The Lifeline

‘The real thing…a well-wrought period piece that Fleming completists will enjoy’The Times

‘The British novelist Phyllis Bottome is almost forgotten but Bond fans owe her a debt…James Bond was based on Mark Chalmers the hero of Bottome’s 1946 thriller, The Lifeline…a cracking read.  Top marks to Muswell Press for bringing this book back’ Best New Thrillers, Financial Times

‘Fascinating …a major inspiration for Ian Fleming’s James Bond. A jolly good read!   Maxim Jakubowski, Crime Time

‘A thriller of a highly diverting and original kind’ Sunday Post

‘I read Phyllis Bottome’s The Lifeline and saw that Mark Chalmers was Fleming, and that he had turned Chalmers into Bond’ Nigel West

‘A gifted and entertaining novelist’ TLS

‘She is unique…her lucid writing style makes reading her work a pleasure’  Pam Hirsch, The Constant Liberal

9781739879402 (20240314)
£10.99
9781739879457 (20240314)
£9.99

Description

The inspiration for Ian Fleming’s Bond, first published in 1946, seven years before Casino Royale.  

Phyllis Bottome’s hero, Mark Chalmers,  shares many similarities with Bond, he is dark haired, athletic, keen on skiing and winter sports, speaks fluent French and German and has a taste for wine, food and women.  It seems that Bond may not have existed without Bottome. It was at the school she ran in Austria with her ex-spy husband, Ernan Forbes Dennis, that she taught Fleming to write.

It is 1938 and Chalmers, a master at Eton, is recruited by an old friend at the Foreign Office and introduced to his boss ‘B’.  Reluctantly he agrees to take on a covert mission for British Intelligence – to parachute into Nazi-occupied Austria and pass on vital information to a British agent. Chalmers has no intention of committing himself beyond this one job but once he reaches his destination, he finds himself sucked into the cause – fighting fascism with the Underground.

Phyllis Bottome was a highly regarded prolific author in the mid 20th century. With her husband Ernan Forbes Dennis, a former diplomat and spy, she set up a school in KitzbŸhel, Austria and it was there, after he was thrown out of Eton, that she taught Ian Fleming to write. Amongst her many bestsellers was The Mortal Storm made into a prescient anti-fascist film which became a Hollywood blockbuster starring James Stewart. She died in London in 1963.

Additional information

Imprint

Muswell Press

Publication Date

20240314

Height

198

Width

129

Subjects

Fiction

Author Name

Pages

224