Publication history Chitty-Chitty-Bang-Bang: The Magical Car was first published in the UK in three hard-backed volumes by
Jonathan Cape, each costing 10
s 6
d. The first volume was launched on 22 October 1964, the second on 26 November 1964 and the third on 14 January 1965. Each volume was 48 pages. In July 1968 the three volumes were released in one single 123-page volume by
Pan Books under the name
Chitty-Chitty-Bang-Bang: The Complete Adventures of the Magical Car. Later editions and paperback versions used only the shortened name
Chitty-Chitty-Bang-Bang. Since its initial publication the book has been re-issued in hardback and paperback editions and, , has never been out of print. The book was published in the US in 1964 by
Random House. Rather than publishing in three volumes, the stories were produced in one volume, which meant American readers were able to read the third part of the story before British readers. In May 1965,
Chitty-Chitty-Bang-Bang was third in
The New York Times list of best-selling books for children; by November that year, it was second.
Critical reception Alexander Muir, in the
Daily Mirror, considered that the first two volumes of
Chitty-Chitty-Bang-Bang would be excellent Christmas presents for younger readers, although
John Rowe Townsend, writing in
The Guardian, suggested that a father, rather than the child, would be a better recipient of the present. The unnamed reviewer for
The Birmingham Post thought the book would be enjoyed by both the children and their parents. Both Oscar Turnill, writing for
The Sunday Times, and Townsend described Fleming's writing as avuncular, although Townsend was being critical, saying that "we have the adult writer at play rather than the children's writer at work. The style is avuncular, the writing down too evident." Turnill, however, praised the good-humoured nature of Fleming's storytelling.
The Birmingham Post commended Fleming's writing, stating he "proves himself already an accomplished, unpatronising story-teller for ... the 5–12-year-olds". Turnill thought the writer "was right in judging the children's market ripe for the ... cliff-hanger"; Muir also praised the "thrilling cliff-hanger" nature of the book. The reviewer for
The Times drew parallels with Fleming's other work, and noted that the book would be an excellent choice for younger readers before they started on a Bond novel. The author
Richard Usborne, writing for
The Daily Telegraph, also reviewed
Chitty-Chitty-Bang-Bang in the light of the
James Bond novels, and wrote: These CCBB stories are highly professional in the field of children's books. The odd items of information, the super wicked villains, the hairsbreadth escapes, the happy family security, the magic, the happy endings, with the comforting assurance that family and car will soon be in mortal danger again. That's the stuff to give the infantry! ==Adaptations==