Of course that's not true – not entirely – but there was certainly a sea change in cover design as the 1970s dawned, one which in truth started in the 1960s (and in some cases earlier) with the introduction of photography and the increasing use of separations and superimposing (as opposed to creating a dust jacket design, including the lettering, all of a piece). One of the most influential agents of change, at least as regards British – and British editions of – thrillers and mysteries and the like, was Raymond Hawkey, whose dust jackets for Len Deighton's nameless spy novels (beginning with The Ipcress File, 1962) ushered in a mania for covers sporting photos of artfully arranged props – secret papers, skulls, attache cases, almost always a gun – a mania that Hawkey himself (alongside disciples like Graham Miller and Bill Richmond) helped propagate over ensuing decades, even into the 1990s (superseded these days by the equally ubiquitous 'tiny man running into the distance' cover).
Was this a change for the better? I have my doubts. But at their best – and maybe even more so at their worst – the often artless, unsubtle, brutalist book covers concocted for thrillers in the '70s and '80s were evocative of this arguably darker, more brutal era (in life as much as in genre fiction). So, as a kind of dark flipside to Beautiful British Book Jacket Design of the 1950s and 1960s, I've established British Thriller Book Cover Design of the 1970s and 1980s, a permanent page tribute – after a fashion – to those covers, drawing on the books in my own collection.
I make no great claims for the covers herein (hence the lack of a 'beautiful' in the title). Few of them are, to my mind, the equal of those in the Beautiful British Book Jacket Design gallery – where I was trying to make the point that, the odd stubborn contemporary designer aside, we'd lost something vital in today's homogenised computerised cover design – whereas it could be argued the covers below are the direct antecedents of today's interchangeable crime and thriller covers. Nevertheless, looking at them makes me feel strangely nostalgic, despite the fact that I was only in short trousers in the 1970s and my teens in the 1980s (and accordingly gripped by other concerns – comics, music, masturbation). Given the choice I'd still prefer to see book covers like these on the shelves (or on Amazon) than the designed-by-committee efforts we see nowadays.
And despite the reservations expressed above, some of them are rather good – powerful, playful, provocative, arresting, striking – and even those that aren't still work as kitsch design (stand up and take a bow, Beverley le Barrow). Unsurprisingly, photographic covers far outweigh illustrated ones, but not to the total exclusion of the latter: I wanted the gallery be representative of thriller book covers of the period as a whole – at least as representative as my particular tastes allow – and illustrated covers were still being produced for thrillers in the '70s and '80s, although even these often either ape photography, are influenced by it, or react against it – the illustrations simplified, reduced to outlines and solid blocks of colour or negative space.
You may find the odd example from the decades either side of the '70s and '80s, if I think them apt – the layer between design eras being a porous thing – and unlike Beautiful British Book Jacket Design of the 1950s and 1960s, I'm including paperbacks as well in this gallery, as the division between those two formats, quite noticeable in the approach to cover design in the '50s and '60s, had virtually disappeared by this point. I've arranged the covers by author rather than cover designer this time – for the simple reason that arranging by designer would have meant breaking up certain writers' backlists, and that didn't seem right somehow – and there are cover credits, a note of format, and links to whatever I might have written about each book. I'll be adding to the gallery periodically and will post updates on the main blog when I do so. And as with all other pages and posts on Existential Ennui, since these are my books and I took the trouble to photograph or scan their covers (however shoddily), please, anyone who decides to 'borrow' an image, at least do me the courtesy of linking back to the page.
For more on the gallery, go here:
Introducing British Thriller Book Cover Design of the 1970s and 1980s
Existential Ennui's companion pages:
Beautiful British Book Jacket Design of the 1950s and 1960s
Patricia Highsmith First Edition Book Cover Gallery
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Ted Allbeury
The Twentieth Day of January (Granada, 1980); hardback, front jacket photograph by John Knights
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Peter Benchley
Jaws (Andre Deutsch, 1974); hardback, jacket design by Tom Simmonds
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Gavin Black
A Big Wind for Summer (Collins, 1975); hardback, jacket photograph by Christopher Ridley
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Oliver Bleeck
The Brass Go-Between (Hodder & Stoughton, 1970); hardback, jacket design by Kaye Bellman
The Highbinders (Hamish Hamilton, 1974); hardback, dust jacket photograph by Beverly Lebarrow
No Questions Asked (Hamish Hamilton, 1976); hardback, jacket design by Ken Reilly
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Victor Canning
Firecrest (Heinemann, 1971); hardback, jacket illustration by Bob Lawrie
The Rainbird Pattern (Heinemann, 1972); hardback, jacket photography by Graham Miller
The Finger of Saturn (Heinemann, 1973); hardback, jacket photography by Robert Golden
The Kingsford Mark (Heinemann, 1975); hardback, dust jacket photograph by Peter Phipp
The Doomsday Carrier (Heinemann, 1976); dust jacket uncredited
Birdcage (Heinemann, 1978); hardback, jacket illustration by Alun Hood
Birdcage (Heinemann, 1978); hardback, jacket illustration by Alun Hood
Vanishing Point (Heinemann, 1982); dust jacket photograph Andy Williams Photo Library
. . . . . . . . . .
