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Rear panel of the dust jacket with scenes from the movie.

 

“A great American story, together with 12 other tales, formerly published as THE LONG VALLEY. The story from which the Technicolor film was made, starring Myrna Loy, Robert Mitchum, Louis Calhern, Peter Miles and Sheppard Strudwick. A Republic Picture – Directed by Lewis Milestone. A Charles K. Feldman – Lewis Milestone Production.

 

“’The Red Pony’ is one of Steinbeck’s finest stories and the title story of this volume. It is one of thirteen magnificent stories, almost all set against the background of the Salinas Valley that Steinbeck has preempted as his literary domain. Here we see once more the paisanos of ‘Tortilla Flat,’ the barley-ranch hands of ‘Of Mice and Men,’ the agricultural workers of ‘In Dubious Battle’ – the farm boys, the idlers on the wharves of Monterey, the simple people of the land so profoundly brought to life in all of Steinbeck’s work.

 

“Contained in this volume are: ‘The Chrysanthemums,’ the ‘White Quail,’ ‘Flight,’ ‘The Snake,’ ‘Breakfast,’ ‘The Raid,’ ‘The Harness,’ ‘The Vigilante,’ ‘Johnny Bear,’ ‘The Murder,’ ‘St. Katy the Virgin,’ ‘Red Pony’ (3 Parts), ‘The Leader of the People.’

 

“Some of the finest work that the author of ‘The Grapes of Wrath’ has ever produced has been in the short story or novelette form. Always a superb craftsman who leans to economy of words and directness and concreteness of impression, Steinbeck often includes in a single tale as much material as another author would spread thinly throughout a novel.”

 

[From the blurb on the dust jacket]

   

1966; Play now... Kill later by Carter Brown. Cover art by Robert McGinnis

1964; The Never-was Girl by Carter Brown. Joke on the backcover: No bra ! Cover art by Robert McGinnis.

1953; The Tunnel of Love by Peter De Vries. Cover art by Al Werner

Training and Certification Sesion MAC OS X 10.5 Server (Leopard 201)

Capturing Camelot:

Stanley Tretick’s Iconic Images of the Kennedys

Kitty Kelley

 

I put together a set titled , #Mybooks.

These are #books / #magazines that I have read or will read at some point.

The books are mainly #nonFiction , #history, #biographies , #autobiographys and #historicalevents I found to be #interesting.

 

This is #myLibrary

Mount Tabor Park 2018 Calendar Back Cover. The Mount Tabor Park Calendar is an 9-year personal project of photographer Andrew Haliburton celebrating Portland’s beloved park and former reservoirs. The park covers 190 acres, offering many recreational amenities including paved and unpaved trails, play areas, basketball court, tennis courts and picnic areas. For over 100 years, the reservoirs functioned at the heart of Portland’s drinking water supply, balancing the flow of drinking water from the source at Bull Run. The Portland Water Bureau disconnected the reservoirs and removed them from the City's water distribution network in 2016.

1955 PBO; Barbary Slave by Kevin Matthews. [pseudonym of Gardner F. Fox] unknown artist

Russ Cochran first published the complete 22-issue run of “Weird Science” in a set of four hardcover volumes in 1978, reproducing all the covers in color and the stories in black & white.

 

“Weird Science” was a science fiction comic book magazine that was part of the EC Comics line in the early 1950s. Published by Bill Gaines and edited by Al Feldstein, the bi-monthly magazine ran for 22 issues over a four-year span, ending with the November–December, 1953 issue. EC’s science fiction comics were never able to match the popularity of their horror comics like “Tales from the Crypt, but Gaines and Feldstein kept them alive using the profits from their more popular titles.

 

As with other EC Comics, Gaines and Feldstein used some “Weird Science” stories to teach moral lessons. "The Probers" (#8) features a space shuttle doctor who pays no mind to dissecting various animals, only to end up on an alien planet where aliens plan to dissect him. In "The Worm Turns" (#11) astronauts have fun with Mexican jumping beans but face a similar situation when they hide in a piece of fruit on an alien world and are found by a giant alien. "He Walked Among Us" (#13) was a take on organized religion in which a Christ-like astronaut helps the impoverished populace of an alien world but is killed by those in power, prompting the birth of a religion. [Source: Wikipedia]

 

Back photo cover with Randolph Scott & Maureen O' Sullivan.

 

A bare-knuckled novel of love and lawlessness!

 

Ransom Price: $50,000

 

– for a fiery beauty, worth everything to her father, owner of Arizona’s richest mine.

 

To raw-boned Pat Brennan, the reward and the lady seemed enticing . . . so the desperate chase was on through rugged Sasabe Valley where the West’s most deadly gunslingers held her a kidnapped captive –

 

behind barricades of hot lead!

 

Movie trailer: www.youtube.com/watch?v=V_nJEMSKXjM

 

Backside of: Saïdjah en Adinda by Multatuli (Eduard Douwes Dekker) Fragment uit den Max Havelaar. uitgegeven in het Multitatuli herdenkingsjaar 1937 door de Wereldbibliotheek - vereeniging

Learning to Dance All Over Again

Johnson, Lorraine

Prelude PRL 12161

1978

MONOGRAM / GoBots

advertisement (Action Comics No 566 / backcover)

1959; Backcover of The Pocket Book of Esquire Cartoons.

