Originally posted by LadyFed:
This one is my favorite; a Victory model cut down to 3 inches, round butt modification, and then carried as a backup by FBI Special Agent George Gillum from the late 1940's until his retirement in 1970. He served most of his career in Las Vegas on a Mafia TF. Looks like this revolver got some good use. It still shoots tight groups at 10 feet/gunfight range. Wish I could carry it in today's Bureau.
Eliza
Lady Fed-
That looks VERY like the custom S&W that was on the hardback cover of the James Bond novel, "From Russia, With Love". (Published about 1955-56.)
That one belonged to Ian Fleming's friend and gun advisor, Geoffrey Boothroyd, a Scots TV writer and firearms authority. He wrote some excellent gun books.
His had the trigger guard cut out, and I think it lacked the lanyard loop.
It was originally a .38/200 that he modified because then, the early 1950's, it was hard to get new S&W guns in the UK.
His gun was painted for the book cover by an artist named Dick Chopping, who rendered it in remarkable detail.
Have you ever seen that cover?
Bond never carried such a gun. The only S&W that he wore was a Centennial in, "Dr. No." He lost it on No's island, and evidently never wore one again, preferring the Walther PPK in .32. (However, Fleming owned a Centennial, bought on a visit to New York.)
I guess the custom revolver on the book cover was just intended to grab the shopper's eye and look dramatic.
I think the modified .38 was also included in Boothroyd's superb, "The Handgun", the best basic book on the subject that I've ever found. If any of you has a copy, I could probably find the energy to look up the page that it's on.
Can anyone here find that book cover and post a photo? The gun would certainly fit the subject matter of this topic!
T-Star