Tuesday, May 12, 2026

Because I Needed a Furst Fix ...



The Caribbean Account, by Alan Furst (Dell, 1983), with cover illustration by Ron Lesser. This was the last of three novels Furst penned in the late 1970s and early ’80s, before he gained fame as an author of historical spy fiction.

Like its predecessor, Your Day in the Barrel (1976) and The Paris Drop (1980), it starred “marijuana dealer Roger Levin (Levy in the first book), who has the habit of becoming caught up in espionage scams and helping in the retrieval of a missing heiress,” recalls Australian critic-blogger Jeff Popple. “They were fun, easy going reads, notable more for their cool tone and dialogue, than their plotting.” In 1981, the year of its original hardcover publication, Kirkus Reviews called The Caribbean Account “a third too long and sometimes sophomoric, [but] more consistently amusing than Levin's previous doings.”

The magazine offered this plot description:
This time Levin is hired by a lawyer friend to deliver $500,000 to a stranger at Miami’s Orange Bowl Stadium. And though the delivery goes okay, the stranger is then promptly murdered (the money stolen) before Levin’s eyes. So, back in N.Y., Levin demands to know what’s going on—and he learns that the $500,000 was, in effect, a ransom for the release of young, crazy, missing heiress Fiona De Scodellaire: in exchange for the dough, her latest cult/guru was supposed to kick her out and send her home. But now that scheme has fallen through, and Levin is hired to find the heiress and the cult’s hideout. He sleuths around, traces the cult to the isle of St. Maarten, locates pudgy Fiona (who immediately lusts for Levin), and uses the sex hookup to lure Fiona home. Then, however, a miserable, Levin-less Fiona is lured back to the isle by her Jim-Jones-y guru (for assorted kinky rituals)—and finally there’s a lethal showdown between Levin and the guru.
Kirkus went on to criticize Furst’s habit of mixing storytelling styles. “When he shifts from hard-boiled comedy and sex-farce to more emotional stuff (Levin’s love life, the death of his chum), the effect is lame,” its review read. “And the thin plot here is self-indulgently stretched out—with the guru’s verbose journal, with Levin’s fantasies, etc. But it’s reasonably entertaining overall—with enough truly stylish and funny moments to promise better things ahead if Furst can continue to get his spunky talent under control.”

Better things, indeed.

(Hat tip to Robert Deis for the cover scan.)

Thursday, April 23, 2026

Another Look: “Forbid Me Not”

Warning: Artistic inspiration drawn from book titles may vary.



Left: Forbid Me Not, by Blair Fuller (Berkley Books, 1958); cover illustration by Charles Copeland. Right: Forbid Me Not, by Blair Fuller (Berkley Medallion, 1962), featuring cover art by Robert K. Abbett. Originally published in 1957 by Harper & Brothers as A Far Place, this was apparently one of two novels penned by Fuller, a former editor of The Paris Review and onetime creative writing teacher at Stanford University (the other being Zebina’s Mountain, 1975). He passed away in 2011 at age 84.

Tuesday, April 7, 2026

The Shadows Know



Book cover design trends come … and some go. Others, however, manage to stick around far longer than seems advisable. Take images of people shown from the rear, for instance. Or aerial photos of snow-shrouded forests. Or spooky-looking trees. Or figures, especially women, running in fright (a holdover theme, really, from illustrated Gothic horror fiction of the late 20th century). Publishers spend a lot of time studying what book-front features sell best, and they can be slow to abandon a fad that has outlived its welcome.

One that’s become particularly ubiquitous on American crime, mystery, and thriller shelves over these last several years is silhouettes of people in windows. An example is the cover—above—of Mark StevensTwo Truths and a Lie, being released today by Thomas & Mercer. It’s the author’s second case for TV journalist Flynn Martin, following 2025’s No Lie Lasts Forever. (Speaking of trends, have you noticed how often versions of the words “lie” or “liar” appear in recent novel titles? Could this be Donald Trump’s influence?) A plot brief calls Two Truths both “taut” and “haunting,” and explains that in its 462 pages, Martin confronts a serial killer who’s copycatting behaviors of her quarry in the preceding yarn. “Scandal. Conspiracy. Murder,” we are promised, with the précis adding: “Flynn hardly knows where to begin―and if her stalker has their way, she might not live to see the end.”

The fact of this being only the second installment in a continuing series could undermine any “might not live” anticipation. But let’s just move on ...

If my memory is correct, it was with the publication of Gillian McAllister’s 2022 page-turner, Wrong Place, Wrong Time, that I initially twigged to the frequent occurrence of shadowy profiles in artwork used for this genre. By the time Lauren Willig’s 2025 mystery, The Girl from Greenwich Street (based on the first well-recorded murder trial in American history, in which both Alexander Hamilton and Aaron Burr participated), saw print, I had already begun to amass a file of cover images. Today, I have well over 100 specimens of the breed in my computer files.

Fear not: I won’t inflict all of them upon you. The following 50 images should prove how overworked this motif is. All of these employ photographs, though I suspect a number of them have been manipulated, adding silhouettes where they did not originally appear.

Click on any of the covers below to open an enlargement.




















































This brand of ominous artwork has clearly played itself out. It’s time for book designers to move on to something different.