Eric Clark
Black Gambit (Hodder & Stoughton, 1978); hardback, jacket design by Raymond Hawkey
The Sleeper (Hodder & Stoughton, 1979); hardback, jacket design by Raymond Hawkey, photography by Peter Williams
. . . . . . . . . .
Francis Clifford
A Wild Justice (Hodder & Stoughton, 1972); hardback, jacket design by Brian L. G. Cook
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Max Allan Collins
Bait Money (New English Library, 1976); paperback, cover uncredited
Blood Money (New English Library, 1977); paperback, cover uncredited
. . . . . . . . . .
Len Deighton
Twinkle, Twinkle, Little Spy (Jonathan Cape, 1976); hardback, jacket design by Raymond Hawkey, photography by Adrian Flowers
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James Dickey
Deliverance (Hamish Hamilton, 1970); hardback, jacket design by Bernard Higton
. . . . . . . . . .
Michael Dibdin
The Last Sherlock Holmes Story (Sphere, 1980); paperback, cover uncredited
. . . . . . . . . .
Ian Fleming
Casino Royale, From Russia, with Love, Goldfinger, Thunderball (Triad/Panther, 1977–1979); paperbacks; photography by Beverley le Barrow, gun prop designed and built by David Collins and Floris van den Broecke
James Bond Box Set (Triad/Panther, 1979); paperbacks
. . . . . . . . . .
Alfred Flett
Never Shake a Skeleton (Michael Joseph, 1973); hardback, jacket photograph by Beverly le Barrow
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Frederick Forsyth
The Fourth Protocol (Hutchinson, 1984); hardback, jacket design by Raymond Hawkey, jacket illustration by Harry Willock
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Simon Gandolfi
The 100 Kilo Club (Wildwood House, 1975); hardback, jacket design by Richard Ward
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John Gardner
The Airline Pirates (Hodder & Stoughton, 1970); hardback, jacket design by Peter Cope
. . . . . . . . . .
Brain Garfield
Death Wish (Hodder & Stoughton, 1973); hardback, jacket design by Jefferson Godwin
Death Sentence (Macmillan, 1976); hardback, jacket photograph by Steve Puplett
Recoil (Macmillan, 1977); hardback, jacket design by Cherriwyn Magill, photographed by Richard Davies
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Jack Gerson
The Assassination Run (BBC Books, 1980); hardback, cover photograph by Graham Ross
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Michael Gilbert
The Body of a Girl (Hodder & Stoughton, 1972); hardback, jacket design by Rene Brown
The Empty House (Hodder, 1978); hardback, dust jacket uncredited
Death of a Favourite Girl (Hodder, 1980); hardback, jacket design by Melvyn Gill
Mr. Calder and Mr. Behrens (Hodder, 1982); hardback, dust jacket uncredited
Trouble (Hodder, 1987); hardback, jacket by McNab Design
. . . . . . . . . .
William Goldman
Marathon Man (Macmillan, 1975); hardback; jacket design by Stan Fernandes
. . . . . . . . . .
William Haggard
The Old Masters (Cassell in 1973); hardback, jacket
design by Design Practitioners
The Scorpion's Tail (Cassell, 1975); hardback, jacket photograph by Michael Lyster, The Zoological Society of London
Yesterday's Enemy (Cassell, 1976); hardback; jacket photo by Mick Wells
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Adam Hall
The Scorpion Signal (Collins, 1979); hardback (proof thereof), dust jacket uncredited
. . . . . . . . . .
