Donnerstag, 14. Mai 2009

Bonanza in the pocket. Old pocket books with artful cover illustrations are going collectible. Keep an eye on it!


There are people who start collecting books, esp. pocket books, just because of the smart, awsome or thrilling front cover illustrations, says AbeBooks in a special feature on this item. Call me Nostradamus, but in, let´s say, ten years, when paper books will be replaced by e-books, artful and extravagant front cover illustrations even of cheap pocket books will find their niche and become collectible at high prizes. So keep an eye on your pocket book and don´t sell it too early: who waits and sells in time, will maybe make a fortune.

Popular pocket books published in numerous and various editions for decades, have been printed with different covers representing the spirit of a decade: studying pocket book cover illustrations scholarly, tells a lot about culture and society in the years when the book was published.

Especially the old illustrated covers of British Penguin and Pelikan books have got their fans: books were published, magazins edited amazing collections, sets were uploaded at flickr; in 2006, the British Design Museum in London dedicated an exhibition to the national trademark Penguin Books and its gifted illustrators.

My favorite Penguin cover design which I proudly present on this blog, is by Michael Kitson: it was created in the 1960s for a book by H.J. Eysenck: Sense and Nonsense in psychology. It was first published in 1954 with a much more understated cover, still available at Amazon Marketplace. The 1968 edition I have in store is more of the psychedelic and Big Brother department; isn´t the eye awsome? I do love it. Inspite of avid googeling, I didn´t find any facts concerning the artist; what a pity.

The book´s author, H.J. Eysenck, was of German origin and lived and worked in London: the Berlin-born psychologist, who as a young man had left his native Germany in the 1930s because of political reasons (he wasn´t Jewish), was professor at the Institue of Psychiatry and was not the founder of but a major contributor to the modern scientific theory of personality, as Wikipedia tells us; H.J. Eysenk published about 50 books, of which "Sense and Nonsense" became one of his most popular with many editions; he died 1997 at age 81.

Quotation from the book, chap. 3, Telepathy and Clairvoyance, p. 106 of this edition: "According to T.H. Huxley it is a customary fate for new truths to begin as heresies and to end as superstitions."

Who is interested in this copy should send me an e-mail. attention: this old copy has got a certain "smell" of age and longtime waiting for a new and caring shelf.....

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