Paperback 1151: Pocket Books 341 (3rd ptg, 1946)
Title: The Body in the Library
Author: Agatha Christie
Cover artist: Uncredited
Condition: 8.5/10
Value: $10
- People say she's crazy, she's got diamonds on the ... what is that, the lap of her dress?
- The sparkly bits are actually gorgeous, though this poor woman has fallen in a rather unbecoming way. More abstract shape than human form. The absolutely ridiculous wig-hair is not helping (if you look at the image upside-down, it looks even sillier, like her wig is sliding back off her scalp)
- Condition on this book is fantastic. Slight spine lean, and maybe a little spine fading, but otherwise the book is bright. Immaculate. The perma-gloss is intact and everything.
Best things about this back cover:
- If the cover is making you a little seasick because everything's a little ... tilty, that's because of a printing anomaly. Sometimes with early paperbacks the printing, particularly on covers, is not perfectly square or centered. I find it charming.
- "Hearthrug" is a weird-looking word. Like three words fighting to be the main word and all of them somehow losing.
- I don't know what color that "backless evening dress" is on the cover, but it ain't white.
- I love the idea that a dead body on a hearthrug looks merely "incongruous" in the Colonel's library. "Her corpse clashes with the escritoire. Oh, no, this won't do at all."
Page 123~
Florence looked uneasily at Miss Marple. Her eyes looked rather like those of one of her father's calves.Miss Marple said, "Sit down, Florence."
~RP
Oh my god is Miss Marple gonna slaughter her. "We were supposed to have veal for dinner this evening, Florence, but your father has no more calves available. Which brings us to the question of why I've brought you here..."
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1 comment:
the priniting's correct, the book binding (cutter) was the problem
probably
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