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User / swallace99 / Sets / Back Covers
Steve / 3,624 items

N 4 B 2.6K C 0 E Dec 18, 2012 F Dec 18, 2012
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William McClellan - Hotel Love
(Original Title: Call Girl, Phoenix Press, 1939)
Griffin Books No# 3, n.d.; ca 1950
Cover Artist: unknown

Tags:   griffin vintage paperback digest pulp romance

N 7 B 2.5K C 0 E Dec 26, 2012 F Dec 26, 2012
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Evelyn Berckman - House of Terror
(Original Title: The Blind Villain)
Dell Books D345, 1960
Cover Artist: Tommy Shoemaker

Tags:   dell vintage paperback gothic mystery

N 4 B 3.8K C 0 E Dec 21, 2012 F Dec 21, 2012
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Thomas W. Duncan - Gus the Great
Dell Books F50, 1953
Cover Artist: Morton Roberts

Tags:   dell vintage paperback circus adventure

N 2 B 2.1K C 0 E Dec 20, 2012 F Dec 20, 2012
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Jack Finney - The House of Numbers
Dell Books A139, 1957
Cover Artist: Daniel Schwartz
Back Cover: Photo of San Quentin prison

Tags:   dell vintage paperback crime movie tie-in jack palance

N 8 B 10.0K C 2 E Dec 18, 2012 F Dec 18, 2012
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Tereska Torres - Women's Barracks
Gold Medal Books 132, 1951
Cover Artist: Baryé Phillips

Originally published in 1950, this account of life among female Free French soldiers in a London barracks during World War II sold four million copies in the United States alone, and many more millions worldwide. Women's Barracks is based on the real-life experiences of the author, Tereska Torres, who escaped from occupied France, arrived as a refugee in London, and joined other exiled Frenchwomen enlisting in Charles DeGaulle’s army, then stationed in Britain awaiting an invasion of their homeland by Allied forces.

But Women’s Barracks is no ordinary war story. The grim setting of an urban military barracks—with its freezing dorms, rationed food, and unbecoming regulation underwear—became the setting for one of the steamiest novels of its time. Leaving “normal” civilian life behind, the women enter an all-female realm, where passionate attachments soon form—between older experienced women and young innocents, between butch officer types and their femmes subordinates. And for those with more traditional leanings, there was a city full of soldiers to be had—sometimes two or three at a time.

Despite a tone that is frank rather than lurid, Women’s Barracks was banned for obscenity in several states. It was also denounced by the House Select Committee on Current Pornographic Materials in 1952 as an example of how the paperback industry was “promoting moral degeneracy”; not one of the committee members could even bring himself to read the offending passages aloud for the Congressional record.

But the novel became a record-breaking bestseller, and inspired a whole new genre: lesbian pulp.

Tags:   gold medal vintage paperback 50s lesbian pulp autobiogrphy


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