Rare Ian Fleming story features a Londoner named Bone, Caffery Bone
[May 14, 2025]
By HILLEL ITALIE
NEW YORK (AP) — “James Bond” creator Ian Fleming didn't need to write
about Cold War intrigue to consider the ways people scheme against each
other. “The Shameful Dream,” a rare Fleming work published this week, is
a short story about a Londoner named Bone, Caffery Bone.
Fleming's protagonist is the literary editor of Our World, a periodical
“designed to bring power and social advancement to Lord Ower,” its
owner. Bone has been summoned to spend Saturday evening with Lord and
Lady Ower, transported to them in a chauffeur-driven Rolls-Royce. Bone
suspects, with a feeling of “inevitable doom,” that he is to meet the
same fate of so many employed by Lord Ower — removed from his job and
soon forgotten.

“For Lord Ower sacked everyone sooner or later, harshly if they belonged
to no union or with a fat check if they did and were in a position to
hit back,” Fleming writes. “If one worked for Lord Ower one was
expendable and one just spent oneself until one had gone over the cliff
edge and disappeared beneath the waves with a fat splash.”
“The Shameful Dream” appears in this week's Strand Magazine along with
another obscure work from a master of intrigue, Graham Greene's “Reading
at Night,” a brief ghost story in which the contents of a paperback
anthology becomes frighteningly real. Greene scholars believe that the
author of “Our Man in Havana,” “The End of the Affair” and other
classics dashed off “Reading at Night” in the early 1960s when he found
himself struggling to write a longer narrative.
Strand Magazine is a quarterly publication that has run little-known
works by F. Scott Fitzgerald, Ernest Hemingway and many others. Managing
editor Andrew F. Gulli noted that the current issue was Strand's 75th
and that he “thought it would be interesting for fans to read stories by
these two midcentury literary icons side by side — writers whose
approaches to the genre were markedly distinct: Greene, with his moral
ambiguity and spiritual tension; and Fleming, with his glamorous take on
espionage.”
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 Fleming, best known for such Bond
thrillers as “Dr. No” and “From Russia with Love,” had a career in
journalism spanning from the 1930s to the early 1960s, when he was
well established as an author. For Reuters in the '30s, he wrote
obituaries, covered auto racing in Austria and a Stalin show trial
in the Soviet Union. After World War II, he served as foreign
manager for the Kemsley newspaper group, a subsidiary of The Sunday
Times. Fleming died of a heart attack in 1964, at age 56.
Mike VanBlaribum, president of the Ian Fleming Foundation, says that
Fleming was clearly drawing upon his own background for “The
Shameful Dream.” But biographers disagree over when Fleming wrote
it. According to Nicholas Shakespeare's “Ian Fleming: The Complete
Man,” Fleming worked on the story in the early 1950s, based Lord
Ower on his boss, Lord Kemsley, and based Bone upon himself. Lord
Ower is sometimes referred to as “O,” anticipating the spy chief “M”
of the Bond novels.
In “James Bond: The Man and His World,” author Henry Chancellor
theorizes that Fleming wrote the story in 1961, and may have been
inspired by a dispute with Daily Express owner Lord Beaverbrook over
rights to a James Bond comic strip.
VanBlaribum speculates that Fleming wrote it in 1951, citing the
author's reference to a Sheerline saloon, a luxury car that the UK
stopped producing in the mid-1950s.
“It is unlikely that Fleming would have used a decade-old car if the
story were written in 1961,” he says. “In either event, ‘The
Shameful Dream’ was never published. It has been stated that Lord
Ower too closely resembled Lord Kemsley.”
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