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Surfing Alien

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Everything posted by Surfing Alien

  1. I love it. It's pretty special regardless. I think I've seen Signets hardcover bound like this.
  2. Rudy Nappi painted that killer cover. Like most pb artists, he got paid so little that he did TONS of work from photos and tear sheets, rather than pay models. Amazing what they did with limited resources
  3. One of the highest paid and most prolific paperback cover artists of the Golden Age.
  4. Moderns aren't vintage so it's a fair exclusion. We're really talking about 40's-60's although there's a fair amount into the 70's and early 80's with comic book material digests
  5. This too is a nice example of a Digest. This one of the numbered, individual novel type highly prevalent in the 40's - 60's with a suwheet GGA cover of Dr. Wertham engaging in what he engaged in when he wasn't having headlight fantasies about Phantom Lady Digests are easy. I know 'em when I see 'em. These are them
  6. Here's a nice example of a Digest, this one of the periodical type with a suwheet Saunders bondage cover
  7. She Lived In Sin (The Sins of Donna Kenyon) Croydon No. 101R 1954 Cover art by Lou Marchetti Some of these late number Croydons you just never see, this one is a first for me. The story is a reprint of Stork Books No. 6, which may account for the "R" in the numbering This incredible copy is one of my pickups from the LA show that I'm finally getting to re-bagging and cataloguing. I am definitely going to have to do another sale because I can't get my overflow boxes to fit back in the closet anymore
  8. Swamp Hoyden by Jack Woodford and John B. Thompson Uni Book No. 71. Cover art by Saul Levine (Re-used on Whittington's "Cracker Girl") Once you start collecting digests, especially Uni Books and the others with thin cover paper, it becomes a tough itch to scratch This one has it all, high grade, swamps & cleavage. What more could a man ask for ?
  9. While we're still on the re-use subject, I dug back once again to the legendary Doohickamabob thread where he posted literally every Avon/Realistic comic/paperback re-use (starting on page 8) so no one has to go looking or wondering what there was... A fun thread and a great effort on the original poster's part
  10. Well, I got GCD to give Johnson his credit (70 years later) it would be nice to see it on the label https://www.comics.org/issue/263278/
  11. True, but much more formulaic I think. Whittington delivered so many varied noirs in different genres, it is tough to comprehend how good he was
  12. Yeah, there's quite a few appealing books by Harry... This is one of the most awesome re-packagings ever
  13. Harry Whittington titles for when you put your man-pants on Spectacular GGA on these U.S.A. Phantom digests.
  14. A great Whittington. But his are almost all great - I'm trying to be a completist but it ain't easy... Such a smooth teller and blessed with tons of top notch cover artists to match the content in awesomeness
  15. Beautiful display Aside from my "wife-supported" Ikea shelf system in my office I usually show, we have a few Billy bookcases in our living room that we've had since our first apartment back in Brooklyn. The glass fronts are awesome, you can make so many cool displays in them
  16. Nice. I'm really glad I grabbed a few back in the days of sanity. Moving to another artist, "The Dark Man" cover may be my favorite I have of Senf's covers. A gem of a tale is what led me to the cover 👍
  17. Some nice space babes from the collection I just bought For some reason, Popular 447 is always trashed. This one is smooth as silk