Personal Glimpses: Behind-the-scenes Of The Lives Of The Famous

Excerpts from Reader's Digest's archives. 

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Excerpts from Reader's Digest's archives. 

Wedding Woes

When it came to the subject of marriage Charles Darwin attacked the problem in his usual scientific manner—deliberately, carefully marshaling all the facts. “This is the question,” he wrote, and then, under separate headings (‘Marry’ and ‘Not marry’), listed the pros and cons. Eventually the pros (children, home, charms of female chitchat) outweighed the cons (terrible loss of time, cannot read in the evenings, if many children, forced to earn one’s bread) and he summed up: “Never mind, boy. There is many a happy slave.”

—From Newsweek, December 1958

Sharp wit

There was a writer who not only appropriated a lot of Bertrand Russell’s ideas for a book he was writing, but had the nerve to ask Russell to contribute an introduction when the work was completed. Lord Russell’s reply consisted of two words: “Modesty forbids.”

—From November 1959

What’s in a Name?

After publishing an article on Ian Fleming, the creator of James Bond, Life received this letter from Mrs James Bond of Philadelphia: “In 1961, after learning how Mr Fleming had appropriated my husband’s name from his book Birds of the West Indies, I wrote him a letter to apprise him amiably of JB authenticus, winding up: “I tell my JB he could sue you for defamation of character, but he regards the whole thing as a joke.”

Mr Fleming replied that the name had struck him as brief, masculine, and just what he needed—and so James Bond II was born. He added: “In return, I can only offer your James Bond unlimited use of the name Ian Fleming. Perhaps one day he will discover some particularly horrible species of bird which he would like to christen in an insulting fashion.”

—From December 1967<...

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