I did try Leiber again, later, narf,
with the same results. I find Leiber a tough read as he always seems to be imitating himself - if that makes any sense? I even felt a little iffy about Michael Chabon's "Gentlemen of the Road" which was a pastiche primarily of F&GM. Not my favorite Chabon.
His latest, just out in paperback, is "Manhood for Amateurs" which I found excellent.
I have a WALL full of books with great covers. Just ask Geo. If I could push past the WALL of toys that my nephews have embedded into that side of the attic, I'd take a picture and post it. Imagine the "wall of comics" as a "wall of paperbacks" and you'll have a good idea. The Klein books of the '60s and '70s did have some great covers, didn't they?
One reason you think of Frazetta when you see some Williamson is that you're most likely seeing some Frazetta, too. They did a lot of work together, especially in the 1950-1955 era. After that, they went their separate ways, Al to Atlas and Frank to L'il Abner - what a tragic waste that was...
Congratulations to you, Geo, on your retirement. Do you, like me, find it difficult to imagine where you ever found the TIME to have a job? I'm continually amazed that for 30 years I carved 9-10 hours out of every single day and devoted them to earning a living. Weird. Welcome to the leisure crowd.
It's sad that Al never got to see the first volume of the Flesk Archive series. He did see the proofs and was proud of them. Or at least happy. John does wonderful books at very reasonable prices. I'm always impressed by his efforts.
And I KNOW this is pissing into the wind, but did you ever consider that paying full price TO THE PUBLISHER might make that next volume in the series more possible and likely to happen that much sooner? If you like something, vote with your pocketbook. Amazon doesn't PUBLISH books and I'm surprised that more publishers don't react more negatively to seeing their product being sold there at prices that undercut their own sales possibilities. How could I, for example, sell enough copies of my Kinstler book at $39.95 when Amazon was selling it for $24.85 or some such? Sure convinced me not to sell to them or to any distributor again.
I got out of the book-selling business for the same reason. If everyone has to compete on price alone, I might as well have been selling widgets instead of books that I loved. "Productizing" everything is repulsive in that it transforms things we love and cherish into "merchandise" that can, should and will be trivialized by the lowest price: buy this book on Amazon for 1