Wednesday, August 21, 2024

Paperback 1099: Savage Night / Jim Thompson (Black Lizard [unnumbered])

 Paperback 1099: Black Lizard [unnumbered] (1st ptg, 1985)

Title: Savage Night
Author: Jim Thompson
Cover artist: Kirwan

Condition: 8/10
Value: $15

[Autumn Leaves, Ithaca, NY (July 2024)]

Best things about this cover: 
  • It's not a great cover, and I paid too much (by my cheap standards), but I can't help it, I gotta have these early (pre-Vintage takeover) Black Lizards. They feel like an origin story—my hardboiled origin story, the origin of the Hardboiled Revival. And Jim Thompson was definitely my gateway hardboiled author. I don't think I've read this one, though.
  • This looks like the poster for a bad late-'80s straight-to-VHS erotic thriller
  • That bullet looks like lipstick. Is it lipstick? Roll-on deodorant? It's giving bullet, but out of context and with no other object for scale, it just looks weird.
Best things about this back cover: 
  • Bah, buncha quotes. Treating this book like it's legitimate literature, there's your first mistake. I don't need high-minded blurbs, I need lurid, turgid cover copy, and possibly more bad art.
  • No idea what Cassill means here. Maybe he's talking about subject matter. I know he's not talking about quality. Or better not be.
  • Too many ellipses in that Village Voice review. Suspicious, especially since it's merely descriptive and not particularly evaluative. Makes you wonder what they left out.
Page 123~
    I winked and jerked my head over my shoulder. "Just borrowed a drink of your whiskey, Mrs. Winroy. Had a sudden attack of stomach sickness."
    "It's perfectly all right, Carl." She gave me back the wink. "Sick at your stomach, huh? Well, that's what you get for eating with cops."
~RP

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3 comments:

  1. I also thought the bullet looks like a lipstick. With the crosshairs and the empty shell casings, I'm pretty sure it's a bullet, though a lipstick mixed in with the shells would be an interesting image. All that's probably contributing to the erotic thriller vibes.

    Cassill's statement could be true, just not in a way that flatters Thompson. That or the ellipsis contains something like "are much better writers" followed by the names of three schlocky authors.

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  2. Kind of looks like the cross hairs were drawn with a lip stick

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  3. Clearly Cassill means that Thompson was writing in Des Moines.

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