This episode looks at Amis's contributions to the James Bond literature - Colonel Sun, his continuation of the Fleming series, set in the Greek islands, and a critical review of Fleming's work as a whole. I discuss whether the novel works as a Bond book (yes), whether Amis fans will find much of his usual pleasures (no) (and on the way manage to get E M Forster's definition of story and plot confused, and examine the theory that Amis was choosing less personal projects at this time because of the turmoil of his private life). The James Bond Dossier is more interesting, addressing head-on the criticisms levelled at Fleming's work as appealing to male reader's wish fulfilment and full of pornography and sadism, and Amis makes a good case that these are largely unfounded; he is on weaker ground arguing that what the critics really disliked was that Bond was presented as patriotic, uncomplicatedly pro-West and brave. Amis also slyly uses his defence of genre writing to implicitly argue that popular literature deserved more respect than polite literature.
Sources mentioned
Dear Philip, Dear Kingsley- The Letters between Kingsley Amis and Philip Larkin (Radio play)
Amis, Amis & Bond Radio documentary