Showing posts with label Angela Landels. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Angela Landels. Show all posts

Monday, 22 December 2008

Capuchins Continued

Experienced illustrator Angela Landels has been at it again, providing the covers to the next batch of Capuchin Classics. I wrote about the first lot earlier, saying that they reminded me favourably of the first illustrated Penguin paperbacks.

At the time, one of Capuchin's staff wrote to me to let me know that, if I looked out for the 2009 books as the covers became available, I would see some (restrained) sauciness. They were not wrong!



Looking at their other forthcoming books, I am much intrigued: they pretty much all look like things I want to read. That they are including an H. E. Bates story collection is highly commendable, what with Bates being a brilliant writer at novella/short story length. He's one of those guys who everybody reads while they (the writer, not the reader) are alive, but then vanish into a black hole of neglect when they die. Only a few of his literally BILLIONS of books are now in print, but his previous ubiquity does at least mean that almost every second-hand bookshop in the known universe contains at least a few of his story collections. If you know what's good for you, you will read one of them and see what I'm talking about.



Other promising Capuchins to come include:





The Vercors book I'd never heard of, but listen to this blurb: Very early one morning a doctor is called out to attend the corpse of a newborn baby who has been killed, the father freely admits, by a shot of strychnine chlorhydrate which he himself has administered. The police are called, but where is the mother? ‘She was taken back to the Zoo yesterday.’ ‘The Zoo? Does she work there?’ ‘No, she lives there … The mother is not a woman, properly speaking. She is a female of the species Paranthropus erectus.’ That sounds like my cup of demented tea, and the restrained cover doesn't hurt, either.

Tuesday, 2 September 2008

Capuchin Covers

I have a lot of time for the little publishing firms which spring up every now and then, dedicated to resurrecting long-lost books which deserve better than to be forgotten. One of the newest of these ventures is Capuchin Classics in the UK (more about their background here). The first book of theirs which I have read is Tom Stacey's excellent The Man Who Knew Everything. It's sort of like a right-wing Graham Greene novella (and it's the quality of the writing rather than the politics that I'm commending here).


Stacey is, it seems, the publisher behind Capuchin. A number of other excellent books are in their list. What's interesting is that all of their covers, as far as I can tell, are drawn by Angela Landels, who has a long but not terribly Google-able history as an illustrator, going back decades. The world probably doesn't need yet another edition of Dracula, but I guess including far-from-neglected standards like Dracula or Hound of the Baskervilles helps pay the bills. At least they don't (yet) have the 189,452,988th edition of Pride and Prejudice on their list.








I like the way these covers are reminiscent of the way "classy" paperbacks used to look, like the original illustrated Penguins. Speaking of which, this is the edition of Pamela Hansford Johnson's An Error of Judgement which I own. It's a nasty, gripping book, well worth its rediscovery in this series. This Penguin cover is by Terence Greer.



Angela Landels has worked with Tom Stacey before, illustrating this children's book:



And here is one of her old advertising illustrations.