Standing out into the sea, like a bastion covering the entrance of two channels, it is but natural that Pembrokeshire should have received many strange visitors. Stone and Bronze using people, men of the Early Iron age, Irish Goidels, Dutchmen and Spaniards under Roman leaders, Scandinavians, Welsh, Saxons, Normans, and Flemings, all have landed on our shores, and in turn warred against each other, and left their mark on our cliffs, plains and mountains.
Added by: peterpan216 | Karma: 22.07 | Fiction literature | 17 January 2010
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An officer in His Majesty’s Secret Service during World War II, Fleming burst onto the literary scene in 1953 with the first in his series of spy novels, thrilling readers for over fifty years.
007 is the ultimate man of action, his high-stakes missions propelling him to exotic locales where he seduces exceptional (and exceptionally named) women. He bests some of literature’s most sinister masterminds and he does it all mixing glamour and grit, subterfuge and style.