Wednesday, August 5, 2015

Paperback 902: The Black Curtain / Cornell Woolrich (Ace H-104)

Paperback 902: Ace H-104 (1st thus, 1968)

Title: The Black Curtain
Author: Cornell Woolrich
Cover artist: Stan Hunter [signature]

Estimated value: $12

AceH104
Best things about this cover:
  • Conjoined twins connected at the forehead are pulled apart like taffy. The good twin becomes a stock broker, while the evil twin becomes someone who shoots squirrels with a shotgun. The stress of all this causes their mother to have a stroke that lands her in a wheelchair. I hate covers that give away the whole plot.
  • The one-mass-of-images style of cover art was, unfortunately, a popular thing for about five years in the '60s. It's as if, as the amount of real estate for images on covers shrank, the images that should have filled a whole cover decided to huddle together in a kind of amorphous glob. Rather than give the cover art room to breathe, or simplifying the art concept, the cover designers give us ... this.
  • My favorite part of this cover is the astonishingly legible full-name signature of the cover artist. Now I know whom to be mad at.

AceH104bc
Best things about this back cover:
  • Text. Boring. Boo.
  • "You've heard of amnesia victims." Have I? How do you know? You don't know me.
    "An average person, like you..." Hey, that stings. YOU DON'T KNOW ME!
  • Frank Townsend would eventually find out he's spent three years pretending to be Dick Nixon.

Page 123~

The awful propinquity was over.

~RP

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2 comments:

Random White Guy said...

Cornell Woolrich sure liked the color black.

capewood said...

Welcome back