing push that would include a release with a tie-in cover. The book was released in 1973 with artwork taken from the movie poster by Robert McGinnis which accompanied the screenings.

In the wake of the film’s success and his winning of the ‘Bond crown’ Roger Moore was commissioned to write a memoir of the events surrounding the filming of the movie and this became a well-received addition to the hype-machine surrounding the novel and is much sought-after by collectors nowadays.

“Roger Moore” (Derek Coyte; Luisa Moore, illus.), Roger Moore as James Bond 007 - Roger Moore's account of filming "Live and Let Die". Pan Books Ltd., London, 1973.

First printing: octavo; paperback; 189pp. (+2pp. of adverts), with 8pp. of full-colour plates.

To be fair, Moore didn’t actually write any of this; it was penned by Derek Coyte who was attached to EON Productions as a publicity writer. Luisa Moore, Roger Moore’s wife, took the lion’s share of the photographs and is probably the only Moore to have had a hand in the effort.

Tarot Cards

While the supernatural themes of “Live and Let Die” are largely underplayed, their presence meant that a set of tarot cards were required as a prop to enable the character of Solitaire to work her mojo. Initially the production company approached Salvador Dali to create a deck for use in the movie; however, the $7 million fee he demanded caused a re-think (in any event, he didn’t actually finish his card deck design until 1986, so they were wise to pull the plug). The deck that was finally used was “The Tarot of the Witches”, designed by Fergus Hall.

The deck used in the film consisted of only 37 cards (whereas a complete deck has 78) because Hall hadn’t finished designing all of them; the post-movie reprints consist of a full deck. In 2022 a special edition release of the deck was issued with only the original 37 cards, the balance of the deck made up of 10 copies of The Lovers card ( a reference to the point in the film where Bond upsets the deck to reveal that it contains nothing but copies of this card), the Six of Wands, the Knight of Wands, the Six of Swords, the Knight of Swords and the Queen of Cups.

So pleased were the producers with these cards that they re-designed the costumes of several of the characters in the movie to accord more strongly with the tarot images, notably Geoffrey Holder’s depiction as Baron Samedi, or Death. The sets of cards created for the film had a red design on their reverse sides; later promotional decks sold in the wake of the movie’s release had a repeated blue pattern featuring Bond’s “007” call sign. Reprints in later years remove the Bond branding for a more general pattern.

The Theme Song

"I read it [the book by Fleming] and thought it was pretty good. That afternoon I wrote the song and went in the next week and did it... It was a job of work for me in a way because writing a song around a title like that's not the easiest thing going."

-Paul McCartney

Saltzman and Broccoli approached Paul McCartney to write a theme song for the movie while principal photography was still running. Paul and Linda McCartney wrote the song, reuniting with George Martin as producer for the first time since the break-up of the Beatles. It became the first rock song to open a Bond movie and was nominated for an Oscar for best theme song (losing out to Streisand’s “The Way We Were”) at the 46th Academy Awards.

McCartney’s follow-up band Wings released an album – “Band on the Run” – in the same year as the movie’s release and toured to promote it; they performed the Bond title song, accompanied by pyrotechnics, during their performances. The song hit the number one spot in charts across the world and did much to promote the film.

In 1991, the rock band Guns ‘n’ Roses covered the song to moderate success. In retaliation to Trump’s use of the cover during one of his rallies in the middle of the COVID crisis, G’n’R created a T-shirt that read “Live ‘n’ Let Die with COVID 45”, the proceeds from the sales of which went to help musicians struggling due to the pandemic lockdowns.

*****

“There was open sensuality in Solitaire's eyes as she looked up at him. She smiled innocently.

'What about my back?' she said”

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A Guide to Bond Part 2: Live and Let Die

Casino Royale , as we have seen, has a bunch of pernickety quirks distributed through its various editions – becoming an expert in Casino re...