Montana
Bad Man was a paperback original published by Pocket Books’
imprint Perma Books in 1957, which is the very edition that caught my eye. The
artwork is starkly creepy as it washes from the muted color of a face to an ink
drawing of a crumpling gun hand. A splash of red bandanna crosses both elements,
and adds an intriguing abstraction of violence. The artist: Jerry Allison.
The opening paragraph:
“The
big Schuttler freight wagon rocked along the ungraded road in the thickening
gloom, creaking and rumbling ponderously behind the six-mule team.”
Roe Richmond was a pseudonym for Roaldus Frederick
Richmond (1910 – 1986). He spent his life in New England; Vermont and New
Hampshire, specifically. He started as a pulp writer—writing sports stories—and
moved to paperbacks in the 1950s. His novels were primarily westerns. Contemporary
Authors, in its brief biography of Mr Richmond, quotes the following—
“I
have loved writing from boyhood. I cared for no other career once I learned I
couldn’t make the Biggies in baseball, but most of my life I’ve had to work at
other jobs in order to support myself and family.”
This is the fifteenth in a series of posts featuring the cover art and miscellany of books I find at thrift stores and used bookshops. It is reserved for books I purchase as much for the cover art as the story or author.
2 comments:
Great cover art. I think I have read Perma Books from Pocket Books. The back cover looks familiar.
Excellent cover. What an amazing illustration.
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