My first pic is a bit distressing, but it does illustrate something I have mentioned before - the fragile nature of some Penguins of the 1970s and 1980s....
This is my "Ionicus" edition of Full Moon, printed in 1979. The gum used in the spine is brittle, and, as so often, the spine snapped in the process of reading, detaching whole chunks of pages. This used to happen regularly, no matter how careful you were. Oddly enough, this tragedy occurred with some titles and not others; it was as if quite different binding processes and materials were used on different books.
As the above copy is clearly not readable, I ordered a cheap copy from ebay as a substitute. This is what arrived:
I think these editions date from about the year 2000 or slightly before. I will not say much about this cover, except that it is not to my taste. It would have done as a reading copy, were it not for the type inside, which seems to me ugly - not even fully justified. There is a grim humour in the fact that the type is called Monotype Trump:
I thought I might be able to read this at a pinch, but it took me only a few lines to realise I simply couldn't; the shot was not on the board. I therefore ordered yet another copy, this one printed in 1961 with a rather jolly cover by Geoffrey Salter:
The interior type is the same as the Ionicus edition, and therefore perfect.
But all this is beside the point. We are here to talk about Ionicus, and so we shall. This is his cover design for Full Moon, dating, I think, from 1975:
It is a mid-range Ionicus, not one of his best but far from his worst. Freddie Threepwood examines the artistic work of his friend Bill Lister and is not convinced. They are in Bill's room at the Emsworth Arms, which provides accommodation of a sturdy but not opulent nature to the passing wayfarer. The effect is rather static (unlike Geoffrey Salter's effort, for instance), but what of it? Bill is just passing through, and his shirtings are strewn negligently hither and thither.
Here is the first paragraph of this edition in good old sturdy Monotype Garamond:
I adore your blog! Thank you so much for another delightful post (I am glad the distressing edition at least has a sympathetic owner).
ReplyDeleterummy about the full moon copy! and thank you for sharing again--- the Geoffrey Salter cover seems like a perfect mend for the situation. the art style is very charming.
ReplyDeleteYour blog is quite a tresure trove!
ReplyDeleteIs one permitted to reblog one of this gems on one's humble blogsite? If so, how?
Pip pip.
Thank you for your kind comments. I don't know how one would reblog it, but if you can, please do!
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