Any
excuse is a good one to share beautiful or interesting dustjacket images. This
post focuses on books I've already read and/or reviewed here. Of course, all
the images are courtesy of my Fairy Godmother. (If you click on the images, you should be able to see them in their larger form.)
One
of the rarest titles here is LORNA LEWIS's
Tea and Hot Bombs, which I did write
about here
in 2017. This was one of the many books Grant Hurlock has shared with me in the
past few years, a fun and wonderfully detailed Blitz story from a young girl's
perspective.
ELFRIDA VIPONT's books aren't so terribly
rare, but their original dustjackets are hard to come by. I've only mentioned in
passing, I think, what a fan I am.
The Lark in the Morn and The Lark on the Wing were, as many of
you know, followed by The Spring of the
Year, Flowering Spring, and The Pavilion in Vipont's series about
the Haverard family. The three later books were reprinted by Girls Gone By, so
their original covers are at least familiar thanks to those.
Then
there's Vipont's lesser-known trio of books about the Conyers family and their
home, Dowbiggins. They're not as polished as the Haverard series, but I still
found them entertaining, and I love getting to see the original covers. I had
the U.S. edition of the third book, retitled A Win for Henry Conyers
I
have the Girls Gone By reprint of DORITA
FAIRLIE BRUCE's The Debatable Mound,
which I reviewed with her other Colmskirk novels here
and which, on its own, I made part of that year's Furrowed Middlebrow Dozen.
But the original dustjacket is still lovely to see.
I
reviewed KITTY BARNE's Family Footlights last year (see here),
and enjoyed it very much, but I didn't have any example of the cover art at
all. Voila!
I
mentioned having acquired MOLLIE
CHAPPELL's The Sugar and Spice,
along with a zillion other books, here
(yikes, book shopping posts are a bit demoralizing to look back on!), but I
never got round to reporting on it. It's a lovely little book, and perfect if
you, like me, have a strange fixation on stories of girls or young women
starting or operating a business.
In
2017 I mentioned here
very much enjoying DOROTHY SMITH's Those Greylands Girls and I commented
about the rather lovely illustrations, but I didn't have the quite eye-catching dustjacket at that
point.
And
finally, I would have sworn I had mentioned NANCY BREARY's charming, funny school story It Was Fun in the Fourth here somewhere, but if I did the blog's
search function is failing me. It's great fun, though, and it's lovely to have
a better dustjacket image for it.
As always, love those DJ images. Many thanks to you for posting and the FG for providing.
ReplyDeleteWow! Those are gorgeous. Each one with a name helps us pin down artists and their era. Thanks Scott
ReplyDeleteThe "Collins Seagull Library" spine must have made all the kids' library look very neat when placed together. I have a few with Raymond Sheppard artwork in them. And as you mentioned your fairy Godmother, I wonder if she also collects versions of classics such as Black Beauty in multiple editions. Sheppard drew art inside of a few classics but dustjackets to them are so hard to find