Raymond Hawkey
Side-Effect (Jonathan Cape, 1979); hardback, jacket design by Raymond Hawkey, photographed by Adrian Flowers
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George V. Higgins
The Friends of Eddie Coyle (Secker & Warburg, 1972); hardback, jacket design by Tom Simmonds
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Jack Higgins
The Eagle Has Landed (Collins, 1975); hardback, jacket illustration by Barry Glynn
Solo (Collins, 1980); hardback, dust jacket design by Donald Macpherson
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Patricia Highsmith
Ripley Under Ground (Heinemann, 1971); hardback, dust jacket illustration by Mohan
Ripley's Game (Heinemann, 1974); hardback, jacket photography by Graham Miller
Ripley's Game (Penguin, 1976); paperback, cover photograph by Paul Wakefield
The Boy Who Followed Ripley (Heinemann, 1980); hardback, photography by Bill Richmond
Found in the Street (Heinemann, 1986); hardback, design by Peter Dyer, photograph by Kinsman Taylor
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Geoffrey Household
The Sending (Michael Joseph, 1980); hardback, jacket by Chris Yates
Summon the Bright Water (Michael Joseph, 1981); hardback, jacket by Chris Yates
Rogue Justice (Michael Joseph, 1982); hardback, jacket by Chris Yates
. . . . . . . . . .
P. M. Hubbard
High Tide (Macmillan, 1971); hardback, jacket design by Bush Hollyhead (Nicholas Thirkell Associates)
The Dancing Man (Macmillan, 1971); hardback, jacket design by Bush Hollyhead (Nicholas Thirkell Associates)
A Hive of Glass (Hamish Hamilton, 1972); hardback, jacket design by Tom Sawyer
A Thirsty Evil (Macmillan, 1974); hardback, jacket illustration by Justin Todd
The Graveyard (Macmillan, 1975); hardback, jacket illustration by Cheryl Drower
The Quiet River (Macmillan, 1978); hardback, jacket photo by Chris Yates
Kill Claudio (Macmillan, 1979); hardback, jacket illustration by Barbara Lofthouse
. . . . . . . . . .
P. D. James
Cover Her Face (Hamish Hamilton, 1976); hardback, jacket photo by Beverly Lebarrow
. . . . . . . . . .
John le Carré
Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy (Hodder & Stoughton, 1974); hardback, cover photograph by Jerry Harpur, design concept by Lippincott and Margulies Limited
The Honourable Schoolboy (Hodder & Stoughton, 1977); hardback, dust jacket uncredited (cover photograph showing the Mekong River at sunrise
Smiley's People (Hodder & Stoughton, 1979); hardback, cover concept and photography by Stephen Cornwell
. . . . . . . . . .
Elmore Leonard
Fifty-Two Pickup (Secker & Warburg, 1974); hardback, cover photograph by Graham Miller
The Hunted (Secker & Warburg, 1978); hardback, photography by Graham Miller
The Switch (Secker & Warburg, 1979); hardback, photography by Bill Richmond
The Hunted (Hamlyn, 1980); paperback, cover uncredited
City Primeval (W. H. Allen, 1981); hardback, jacket photography by Howard Bartrop
City Primeval: High Noon in Detroit (Viking, 1987); hardback, jacket photography by Peter Chadwick, jacket design by Bet Ayer
Split Images (W. H. Allen, 1983); hardback, jacket photography by Howard Bartrop
LaBrava (Viking, 1984); hardback, cover uncredited (photos credited to Stockphotos International)
Swag (Penguin, 1983); paperback, cover photograph by Peter Chadwick
Cat Chaser (Viking, 1986); hardback, jacket photography by Peter Chadwick, jacket design by Bet Ayer
Touch (Viking, 1988); hardback, jacket photograph by James Walker, jacket design by Bet Ayer
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Robert Littell
The Debriefing (Hutchinson, 1979); hardback, jacket illustration by Jeremy Ford
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Desmond Lowden
Bellman & True (Eyre Methuen, 1975); hardback, jacket illustration by Mike Heslop
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Robert Ludlum
The Bourne Identity (Granada, 1980); hardback, front jacket photograph by Graham Miller
The Bourne Supremacy (Granada, 1986); hardback, jacket photograph by Colin Thomas
The Bourne Ultimatum (Grafton, 1990); hardback, jacket photograph by Colin Thomas
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Gavin Lyall
Blame the Dead (Hodder & Stoughton, 1972); hardback, jacket design by Colin Andrews
The Secret Servant (Hodder & Stoughton, 1980); hardback, jacket design by Raymond Hawkey, photography by Peter Williams
The Conduct of Major Maxim (Hodder & Stoughton, 1982); hardback, dust jacket design and photography by Melvyn Gill
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Ross Macdonald
The Moving Target (Fontana, 1966; 1971 second impression); paperback, cover uncredited
The Underground Man (Collins, 1971); hardback, jacket design by Roy Belcher
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Donald MacKenzie
The Kyle Contract (Hodder & Stoughton, 1971); hardback, dust jacket uncredited but possibly by Gordon King
Raven and the Paperhangers (Macmillan, 1980); hardback, jacket photograph by Bill Richmond
Nobody Here by That Name (Macmillan, 1986); hardback, jacket illustration by Martin White
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Ian Mackintosh
The Brave Cannot Yield (Robert Hale, 1970); hardback, jacket design by Kingaby/Keeman
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Arthur Maling
Decoy (Michael Joseph, 1971); hardback, jacket photograph by Beverly le Barrow
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Dan J. Marlowe
The Name of the Game is Death (Gold Lion, 1973); hardback, dust jacket uncredited
Operation Overkill (Coronet, 1973); paperback, cover uncredited
Operation Endless Hour (Coronet, 1973); paperback, cover uncredited
Operation Fireball (Gold Lion, 1973); hardback, dust jacket uncredited
Operation Breakthrough (Gold Lion, 1973); hardback, dust jacket uncredited
Operation Drumfire (Gold Lion, 1973); hardback, dust jacket uncredited
. . . . . . . . . .
