I started reading Don Pendleton’s adventure series The Executioner in middle school and it
was (somewhat embarrassingly) the staple of my reading for two or three
years. I even belonged to the “book club”
and received the newest edition of The
Executioner, and its two offshoots Able
Team, and Phoenix Force every
month. A new one every month! Those were good
days. Go to school for six hours, come
home and read a little Mack Bolan.
I read online somewhere the cover art for the
series, which is somewhere around 425 titles as I type this, is being
updated. The most recent cover style has
featured an embarrassing—embarrassing because I would be shamed if I took it to
the counter for purchase—“live action” artwork featuring a model posing with
guns, grenades, knives, bazookas, and god knows what else.
The change made me reminisce about the cover styles
I read as a teenager, and as I looked back at some of the older covers many
gave me something like the thrill I used to feel when that book club package
arrived each month. So much action. So little responsibility. I made a brief survey of the Internet and
identified 12 variations of style, and each of them, particularly those
published pre-1990 really spoke to me.
Variation 1. This is a little disingenuous because the first
two novels—War Against the Mafia and Death Squad—were published with their
own unique covers, but I’m going to ignore them and focus on the first
“standard” cover style. The first 38
novels were published by Pinnacle Books, and, mostly, actually written by Don Pendleton. The cover art is terrifically lurid with
weaponry and violence. These titles were published between 1969 and March 1980.
Variation 2.
Variation 3. A small change to the original Gold Eagle covers. The overall design did not change, but “Don Pendleton’s” was added above the large block letter “Mack Bolan”. These titles were published between June and December 1983—entry numbers 54 – 60.
Variation 4.
Variation 5.
Variation 6.
Variation 7. This represents the biggest change since the Pinnacle novels. The “Mack Bolan” shrinks (and is consistently yellow or white), the title font changes significantly, and the cover art becomes less of a cohesive scene and more of a montage with something approaching a posing Mack Bolan. A blurb from the San Francisco Examiner is also added—“The biggest of all adventure series.” These titles were published between February 1988 and August 1989—entry numbers 110 – 128.
Variation 8.
Variation 9.
Variation 10.
Variation 11.
Variation 12. The newest variation is something of a mixture of the most recent and the older titles. It appears to be art rather than photography. The montage effect is gone, and the title is nice and clean. Conspicuously missing is the Series Book No. on the cover. These titles will begin arriving in August 2014.
My favorite Mack Bolan, Executioner covers will always be the Gil Cohen covers.
ReplyDeleteDo you happen to know the name of the model who played him for the 300s, I looked him up once, he was with a Canadian modeling agency but I forgot his name. Just curious. I liked him better than the new guy. But of course the illustrated 80s covers when Phoenix and Able had their own series were the best.
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