As the DNI's personal assistant, Fleming's intelligence work provided the background for his spy novels. In 1953, he published his first novel,
Casino Royale. In it he introduced secret agent
James Bond, also famously known by his code number,
007. The double "00" indicating that he has a licence to kill. Bond appears with the beautiful heroine Vesper Lynd, who was modelled on SOE agent
Christine Granville. Ideas for his characters and settings for Bond came from his time at
Boodle's. Blade's, M's club (at which Bond is an occasional guest), is partially modelled on Boodle's and the name of Bond's arch enemy,
Ernst Stavro Blofeld, was based on a fellow member's name.
Initially Fleming's Bond novels were not bestsellers in America, but when President
John F. Kennedy included
From Russia With Love on a list of his favourite books, sales quickly jumped. Fleming wrote 14 Bond books in all:
Casino Royale (1953),
Live and Let Die (1954),
Moonraker (1955),
Diamonds Are Forever (1956),
From Russia With Love (1957),
Dr. No (1958),
Goldfinger (1959),
For Your Eyes Only (1960),
Thunderball (1961),
The Spy Who Loved Me (1962),
On Her Majesty's Secret Service (1963),
You Only Live Twice (1964),
The Man With The Golden Gun (1965), and
Octopussy/The Living Daylights (1966).
In the late 1950s, the financial success of Fleming's James Bond series allowed him to retire to
Goldeneye, his estate in
Saint Mary Parish, Jamaica. The name of the house and estate where he wrote his novels has many sources. Notably, Ian Fleming himself cited
Operation Goldeneye, a plan to bedevil the Nazis should the Germans enter Spain during World War II. He also cited the 1941 novel,
Reflections in a Golden Eye by
Carson McCullers. The location of the property may also have been a factor —
Oracabessa, or "Golden head". There is also a Spanish tomb on the property with a bit of carving that looks like an eye on one side. It is likely that most or all of these factors played a part in Fleming's naming his Jamaican home. In Ian Fleming's interview published in
Playboy in December 1964, he states, "I had happened to be reading
Reflections in a Golden Eye by Carson McCullers, and I'd been involved in an operation called Goldeneye during the war: the defense of Gibraltar, supposing that the Spaniards had decided to attack it; and I was deeply involved in the planning of countermeasures which would have been taken in that event. Anyway, I called my place Goldeneye." The estate, next door to that of Fleming's friend and rival
Noel Coward, is now the centerpiece of an exclusive resort by the same name.
The Spy Who Loved Me (1962) stylistically departs from other books in the Bond series as it is written in the
first person perspective of the (fictional) protagonist, Vivienne Michel, whom Fleming credits as co-author. It is the story of her life, up until when James Bond serendipitously rescues her from the wrong circumstance at the wrong place and time.
Besides writing twelve
novels and nine
short stories featuring James Bond, Fleming also wrote the children's novel
Chitty Chitty Bang Bang. He also wrote a guide to some of the worlds most famous cities in "Thrilling Cities" and a novel on diamond smuggling entitled "The Diamond Smugglers".
In 1961, he sold the film rights to his already published as well as future James Bond novels and short stories to
Harry Saltzman, who, with
Albert R. "Cubby" Broccoli, co-produced the film version of
Dr. No (1962). For the cast, Fleming suggested friend and neighbour
Noël Coward as the villain
Dr. Julius No, and
David Niven or, later,
Roger Moore as James Bond. Both were rejected in favour of Sean Connery, who was both Broccoli and Saltzman's choice. Fleming also suggested his cousin,
Christopher Lee, either as Dr. No or even as James Bond. Although Lee was selected for neither role, in 1974 he portrayed assassin
Francisco Scaramanga, the eponymous villain of
The Man with the Golden Gun.
Neither Saltzman nor Broccoli expected
Dr. No to be much of a success, but it was an instant sensation and sparked a spy craze through the rest of the 1960s.
The successful
Dr. No was followed by
From Russia with Love (1963), the second and last James Bond movie Ian Fleming saw.
During the
Istanbul Pogroms, which many
Greek and some
Turkish scholars attributed to secret orchestrations by
Britain, Fleming wrote an account of the events, "The Great Riot of Istanbul", which was published in the
The Sunday Times on
11 September 1955.