Thursday, November 3, 2011

Top-Shelf Treats

I somehow missed acknowledging--on November 1--the third anniversary of the launch of Pulp International, a wonderfully eclectic blog. But let me make that up today by highlighting its collection of 25 top paperback covers. Justly represented are such artists as Robert Abbett, Robert McGinnis, Sam Peffer, and William Teodecki.

Tuesday, November 1, 2011

Knock-Outs

Many readers are familiar with the work of David Drummond, the Canadian designer behind the elegant covers of the University of Chicago Press’ recent reissues of Donald E. Westlake’s Parker novels--books he wrote under the pseudonym Richard Stark. However, The Casual Optimist’s Dan Wagstaff points out that Drummond has now created fronts for another series of UCP books, the four novels Westlake/Stark composed about Parker’s sometime partner, thief and actor Alan Grofield: The Damsel (1967), The Dame (1969), The Blackbird (1969), and Lemons Never Lie (1971, which was also re-released by Hard Case in 2006).

In the same way as Drummond built his Parker novel covers around the imposing shadow of a gun, he uses the shapely outline of a woman as the consistent element on his Grofield fronts. Wagstaff has posted all four of those covers here. And the designer talks a bit about his work on the books here.

The four Grofield novels are due out in paperback next spring, with a blanket introduction by critic Sarah Weinman.

Minney Mart

Men’s Pulp Mags features Part I of a well-illustrated new interview with Bruce Minney, who blogger Subtropic Bob describes as “one of the most talented and prolific of the many great artists who created cover paintings and interior illustrations for men’s adventure magazines from the mid-1950s to the mid-1970s.”

Part II of this Minney interview is here, and Part II is here.