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French Girls Are Vicious and Other Stories, by James t farrell. Panther Books, 1958.
Today in pulp: should you create rat/human hybrids? Note I said should, not could. Genetic engineering took a big leap forwards recently, and its implications are quite interesting.
Let's take a look...
At #5: Widow In White, by Evelyn Bond. Ace, 1973. Cover by Walter Popp. This is classic Popp: great use of perspective and a knack of suggesting movement - especially in big dresses!
At #7: Legacy Of Terror, by Deanna Dwyer. Magnum Gothic, 1971. This was one of a number of gothic romances penned by horror writer Dean R Koontz.
At #67: The 13th Doll, by Ann Loring. Avon Gothic Original, 1973. Cover art by Walter Popp. Another beachfront gothic...
At #82: The One-Faced Girl, by Charlotte Armstrong. Ace Gothic, 1969.
Lovely jagged rip effect on this cover.
Appeals against the sentence went in for many years, but Uncle Sam wasn't going to let up. It all ended in 1976 with Hamling on parole but banned from working in the obscene book trade.
Molino was following in illustrious footsteps: Achille Beltrame had made his career illustrating for La Domenica del Corriere and had defined its cover style - direct and dramatic.