Critic Reviews
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Based on 9 reviews on
The Beatles are the biggest band in the history of pop music. James Bond is the single most successful movie character of all time. They are also twins. Dr No, the first Bond film, and Love Me Do, the first Beatles record, were both released on the same day: Friday 5 October 1962. Most countries can only dream of a cultural export becoming a worldwide phenomenon on this scale. For Britain to produce two iconic successes on this level, on the same windy October afternoon, is unprecedented.
Bond and the Beatles present us with opposing values, visions of the British culture, and ideas about sexual identity. Love and Let Die is the story of a clash between working class liberation and establishment control, and how it exploded on the global stage. It explains why James Bond hated the Beatles, why Paul McCartney wanted to be Bond, and why it was Ringo who won the heart of a Bond Girl in the end.
Told over a period of sixty dramatic years, this is an account of how two outsized cultural phenomena continue to define American aspirations, fantasies, and our ideas about ourselves. Looking at these two touchstones in this new context will forever change how you see the Beatles, the James Bond films, and six decades of cross-Atlantic popular culture.
"For Higgs, both James Bond and The Beatles provide a way to examine questions of masculinity and class — along with how audiences’ perceptions of both have changed in the decades since that fateful day in 1962."
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“Love and Let Die”, a new book by John Higgs, uses these two icons to recount the cultural history of post-imperial Britain https://t.co/oLHevoyPcu
Professor of History at Joliet Junior College, author of Joy and Fear: The Beatles, Chicago and the 1960s
I avoided reading John Higgs’ book, Love and Let Die, because I’m no fan of 007. I finally borrowed the book from the library and found Higgs to be an excellent writer with perceptive observations on the Beatles and the changes they brought to 60s Britain. Still no fan of Bond! https://t.co/aijA3kQiko