Berkely Mather
With Extreme Prejudice (Collins, 1975); hardback, jacket illustration by Barry Glyn
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Charles McCarry
The Miernik Dossier (Hutchinson, 1974); hardback, dust jacket uncredited
The Tears of Autumn (Hutchinson, 1975); hardback, jacket illustration by Ian Robertson
The Tears of Autumn (Hutchinson, 1975); hardback, jacket illustration by Ian Robertson
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James Mitchell
A Magnum for Schneider (Herbert Jenkins, 1969); hardback, jacket designed by Ian Kestle
Russian Roulette (Hamish Hamilton, 1973), hardback, jacket photograph by Beverly Lebarrow
Death and Bright Water (Hamish Hamilton, 1973), hardback, dust jacket uncredited
Smear Job (Hamish Hamilton, 1974), hardback, jacket design by Ken Reilly
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David Morrell
First Blood (Barrie & Jenkins, 1972); hardback, illustration by Michael Codd
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Anthony Price
Tomorrow's Ghost (Gollancz, 1979); hardback, jacket photograph by Oliver Hatch
The Hour of the Donkey (Gollancz, 1980); hardback, jacket photograph by Oliver Hatch
Soldier No More (Gollancz, 1981); hardback, jacket photograph by Oliver Hatch
Gunner Kelly (Gollancz, 1983); hardback, jacket design by Brian Nicholls, front of jacket photograph Bruce Coleman Ltd.
The Alamut Ambush (Gollancz, 1983); hardback, jacket designed by Brian Nicholls
Sion Crossing (Gollancz, 1984); hardback, dust jacket design uncredited, jacket illustration from a contemporary drawing by Theodore Russell Davis
Here Be Monsters (Gollancz, 1985); hardback, dust jacket design uncredited, jacket picture from The Romance of the Rose (XV century) courtesy Bodleian Library, Oxford
. . . . . . . . . .
Richard Price
The Wanderers (Chatto & Windus, 1975); hardback, jacket design by Graham Palfrey-Rogers
. . . . . . . . . .
Sarban
The Sound of His Horn (Sphere, 1970); paperback, cover uncredited
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Richard Stark
Point Blank! (Coronet Hodder Fawcett, 1970); paperback, cover uncredited
The Rare Coin Score (Coronet Hodder Fawcett, 1970); paperback, cover uncredited
The Steel Hit (Coronet Hodder Fawcett, 1971); paperback, cover uncredited, attributed to Raymond Hawkey
Run Lethal (Coronet Hodder Fawcett, 1972); paperback, cover uncredited, attributed to Raymond Hawkey
Deadly Edge (Coronet Hodder Fawcett, 1972); paperback, cover uncredited, attributed to Raymond Hawkey
Slayground (Coronet Hodder Fawcett, 1973); paperback, cover uncredited, attributed to Raymond Hawkey
The Split (Gold Lion, 1973); hardback, dust jacket uncredited
The Green Eagle Score (Gold Lion, 1973); hardback, dust jacket uncredited
The Sour Lemon Score (Gold Lion, 1973); hardback, dust jacket uncredited
The Sour Lemon Score (Gold Lion, 1973); hardback, dust jacket uncredited
Butcher's Moon (Coronet Hodder Fawcett, 1977); paperback, cover uncredited
Point Blank (Allison & Busby, 1984); hardback, jacket design by Mick Keates
The Man with the Getaway Face (Allison & Busby, 1984); hardback, jacket design by Mick Keates
Slayground (Allison & Busby, 1984); hardback, jacket design by Mick Keates
The Outfit (Allison & Busby, 1988); hardback, jacket design by Mick Keates
Ross Thomas
The Fools in Town Are on Our Side (Hodder & Stoughton, 1970); hardback, jacket design by Wilson Buchanan
The Porkchoppers (Hamish Hamilton, 1974); hardback, jacket design by Bernard Higton
If You Can't be Good (Hamish Hamilton, 1974); hardback, jacket photograph by Beverly Lebarrow
If You Can't be Good (Pan, 1975/6); paperback, cover uncredited
The Money Harvest (Hamish Hamilton, 1975); hardback, jacket photograph by Beverly Lebarrow
Yellow Dog Contract (Hamish Hamilton, 1977); hardback, jacket photograph by Beverly Lebarrow
Chinaman's Chance (Hamish Hamilton, 1978); hardback, jacket photograph by Beverly Lebarrow
The Eighth Dwarf (Hamish Hamilton); hardback, jacket photograph by Beverly Lebarrow
The Mordida Man (Hamish Hamilton, 1981); dust jacket designed by David Butler
Missionary Stew (Hamish Hamilton, 1984); hardback, dust jacket designed by Pat Doyle.
