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The Wayback Machine - https://web.archive.org/web/20101020101543/http://salmongutter.blogspot.com/search/label/TV%20Tie-In
Showing newest posts with label TV Tie-In. Show older posts
Showing newest posts with label TV Tie-In. Show older posts

Friday, July 16, 2010

Paperback 334: The Partridge Family #5: Terror By Night / Vic Crume (Curtis Books 06148)

Paperback 334: Curtis Books 06148 (PBO, 1971)

Title:
Terror By Night
Author: Vic Crume
Cover artist: Photo

Yours for: $6

BERJAYA
Best things about this cover:
  • Literally nothing about this cover — the pic, the design, nothing — says TERROR BY NIGHT. Is there a ghost in the amp? Is Keith gonna get blown away by some wicked feedback?
  • There's a weed-whacker on the wall.

BERJAYA
Best things about this back cover:
  • "Downbeat for Danger!" should have been the title.
  • Why is "and when Keith" italicized???
  • "Provincetown was *nothing* like Keith expected..."

Page 123~

Keith Partridge and Bill Angelo, dripping wet, followed with another heavy box, and in back of them were eight men—three of them in handcuffs.

"Mom," said Keith, "it's not what you think."

~RP

[Follow Rex Parker on Twitter]

Saturday, January 10, 2009

Paperback 185: Honey West: Dig a Dead Doll / G.G. Fickling (Pyramid R-1355)

Paperback 185: Pyramid Books R-1355 (2nd ptg - 1st thus, 1966)

Title
: Honey West: Dig a Dead Doll
Author: G.G. Fickling
Cover artist: photo cover

Yours for: $11

BERJAYA
Best things about this cover:
  • Alliteration? Check. Hot girl with gun? Check. Ocelot? Check.
  • Fencing in the foyer!
  • The Honey West novels were first published before the TV series, then reissued as TV tie-ins like this one. The series was short lived. More here.
  • This cover makes me sad, as I am sure that cat is drugged
BERJAYA
Best things about this back cover:

  • Grrrr. Seriously, grrr, taking this fucking leash off, lady.
  • "Look, I give. You are very, very hot. I can't deny it. Now just put down the gun and dear god let the cat go already ..."

Page 123~

He shoved an elbow in my ribs. ". There is no place better to hide a body, no?" His eyes slid down to my hips. "Speaking of bodies, it is a shame to hide yours."

"Thanks," I said, patting his swarthy cheek. "You're not so bad after all."


Non-threatening lecherous Mexicans who love word play = comedy gold.

~RP

Monday, December 17, 2007

Paperback 56: This Girl For Hire / G.G. Fickling (Pyramid R-1151)

Paperback 56: Pyramid R-1151 (4th ptg, 1965)
Title: This Girl For Hire
Author: G.G. Fickling
Cover artist: Uncredited

BERJAYA
Best things about this cover:
  • Honey West was a brief but important crime fiction phenomenon - an early, nakeder version of today's modern female detectives. See, Honey West lost her clothes a lot. It was her thing. Like ... a wordless catchphrase or facial tic or something. A girl's gotta do etc. See back cover.
  • My wife's first comment: "Is she pregnant?" - I believe the tenting of the coat is meant to convey motion, specifically a spinning motion as Honey West rounds on a would-be assailant. According to this drawing, she is a south paw. And she has broken the heel of her left shoe. And yet she persists. True grit!
  • Alliteration!
  • "This Gun for Hire" is a sensational film noir (1942) starring Veronica Lake and Alan Ladd.
  • "See her on 'Burke's Law' ... Whoops. We're sorry. While you blinked, 'Burke's Law' was canceled. Good bye."
  • Honey actually went on to have her own show. Go here for more than you ever wanted to know about Honey West.
  • Again, I hope you are noticing how covers get crappier, in general, after 1959. Too much text, not enough hot lady with gun, I say.
BERJAYA
Best things about this back cover:

  • Well, if you're a feminist who happens to have no sense of humor ... then, nothing.
  • If you're a feminist who does have a sense of humor (like most I know), then you should find this hilarious. What did it take for a female detective to get some street cred back in the day? Now you know: a penchant for accidental nudity.
  • I have a way, way hotter version of this book that dates from the late 50's. Honey's not naked on that one, but she is more than two inches tall, at least.

