Pulp Art: Original Cover Paintings for the Great American Pulp Magazines
"Dope Menace boasts hundreds of full color images from the wicked subgenre of drug-exploitation narratives... The covers that made these authors books so easy to pick up are collected here for the first time, in all their seductive and transgressive glory."--Tucson Weekly
While we now enjoy this exploitative genre for its campy kitsch, gloriously bad writing, and outlandish misinformation, drug paperback books were once a transgressive medium with a perversely seductive quality.
Dope Menace collects together hundreds of fabulously lurid and collectible covers in color, from xenophobic turn-of-the century tomes about the opium trade to the beatnik glories of reefer smoking and William S. Burroughs’ Junkie to the spaced-out psychedelic ’60s. We mustn’t forget the gonzo paranoia brought on by Hunter S. Thompson in the ’70s, when anything was everything.
Author Stephen J. Gertz is a well-regarded authority on antiquarian books and contributor to Feral House’s Sin-A-Rama, an award-winning visual history of sleaze paperbacks from the sixties.
Annie Nocenti, longtime editor of High Times magazine, offers an informative foreword.
Country | USA |
Brand | Feral House |
Manufacturer | Feral House |
Binding | Paperback |
ItemPartNumber | Illustrated |
UnitCount | 1 |
Format | Illustrated |
EANs | 9781932595345 |
ReleaseDate | 0000-00-00 |