Interestingly, while working for the Sunday Times, he became
friends with author Ian Fleming, creator of James Bond. Fleming later praised
Jenkins’ debut novel, A Twist of Sand as ‘a literate, imaginative first
novel in the tradition of high and original adventure’. Jenkins could be relied
on to deliver an exciting action-filled adventure yarn.
After the war Jenkins settled in Rhodesia (now Zimbabwe), where he married.
His first novel, A Twist of Sand (1959), was subsequently
translated into almost two dozen languages and became a movie in 1968 starring Richard
Johnson and Honor Blackman. He kept his day job until he had published his
third novel.
After Ian Fleming’s death (1964), Glidrose Productions commissioned
Jenkins to write a James Bond novel in 1966. Jenkins finished the manuscript
for Glidrose entitled Per Fine Ounce, but it was rejected. The full novel
is believed lost, though a few pages have survived. Two pages have been
released to the public and were exclusively published by the James Bond website
MI6-HQ.com.
The first post-Fleming Bond book was Colonel
Sun by Robert Markham [Kingsley Amis] (1968).
Jenkins had a penchant for using unusual titles for some of his novels.
- A Twist
of Sand (1959)
- The
Watering-Place of Good Peace (1960; revised 1974)
- A Grue
of Ice (1962) published in the U.S. as The Disappearing Island
- The
River of Diamonds (1964)
- Hunter-Killer (1966)
- Scend
of the Sea (1971) published in the
U.S. as The Hollow Sea
- A Cleft
of Stars (1973)
- A
Bridge of Magpies (1974)
- South
Trap (1979) published in paperback as Southtrap
- A Ravel
of Waters (1981)
- The
Unripe Gold (1983)
- Fireprint (1984)
- In
Harm's Way (1986)
- Hold
Down a Shadow (1989)
- A Hive
of Dead Men (1991)
- A
Daystar of Fear (1993)
Note:
If you want a Wikipedia link to all things ‘James Bond’, go here.
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