RP

Sunday, December 2, 2007

Paperback 49: Ballantine 236

Paperback 49: Ballantine 236 (PBO, 1957)

Title: Gunsmoke
Author: Don Ward
Cover artist: photo cover

BERJAYA
Best things about this cover

  • "I Was A Sunburned Frankenstein"
  • Wow, colorization could really wreak havoc with your skin back then. Marshal Dillon looks like he just completed an overly lengthy stint at the tanning salon. You live in the DESERT, Marshal. Just walking around outside should give you all the color you need.
  • I'm not sure this cover could be less interesting if it tried. "I am ... walking toward you ... I am huge ... that is all."
  • Love the CBS "Eye"
BERJAYA
Best things about this back cover

  • Copy writer should be fired - you don't open your promo with the passive voice, for god's sake.
  • Further, of course it "is remembered." If I'm reading this book in 1957, then I "remember" it from Last Night, When It Was On.
  • "Movie goers" is two words now? Walker Percy's not going to like that one bit.

RP

Thursday, October 25, 2007

Why Book Sales are Like Crack Dens To Me, Part 1

I spent much of the last year getting rid of books - giving them away, throwing them away, recycling them, cutting them up to make art, etc. I just had too many. And I vowed not to acquire anymore books unless they were a. beautiful, or b. written by someone I really wanted to support with my $.

But those vows were made before I encountered the latest University Book Sale, at which point they immediately went out the window. I actually paid money (well, technically my student paid for me... we'll call her "Dondie") to get into the sale, and then got first crack at a ton of books - fiction, instructional, other, etc. I immediately went into super-consumption mode, as nearly every other cover called out to me with its cheesy greatness and awe-inspiring improbability. I am sitting here at my desk with "Dondie" right now - she actively encouraged me to buy many of the following. That's what they call an "enabler." What did I pick up? OK, Where to start ...?

Henry Bridgman, How To Make an Oboe Reed (PBO, 1987)
Cover artist: Some clip art genius

BERJAYA
  • I don't know why, but I know that someday this book will come in handy
  • Did you know, and I quote: "The tip is where most of the action is"? Damn, this is hot. And useful.
  • "We are assuming a finished tip length of 4.5mm." Dondie says: "Whoa, low standards!"

BERJAYA
  • Woo hoo, First Edition!
  • Dondie says: "I was four when this came out!"
  • Not only did Henry Bridgman write the book ... he then mailed it to himself.

John Updike, Bech: A Book (1st ptg, 1971)
Cover artist: Arnold Roth

BERJAYA
  • "Bech, A Book, A Female Book..."
  • More like "Blecch: A Book" [HA ha, I kill me]
  • He has boobs in his hair. Furthermore, he has Boobs in his Hair.
  • Dondie says: "The nipples are ferociously red"
  • Head = phallus? scrotum? squash? zucchini?
  • I have to say, that is the most disturbing head in all of paperback cover art history - even more disturbing than ...

Lawrence Durrell, Clea (1st ptg, 1961)
Cover artist: Unidentified

BERJAYA
  • This, my friends, is the Original Floating Head, in that it is LITERALLY FLOATING. In water. Ur-Floating-Head. Totally scary / haunting.
  • The floating head that ate Beirut! Run, women in burkhas, run! The blonde lady is hungry!
  • Dondie says: "You'll never understand .... Clea ... my love [kisses book]"

Edwin Newman, Sunday Punch (1st ptg, 1980)
Cover artist: "Paris"

BERJAYA
  • That can't be good for your back.
  • Dondie says: "He farted in the martini ... fartini."
  • Dondie says: "His grimace has an 'I wanna do you / I gotta poop real bad' quality."
  • This is my second "Person-in-a-cocktail-glass" book cover, if you can believe that. Here is the other one. This Sunday Brunch one is far less hot.
  • There is something very wrong about the olive.
BERJAYA
"The Walking Asparagus" - "So powerful that he can make your pee smell funny just by looking at you."

James Salter, Solo Faces (1st ptg, 1980)
Cover design: Neil Stuart
Cover photograph: Christina Rodin

BERJAYA
The story of the gigantic nose that climbed the Swiss Alps.

And, lastly for today, a gem:

Joan Oppenheimer, Which Mother Is Mine? (PBO, 1980)

BERJAYA
  • Novelization of an ABC Afterschool Special! Awesome!
  • Starring Blind Mary from "Little House," and My all-time TV mom crush, Mrs. C from "Happy Days."
  • Is Mary blind in this show too? Is that why she is looking at nothing in particular and using her hands to communicate with Mom 1? It's so "Miracle Worker."
  • Dondie says: Awesome photograph. Mom 2 is so sickened by Mom 1: "I'll kill you, bitch! She's mine!"
  • Dondie also says: Ugliest dress ever. It's a wonder either of them wants to be her mom.
  • I say: I think this is actually an Ugly Dress Pageant, and these are the three finalists. Mom 1 is doing that fake hand-holding "I hope you win" thing that pageant finalists do to fake support each other before the winner is announced.

More - much more - to follow.

RP (with Dondie)