Briarpatch (Hamish Hamilton, 1985); hardback, dust jacket designed by Pat Doyle.
Out on the Rim (Century Hutchinson, 1987); hardback, dust jacket uncredited
. . . . . . . . . .
Jim Thompson
The Getaway (Sphere, 1973); paperback, cover uncredited
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Donald E. Westlake
The Hot Rock (Hodder & Stoughton, 1971); hardback, jacket design by Lipscombe, Lubbock, Ewart and Holland
Bank Shot 1972 (Hodder & Stoughton, 1972); hardback, dust jacket uncredited
Bank Shot 1972 (Hodder & Stoughton, 1972); hardback, dust jacket uncredited
I Gave at the Office (Hodder & Stoughton, 1972); hardback, dust jacket uncredited
Jimmy the Kid (Hodder & Stoughton, 1975); hardback, jacket design by Tony Page
Two Much! (Hodder & Stoughton, 1976); hardback, dust jacket uncredited
Nobody's Perfect (Hodder & Stoughton, 1978); hardback, jacket design by Mark Wilkinson
A New York Dance (Hodder & Stoughton, 1979); hardback, jacket artist Mark Wilkinson
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Gordon Williams
Big Morning Blues (Hodder & Stoughton, 1974); hardback, jacket design by Jeff Godwin
. . . . . . . . . .
Andrew York
The Infiltrator (Hutchinson, 1971); hardback, jacket design by Keith Inman
The Expurgator (Hutchinson, 1972): jacket design by Michael Bramman
The Fascinator (Hutchinson, 1975): jacket photograph by Chris Parker
The Combination (Severn House, 1984); hardback, photograph of mosque in Isfahan, Iran, courtesy of Michael Lancaster
Great great stuff!
ReplyDeleteCheers Hylen!
ReplyDeleteGreat selection. Most are good, and even the duff ones have a period appeal. These covers bring back YA reader memories of seeing the shelves in the genre fiction sections of libraries in the early/mid 80s. Lots of it was from the 70s, and the bleak feel of these sort of covers & the stories left a lasting impression. As you say, a brutal era. I was more into sci-fi (especially the downbeat/dytopian stuff, loads of the UK ones seemed to involve civilisation collapsing or at the least London being destroyed) and a bit of horror than the straight thrillers, but I read plenty of those too. The overall look of the covers across genres was very similar. Top marks for the Callan covers, and for the related article on it you linked to. I was lucky to find some of them second hand about 10 years ago. Big fan of the series. Anyway, keep up your good work!
ReplyDeleteI know what you mean about libraries in the 1980s, Leroy: I was in my teens then, and I can picture a lot of these books on the shelves of my local library in Beckenham (whether they were actually there or not). Thanks for the comment, and the kind words about the Callan stuff.
ReplyDeleteGreat collection of covers. Helen MacInnes (Fontana) had a good selection in the 1960s, and there were the 4-square Desmond Cory covers, all uniform in style.
ReplyDeleteThanks Nik – duly noted!
DeleteCheck mout Raymond Hawkey's opening credit sequence for 'Oh What A Lovely War!'. Very late sixties early seventies. Most of the above covers remind me of newsagents in the seventies and early eighties selling crime paperbacks. As well as being taken to see relatives who couldn't have cared less what salubrious crime/action fiction they left lying around the house.
ReplyDelete