1959; The Pocket Book of Esquire Cartoons Anthology. Cover art by E. Simms Campbell. Cartoons

1953 PBO; The Neon Jungle by John D MacDonald. Wrapped around cover. unknown Artist.

He's just a man in a rubber suit but very convincing for his day. The Gill-Man is an ingenious and complicated costume created after eight-and-a-half months' research by Universal-International makeup chief Bud Westmore and his staff. And the creature who lumbered around the lot dressed in the foam-rubber suit is an ex-Marine named Ben Chapman who played the part of the Gill-Man in the 1954 film. Costume designer Milicent Patrick had to change his shape 76 times before her sketches were finally approved. It was then up to Bud Westmore and Jack Kevan to actually create the costume which had to be completely waterproof because much of the action takes place underwater. Then, too, it had to be light and flexible enough so that Chapman could move easily and with realism in his part.

Kodachrome II

Kodachrome-X

Ektachrome-X

Kodak High Speed Ektachrome

 

1970/April “Popular Photography” magazine.

Back cover.

Dreams

Slick, Grace

RCA AFL1-3544

1980

"Just one more, Ma'am. The public wants to share your sorrow"

1964; The Trail of Fu-Manchu by Sax Rohmer. Cover artist is questionable on the backcover the publisher credits Robert Maguire, but the cover looks nothing near a real Maguire :-(

 

maybe a Jerry Podwil cover? compare 'Shadow of Fu Manchu'

1952; Backcover of Cartoon laffs from true. Cartoon by Cobean ?

1961; The Exotic by Carter Brown. On the backcover the same drawing in black and white. Cover art by Robert McGinnis.

When I think of my great Flickr friend, Jax, I think of ROCK & ROLL, Baby! And though I know some of these wouldn't be his ultimate picks, I chose some for the art value- the old album covers for some of the vinyl was AWESOME! One even says "Friends"/Amigos! (Thx to Ken for letting me use more of his collection!) A really eclectic collection of thoughts here, as Jax is complex in emotion and personality. I identify with SO much that is Jax! Thank you for being my friend, Jax- SO lucky to have found you out here! :)

 

PS. So I spent ALL day shooting record covers and just as I was going to sit down and work on this, our power went out! For 3 hours! Jeeeeeees!! :)

 

Sorry- should have listed these!

 

Row 1: Harry Nilsson

Row 2: David Bowie, Blue Oyster Cult

Row 3: Grateful Dead, Santana

Row 4: Emerson Lake & Palmer

Title: Photographs of Western India. Volume II. Scenery, Public Buildings, &c. [back cover]

 

Creator: Johnson, William

 

Date: ca. 1855-1862

 

Series: Photographs of Western India. Volume II. Scenery, Public Buildings, &c.

 

Part of: Photographs of Western India

 

Place: India

 

Physical Description: 1 album cover: part of 1 volume (100 albumen prints); 42 x 35 cm

 

File: vault_ag2002_1407x_2_187_backcover_opt.jpg

 

Rights: Please cite DeGolyer Library, Southern Methodist University when using this file. A high-resolution version of this file may be obtained for a fee. For details see the sites.smu.edu/cul/degolyer/research/permissions/ web page. For other information, contact degolyer@smu.edu.

 

For more information and to view the image in high resolution, see: digitalcollections.smu.edu/cdm/ref/collection/eaa/id/1165/

 

View the Europe, Asia, and Australia: Photographs, Manuscripts, and Imprints Collection

1955 PBO; That Girl on the River by Ted Fox. unknown Artist Ray Johnson

Right On

Various

K-Tel TU 2500

1976

1968; Drei Unzen Agonie by Carter Brown. Danny Boyd is chasing the stole parfum formula 'Agonie'. Cover art by Robert McGinnis. [ House of Sorcery ]

 

Love the parfum bottle on the backcover

1954; Beautiful Humburg by William H. Fielding. Cover art by Jack Floherty, Jr.

1951; Bombay Mail by Lawrence G. Blochman. Cover art by Robert Stanley. Map of India

Trans

Young, Neil

Geffen GRS 2018

1982

Solomon's Vineyard by Jonathan Latimer. Cover art by Samuel Peff

1961; The Misfits by Arthur Miller. Movie Tie-in. Photo by Ernst Haas. Starring Clark Gable, Marilyn Monroe and Montgomery Clift.

Normally, when you buy a 5 CD box of your favourite band you get a good mix of greatest hits, obscure B-sides and a few unreleased rarities. Not here. These are 4 hours of previously unreleased music.

 

The anthology includes the Trout Masc Replica sessions - instrumental tracks played by the Magic Band before Frank dubbed Don's vocals over them. Which is great, but it's not even the highlight. The highlights are "Tupelo" (recorded in 1966, so it's the John Lee Hooker song not the Nick Cave number) and "Black Snake Moan" (by Blind Lemon Jefferson). These are the 2 songs I play when I want to introduce a newcomer to the Captain's world.

