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The Wayback Machine - https://web.archive.org/web/20101020101633/http://salmongutter.blogspot.com/search/label/1971
Showing newest posts with label 1971. Show older posts
Showing newest posts with label 1971. 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]

Wednesday, November 26, 2008

Paperback 168: Tales of the Flying Mountains / Poul Anderson (Collier 01626)

***BIRTHDAY EDITION***

Truth be told, this book was not scheduled to be written up today. There was an interesting but visually bland book on tap for today, but I decided I needed something spicy to help me celebrate my birthday, so I skipped forward two books in line and found this. Enjoy!

Paperback 168: Collier 01626 (1st ptg, 1971)

Title: Tales of the Flying Mountains
Author: Poul Anderson
Cover artist: Uncredited

Yours for: $8

BERJAYA
Best things about this cover:

  • "Tales of the Flying Mountains," Or, "Psychedelic Ape Men Visit the Boob Museum"
  • I've heard them called a lot of things. "Flying Mountains" is not one of those things.
  • More proof that everyone in the early 70s was high. How I survived my infancy is a miracle.
BERJAYA
Best things about this back cover:

  • How many papers does Washington have?
  • This book is apparently a collection of short stories, each of which originally appeared in Analog magazine between the years 1963 and 1965. Anderson published them under the pseudonym "Winston P. Sanders." They are all set in a common futuristic universe in which mankind has colonized the solar system. One of the reviews at amazon starts with the phrase, "Taking his cue from Chaucer..." (!?)

Page 123~

... and yet that spark, together with the dwarfed sun, reached across to grip this orb on which she dwelt and lock it fast for eternity.


This book should be called "Grip This Orb" (see cover painting)

~RP

Sunday, June 1, 2008

Paperback 105: The Ipcress File / Len Deighton (Panther 026193)

Paperback 105: Panther 026193 (14th or so ptg, circa 1971)

Title: The Ipcress File
Author: Len Deighton
Cover artist: Photo cover

Yours for: $9

BERJAYA
Best things about this cover:

  • Simplicity - B&W still photo that is the epitome of mid-century hard-boiled cool. Espresso vs. Smith & Wesson - Paper Clips vs. Bullets. Such great, simple balancing of iconic images. Gives you a sense of the Where and What and even the Who of the story before you've even opened the book. Details are incredibly precise. You can even read the "Gauloise" on the cigarette and the "Wesson" on the barrel of the gun. This book is from outside my collecting window (i.e. post-1969), but when I saw it at my local University book sale, I had to have it. If I ever publish a book, I want it to look like this, no matter what it's about.
  • LEN Deighton is a frequent crossword puzzle answer
  • The paper clips are somehow charming the hell out of me
BERJAYA
Best things about this back cover:

  • Stamp!
  • A near complete lack of punctuation, including standard blurb quotation marks. No exclamation points, commas ... figure it out for yourself, reader!
  • Quaint passive voice construction in the last sentence. So British (Panther is a British imprint, in case you didn't know)

PAGE 123~

Wriggling away from the legs of the tower, black smooth cables and corrugated pipelines rested along each other like a Chinese apothecary's box of snakes.


~RP

Thursday, November 22, 2007

Paperback 46: Fawcett / Gold Medal M2268

Paperback 46: Fawcett / Gold Medal M2268 (3rd ptg, 1971)

Title: The Crossroads
Author: John D. MacDonald
Cover artist: Uncredited

BERJAYA
Best things about this cover:

  • "Look at my shoulder holster! Look at it! Yeah, that's right. You better be afraid!"
  • Floating Head says: "You dance funny, little man."
  • This book has much better cover copy than it does art. See back cover...
BERJAYA
Best things about this back cover:

  • Centeredness makes back cover copy look like a poem - an awesome poem. Not sure which is my favorite phrase here: "sadistic chiseler" or "musclebound lover-boy." Probably the latter. Also, I love Anything having to do with a motel. Motels are my second-biggest thematic obsession, after Revenge.
  • Ridiculous, arbitrary formatting - the gun-toting fist breaks up the text in absurd ways. It's like someone opened up a little door in a wall and is now about to shoot through it blindly.
  • John D. MacDonald looks like the biggest Poindexter ever. His glasses are positively Asimovian. Awesome.

RP