Showing posts with label vintage paperbacks. Show all posts
Showing posts with label vintage paperbacks. Show all posts
Friday, January 25, 2013
Forgotten Books: Paperbacks, U.S.A.
This one brings back a lot of memories. At the time it was published in 1981, I had known Lance Casebeer, the "King of Paperbacks," for two or three years, become a regular attendee of the backyard paperbackalooza called LanceCon, and - because I lived nearby, dropped in at many another time to marvel at his basement-to-second story collection of every paperback book published in American between 1939 and 1959 (and beyond).
In short, I didn't need this book. I was practically living it. That magic died in 2003 - along with Lance - but the book lives on, and it's still packed cover-to-cover with some truly amazing information.
Paperbacks, U.S.A. (the U.S. title) was also published - at almost the same time - in Britain as The Book of Paperbacks. I have both editions, and everything inside the covers (including the endpapers) is identical.
It begins with a history of the paperback, paying special attention to the major vintage houses of Pocket Books, Avon, Penguin, Popular Library, Dell, Bantam and Signet.There's a lengthy section on cover art, including details on how it was produced and interviews with the artists. There's a year-by-year chronology listing milestones in the industry, and putting them in context with the "real" world.
And there's more: An overview of every U.S. publisher and imprint of the period, lists of the first hundred books issued by each major publisher, and a thirty-page encyclopedia detailing who was who in producing cover art.
If you're at all intrigued with vintage paperbacks, or the history of book publishing in America, you can't go wrong with this one.
Bill Crider collectors take note! You'll want this, too, because his name appears twice - in the Index and in the Bibliography.
Tuesday, October 27, 2009
The Art of Nero Wolfe: And Be A Villain
Archie is offscreen here but we have another fine image of Wolfe. Bantam did not credit the artist for this one, but they provide this info...
About THE COVER
Wolfe shrugged. His eyes moved. "She's capable of anything. Look in her bag."
I made a move but she gave me the full force of her eyes. "Don't touch me."
I brought the hand back. Her eyes went to Wolfe . . .
Tuesday, September 29, 2009
The Art of Nero Wolfe: Too Many Women
About THE COVER
The door to the hall came open and Rosa Bendini was there among us. She stood just inside the door in the cherry-colored thing which, whatever its name might be, was certainly not intended for street wear. But she hadn't merely blundered in. She came forward, on past the others, clear to me...
Illustrated by Hy Rubin
Wednesday, September 23, 2009
The Art of Nero Wolfe: The Silent Speaker
About THE COVER
Nero Wolfe was a man who like to get things done . . . preferably by somebody else. In this case, there is a little matter of murder involved, and the very beautiful blonde, Miss Phoebe Gunther, knows something she isn't telling. Wolfe and his man-of-all-dirty-work, Archie Goodwin, are trying to find out just what the little lady has on her mind.
Illustrated by Hy Rubin.
"But I have nothing to lie about!" Miss Gunther says.
"Pfui," says Wolfe. "Everybody has something to lie about."
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