 

Design and layout by Susan Archie. The front cover is here.

 

The box includes an illustrated booklet of 112 pages, with John 'Drumbo' French's history of the band, some other stories and many photos, all published for the first time. The whole set was released on John Fahey's Revenant label in 1999. Not cheap: I bought it in 2001 for 219 Deutschmark, about 100 US$ at that time, but worth it. It is out of print now and has become a collectors' item. It was even available on vinyl for a short while.

 

CD 1: Just Got Back From the City (1965 - 1967)

 

Obeah Man - 2:47

Just got Back from the City - 1:53

I'm Glad - 3:44

Triple Combination - 2:48

Here I Am I Always Am - 3:15

Here I Am I Always Am - 2:32

Somebody in My Home - 3:03

Tupelo - 4:15

Evil Is Going on - 2:33

Old Folks Boogie - 3:15

Call on Me - 3:04

Sure 'Nuff 'n Yes I Do - 2:11

Yellow Brick Road - 1:45

Plastic Factory - 2:57

 

CD 2: Electricity (1968)

 

Electricity - 3:42

Sure 'Nuff 'n Yes I Do - 2:57

Rollin n Tumblin - 11:08

Electricity - 3:54

Yer Gonna Need Somebody on Yer Bond - 6:25

Kandy Korn - 4:21

Korn Ring Finger - 7:23

 

CD 3: Trout Mask House Sessions (1969)

 

- 4:59

- 8:18

Hair Pie: Bake 1 - 5:04

Hair Pie: Bake 2 - 2:44

- 1:04

Hobo Chang Ba - 3:08

- 1:57

Hobo Chang Ba - 3:08

Dachau Blues - 2:06

Old Fart at Play - 1:23

- 1:01

Pachuco Cadaver - 4:08

Sugar 'n Spikes - 2:40

- 1:00

Sweet Sweet Bulbs - 2:30

Frownland (Take 1) - 2:51

Frownland - 1:52

- 1:10

Ella Guru - 2:33

- 0:08

She's too Much for My Mirror - 1:30

- 0:35

Steal Softly thru Snow - 2:22

- 1:51

My Human Gets Me Blues - 2:53

- 1:05

When Big Joan Sets up - 4:32

- 0:04

- 0:56

China Pig - 4:14

 

CD 4: Trout Mask House Sessions (continued) (1969)

This CD also includes some CD-ROM-accessible video/audio footage with live performances of "Electricity", "Sure Nuff" (1968), "Click Clack" (1973), "Big Joan," "Woe Is Me," "Bellerin Plain" (1970/1971), "Too Much For My Mirror" and "Human Gets Me Blues" (1969).

 

Blimp - 5:09

Herb - 1:06

Septic Tank - 0:51

Overdub - 5:26

 

CD 5: Captain Beefheart & His Magic Band Grow Fins (1969 - 1981)

 

My Human Gets Me Blues - 3:54

When Big Joan Sets up - 6:12

Woe Is Uh Me Bop - 2:46

Bellerin' Plain - 3:23

Black Snake Moan I - 1:01

Grow Fins - 5:09

Black Snake Moan II - 1:49

Spitball Scalped Uh Baby - 9:12

Harp Boogie I - 1:32

One Red Rose that I Mean - 1:45

Harp Boogie II - 0:53

Natchez Burning - 0:43

Harp Boogie III - 0:50

Click Clack - 2:49

Orange Claw Hammer - 4:36

Odd Jobs - 5:10

Odd Jobs - 5:08

Vampire Suite - 3:46

Mellotron Improv - 1:22

Evening Bell - 0:54

Evening Bell - 2:15

Mellotron Improv - 2:19

Flavor Bud Living - 1:14

Voices

Hall & Oates

RCA AQL1-3646

1980

This vintage 1963 issue of the Kexue Huabao magazine takes a look at watercraft.

Q: Are we not men? A: We are DEVO

Devo

Warner Bros GSR 3239

1978

back cover of LAB issue 0.5

photo: by Joseph Robertson (inspired by Laura Kicey's amphibious)

quote: You can never learn less. You can only learn more. (Buckminster Fuller)

 

Hooray! The first issue of LAB is finally out. I've been working on this project for the last coupla months, and it's been hard to not let the cat out of the bag.

 

I'm proud to say we've got interviews with fellow flickrites Simon Pais, Rodolphe Simeon, and Jim Lucio (aka Defekto). We've also re-published Laura Kicey's article on self-portraiture, Self:Interest (originally posted on Utata), which features photos from Dustin Fenstermacher, Edgar Dacosta, Lara Jade, Simon Pais, and Rodolphe Simeon.

Prisoner

Cher

Casablanca NBLP-7184

1980

1950;Madam is Dead by Robert Terrall. unknown Artist. The strangest Murder hunt ever Made!

Roger McGuinn and Band

McGuinn, Roger

Columbia PC 33541

1975

1957; Diamond in the Sky by Mary Orr. On the backcover James Avati gets the credits, but it isn't his style and the rich lady with make-up doesn't fit in a James Avati picture. The publisher must have made a misstake. His colleague and friend Tom Dunn did a lot of covers for Perma, He might also did this one.

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