In May I raved about Matt Taylor's wonderful John Le Carre covers for Penguin US. He's produced one more, for January's republication of the classic The Spy Who Came in from the Cold.
And here's the un-texted illustration.
Also! Heroes of this blog David Pelham and Berthold Wolpe have some of their celebrated cover designs for Penguin and Faber respectively available as fancy art prints here. If you have any wall space not obscured by jammed bookshelves, how about filling it with some book covers?
Here are the designs: Wolpe's famous text-based covers for Faber, and Pelham's famous A Clockwork Orange and J. G. Ballard covers.
Showing posts with label David Pelham. Show all posts
Showing posts with label David Pelham. Show all posts
Monday, 5 December 2011
Monday, 18 January 2010
Clockwork Copper
Not exactly a cover containing a cover, but instead a cover adapting another cover:
This is, of course, a variation on David Pelham's famous cover for A Clockwork Orange...
..which has been used elsewhere, too.
This is, of course, a variation on David Pelham's famous cover for A Clockwork Orange...
..which has been used elsewhere, too.
And if you want to make your own little paper toy Alex (and droogs), try this link.
Thursday, 11 September 2008
Romek Marber Round-Up Part 4
Here's the final part of the Romek Marber fiesta. Having looked at pretty much all of his crime covers, what else did he do? Well, for a start, these Angus Wilson novels:
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Then there are these Pelican books on Shakespeare:
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Some books on literacy and language:
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And a few strays:
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As far as I can determine, Romek Marber is still alive and well, though quite possibly retired. He gave a speech in 2005 about design and his own experiences to an audience at the Victoria and Albert Museum in London. As part of the same event, designer David Pelham gave a speech which is available online here, which is also very interesting for those who like to know about the making of books.
Now, if you haven't already, it's time to go and look at that flickr set of his other Pelican covers.
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Then there are these Pelican books on Shakespeare:
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Some books on literacy and language:
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And a few strays:
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As far as I can determine, Romek Marber is still alive and well, though quite possibly retired. He gave a speech in 2005 about design and his own experiences to an audience at the Victoria and Albert Museum in London. As part of the same event, designer David Pelham gave a speech which is available online here, which is also very interesting for those who like to know about the making of books.
Now, if you haven't already, it's time to go and look at that flickr set of his other Pelican covers.
Saturday, 15 March 2008
Ballardian
J. G. Ballard is one of the greats, a science-fiction writer who has achieved mainstream success (to the point where critics now pretend he never wrote SF at all), and whose worldview and style are consistent and quite recognisable. Wrecked vehicles, drained swimming pools, creeping sand, designer clothes, spilled blood: these are common elements throughout his work. He's also someone who has been unusually well served by cover artists over the years.
His recent novels have seemed stuck in a rut, repeating the same plot (someone, usually a doctor, moves into an expensive enclave, and gets involved with the rich psychopaths who live there). Look to his earlier work, though, and you'll find some ferocious, bleakly intelligent stuff. We'll look at two of them here as part of the End of the World project.
The Drowned World (1962) and The Drought (1964, and also known as The Burning World) were Ballard's second and third books--he has disowned his first, The Wind from Nowhere.
Here are the covers to these two books, from the 1974 Penguin reissues designed by David Pelham, most famous for his cover to A Clockwork Orange.

The Drowned World is an early global warming novel. Increased solar radiation has made the equator too hot to live in, and turned the rest of the globe into a lushly tropical nightmare, sinking into the rising seas. What's left of civilisation has fled for the melting poles. A few loners and eccentrics remain behind in London, using research work or military action as an excuse to stay, their behaviour slowly turning reptilian to cope with their changed environment. Slow-moving but very involving, it ends with a hallucinatory journey towards the boiling equator in search of a missing man. The Pelham cover above could only be improved by the use of a London rather than a New York landmark.
The Drought goes to the opposite extreme, positing a world deprived of fresh water, and following one man and his disintegrating family through their struggles to survive. Both books have a certain clinical--perhaps sociopathic--detachment from their characters. It's as though you're watching an extreme experiment that just happens to involve real human beings.
Here are the very different, but also effective, most recent editions, the current Harper Perennial versions.

Compare these with a couple of early US paperback covers.

And finally, here are a range of other covers, which you'll need to click on to view properly.

Here we have the recent Gollancz cover by Jim Burns (appropriately London-y), the original 1960s Gollancz hardback, a surrealist Penguin, and another Harper Perennial cover which was (I believe) never actually used.

And here we have the original Cape hardcover jacket, and three covers from various 1990s and 2000s editions published by the late, lamented Flamingo, who have since been dissolved into the HarperCollins empire.
For more on Ballard covers, and Ballard in general, visit the Ballardian.
UPDATE: Rick McGrath kindly sent more information: "Yes, Ballardian is great for comments about JGB's book covers, but to actually see the covers in question, you have to go to The Terminal Collection."
His recent novels have seemed stuck in a rut, repeating the same plot (someone, usually a doctor, moves into an expensive enclave, and gets involved with the rich psychopaths who live there). Look to his earlier work, though, and you'll find some ferocious, bleakly intelligent stuff. We'll look at two of them here as part of the End of the World project.
The Drowned World (1962) and The Drought (1964, and also known as The Burning World) were Ballard's second and third books--he has disowned his first, The Wind from Nowhere.
Here are the covers to these two books, from the 1974 Penguin reissues designed by David Pelham, most famous for his cover to A Clockwork Orange.

The Drowned World is an early global warming novel. Increased solar radiation has made the equator too hot to live in, and turned the rest of the globe into a lushly tropical nightmare, sinking into the rising seas. What's left of civilisation has fled for the melting poles. A few loners and eccentrics remain behind in London, using research work or military action as an excuse to stay, their behaviour slowly turning reptilian to cope with their changed environment. Slow-moving but very involving, it ends with a hallucinatory journey towards the boiling equator in search of a missing man. The Pelham cover above could only be improved by the use of a London rather than a New York landmark.
The Drought goes to the opposite extreme, positing a world deprived of fresh water, and following one man and his disintegrating family through their struggles to survive. Both books have a certain clinical--perhaps sociopathic--detachment from their characters. It's as though you're watching an extreme experiment that just happens to involve real human beings.
Here are the very different, but also effective, most recent editions, the current Harper Perennial versions.

Compare these with a couple of early US paperback covers.

And finally, here are a range of other covers, which you'll need to click on to view properly.

Here we have the recent Gollancz cover by Jim Burns (appropriately London-y), the original 1960s Gollancz hardback, a surrealist Penguin, and another Harper Perennial cover which was (I believe) never actually used.

And here we have the original Cape hardcover jacket, and three covers from various 1990s and 2000s editions published by the late, lamented Flamingo, who have since been dissolved into the HarperCollins empire.
For more on Ballard covers, and Ballard in general, visit the Ballardian.
UPDATE: Rick McGrath kindly sent more information: "Yes, Ballardian is great for comments about JGB's book covers, but to actually see the covers in question, you have to go to The Terminal Collection."
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