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Showing posts with label Sherwood Anderson. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sherwood Anderson. Show all posts

Wednesday, June 17, 2015

Paperback 892: Dark Laughter / Sherwood Anderson (Pocket Books 878)

Paperbacks 892: Pocket Books 878 (1st ptg, 1952)

Title: Dark Laughter
Author: Sherwood Anderson
Cover artist: Tom Dunn

Estimated value: $15-20

PB878-1
Best things about this cover:

  • Her expression is somehow both lascivious and bored. It says "You … sure, you'll do."
  • Maybe if you angle your boobs toward him just a little bit more, Lady Chatterley, he'll get the hint.
  • The husband … is one of my favorite cover elements of all time. Without him, you've got a pretty typical paperback cover. With him, and his ham-sized pate and his spectacles and his "can't talk, reading" and his vibrant, shlubby boredom, this cover skyrockets to comedy. "What? Sure, fuck him, don't fuck him, whatever. I gotta check my stocks…"
  • Reader Michael 5000 sent me this book. Since I hardly ever check my mail at school, I didn't discover this book until very recently. I had, very, very weirdly and coincidentally, checked out Sherwood Anderson's Winesburg, Ohio that same week. Anyway, Michael sent along a nifty postcard with its own spot-on commentary:

BERJAYA

BERJAYA

And the back cover:

PB878bc

Best things about this back cover:

  • Who wrote that tagline, Douglas Sirk?
  • Not "love as few men have ever loved," but "love as few men ever have time to love"—like that's the issue. "Damn my 6pm squash game! I could be LOVING right now, but nooooo…"
  • "… when she saw Bruce Dudley  she knew physical desire for the first time." Uh … I challenge. That is simply not a plausible statement.


Page 123~

Being in Rose's apartment that night was, for all the people who had been there, a good deal like walking into a bedroom in which a woman lies naked. They had all felt that.

I really, really wish I … knew what the hell this meant.

~RP

[Follow Rex Parker on Twitter and Tumblr]

Friday, September 4, 2009

Paperbacks 284-287: The work of Clark Hulings

Sorry for missing Wednesday. First week of school had me a bit overwhelmed and I completely spaced. To make up for it — a glut of paperbacks. Four, to be precise, all featuring the cover art of Clark Hulings. I culled all the Hulings covers I had and scanned them at the request of someone producing an article on Hulings for Illustration magazine. Sadly, upon perusing the covers I have, there's no signature style that I can see, and no one cover that really makes you go 'wow.' They are all very typical mid '50s covers, but only "Savage Holiday" really gives Hulings a broad enough canvas to have a real artistic impact. The others crowd the cover with text and offer only tiny pictures — mostly free-floating heads. Cover for "Winesburg, Ohio" is about as dull and generic as they come. The clear WINner here is "The Brave, Bad Girls." Bold, bright design with fantastic background use of the familiar fedora'd and trenchcoated detective. Coincidentally (I assume), two of these covers deal with interracial themes.

Paperback 284: Lion Library 47 (PBO, 1954)

Title: Strange Barriers
Author: J. Vernon Shea (ed.)

Yours for: $12

BERJAYA
Best things about this cover:

  • "Strange Fruit" + "Racial Barriers" = "Strange Barriers"
  • Given the tagline, this cover is *very* disappointing. Where's the tumult, I ask!?
  • These heads are drawn in different styles, to different scales, with different textures ... we get it, they're different! There's a "barrier." etc.
  • Mark Schorer?

BERJAYA
Best things about this back cover:

  • "I'm enthralled by his jazz trumpeting, but his shirtless gun-toting just makes me howl with laughter."
  • Man, I really, really wish I knew what was going on in that last panel.

Paperback 285: Avon T-86 (PBO!!!?, 1954)

Title: Savage Holiday
Author: Richard Wright

Yours for: $25

BERJAYA
Best things about this cover:

  • Oh no, why is bed-headed Anthony Perkins attacking Lena Horne!?
  • "I was just borrowing your Dick Tracy trenchcoat! I swear I was gonna put it back!"
  • Love the random pseudo-japonesque pattern on those curtains.
  • "I've made my decision, Steve. I choose the roses — not you."
  • Her hands look very wrong — like she's got extra fingers or stubby fingers or fused fingers or something.
BERJAYA
Best things about this back cover:

  • The first and last time "The Yale Review" was used as a blurb on a paperback book.

Paperback 286: Signet 1304 (2nd ptg, 1956)

Title: Winesburg, Ohio
Author: Sherwood Anderson

Yours for: $8

BERJAYA
Best things about this cover:

  • "Breathe, damn you, breathe! Oh, why won't that doctor stop staring wistfully into the distance and get over here and help me!"
BERJAYA
Best things about this back cover:
  • Why is there no picture of "The girl who walked naked in the rain"!? Booooo!
  • Thank god my neighbors "completely hide their private lives from" me. Barely repressed anger + miniature fainting couches (!?) = some crazy-ass !@#@ I don't need to know about.

Paperback 287: Perma Books M-3089 (1st ptg, 1957)

Title: The Brave, Bad Girls
Author: Thomas B. Dewey

Yours for: $9

BERJAYA
Best things about this cover:

  • Damned sticker pull!
  • Red-on-yellow Totally makes this cover pop. Beautiful.
  • Looove the expression on Girl 1 — nice, smug F@#$ You expression to complement the (in order) Just Woke Up, Meek and Scared, and Suicidally Depressed expressions of the others.
BERJAYA
Best things about this back cover:

  • "A Man! A Man, I say!"
  • "A large pea?" — wtf? Like ... a marble? A dime? How big is a "large pea?" Are we talking freakishly, County-Fair-ribbon-winning large or what?
  • Things Not To Say To A Lady You Just Met: "Just for tonight ... I wish you were seventeen."

Page 123~

  • I was a friend of Karl Kadek's ("The Brave, Bold Girls")
  • He took a cheap revolver from the case and began to wave it about. "You get out of here!" he shrieked. "We don't want any collar fasteners here!" ("Winesburg, Ohio")
  • "On a Sunday morning?" There was a trace of scorn in his voice. "And what would he be doing barefooted?" ("Savage Holiday")
  • Then he saw the hole in Jenny's side, right between the ribs. It was round, wet, red. ("Almos a Man" by Richard Wright —from "Strange Barriers")

Jenny is a mule, for the record.

~RP

[Follow Rex Parker on Twitter]