Ian Fleming – The Spy Who Loved Me – SIGNED by 5 of the Cast of the Film Including ‘Jaws’

ian fleming tswlm multi signed 1

Ian Fleming – The Spy Who Loved Me – SIGNED by 5 of the Cast of the Film Including ‘Jaws’

£450.00

In stock

£450.00

A first edition, sixth printing of ‘The Spy Who Loved Me’ by Ian Fleming, published by Cape in 1964. A near fine book with a neat name to the front endpaper. Some light spotting to the top edge. In a very good unclipped wrapper showing the price of 16s as called for. None of the usual heavy browning to the spine with some rubbing to the edges and corners. SIGNED on the front endpaper by Richard Kiel (’Jaws’), Vernon Dobtekoff (Max Kalba), Olga Bisera (Felicca), Eva Rueber-Staier (Rublavich) and Carolina Munro (as Naomi 007).
A unique James Bond novel, told from the perspective of Vivienne Michel, a young woman caught in danger at a remote motel. Bond appears later, rescuing her from two brutal thugs. Unlike other Bond books, it focuses on Michel’s experiences rather than espionage. The novel received mixed reactions, leading Fleming to restrict adaptations, though the 1977 film used only the title, creating an entirely new plot.


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Description

A first edition, sixth printing of ‘The Spy Who Loved Me’ by Ian Fleming, published by Cape in 1964. A near fine book with a neat name to the front endpaper. Some light spotting to the top edge. In a very good unclipped wrapper showing the price of 16s as called for. None of the usual heavy browning to the spine with some rubbing to the edges and corners. SIGNED on the front endpaper by Richard Kiel (’Jaws’), Vernon Dobtekoff (Max Kalba), Olga Bisera (Felicca), Eva Rueber-Staier (Rublavich) and Carolina Munro (as Naomi 007).
A unique James Bond novel, told from the perspective of Vivienne Michel, a young woman caught in danger at a remote motel. Bond appears later, rescuing her from two brutal thugs. Unlike other Bond books, it focuses on Michel’s experiences rather than espionage. The novel received mixed reactions, leading Fleming to restrict adaptations, though the 1977 film used only the title, creating an entirely new plot.