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Other studies of the James Bond phenomenon include: Double O Seven, James Bond, A Report ( 1964 ), by O. F. Snelling ( revised, re-titled, and re-published on-line, in 2007, as Double-O Seven: James Bond Under the Microscope ), an analysis of Bond ’ s literary predecessors, his image, women, adversaries, and future ; Ian Fleming: The Spy Who Came In with the Gold ( 1965 ), by Henry A. Zeiger, a biography of Fleming as a commercial writer ; The Politics of James Bond: From Fleming ’ s Novels to the Big Screen ( 2001 ), by historian Jeremy Black, an analysis of the cultural politics of the Bond books and films ; James Bond and Philosophy: Questions Are Forever ( 2006 ), edited by James B.
South and Jacob M. Held, a collection of essays which discuss ethical and moral issues arising out of the Bond stories ; and Simon Winder's The Man Who Saved Britain: A Personal Journey into the Disturbing World of James Bond ( 2006 ), a discussion of how post – Second World War England is represented in the novels and films.

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