In the early-1970s Berkley Medallion published several
of Richard Stark’s Parker novels dressed up as a men’s adventure series. The
series was called: The Violent World of
Parker. Each novel was numbered; the numbering had no relationship to the
original publication order. The first in the series was Slayground, which was the fourteenth printed, and the second in the
series was Point Black, which, under
the title The Hunter, was the first
to feature professional thief Parker. The covers are very much like the men’s
adventure series published in the 1970s—explosions, shootings, guns and knives.
Two of my favorites, as far as cover art, are Point Blank, and Killtown (originally
published as The Score). The artist:
Lou Feck.
The opening paragraph of Point Blank:
“When
a fresh-faced guy in a Chevy offered him a lift, Parker told him to go to hell.
The guy said, ‘Screw you, buddy,’ yanked his Chevy back into the stream of
traffic, and roared on down the tollbooths. Parker spat in the right-hand lane,
lit hislast cigarette, and walked across the George Washington Bridge.”
The opening paragraph of Killtown:
“When
the bellboy left, Parker went over to the house phone and made his call. He
gave the operator downstairs the number he wanted, and waited while the phone
clicked and ticked and snicked in his ear. He was feeling impatient, and he was
about to go downstairs and put in the call from a pay phone when all the
clicking finally quit and a ringing sound started instead.”
I believe that cover from "Point Blank" was painted by notable book illustrator Lou Feck. You can see his signature in the lower right-hand corner.
ReplyDeleteThe cover of "Killtown" has what might be his initials, "L.F.," in the lower right-hand corner, but I'm not going to bet my life on it.
Cheers,
Jeff
Thanks Jeff. I bet KILLTOWN is also by Lou Feck.
ReplyDeleteBen