NB: A version of this post also appears on Existential Ennui.
So apparently there’s some movie out in the States starring Jason Statham and based on the nineteenth novel in a twenty-four-book series featuring a cold-hearted taciturn career criminal. Dunno what that’s all about, but whatever it is, I’m certainly not about to let it distract me from the task in hand (especially since said film isn’t out here in the UK until March)—namely: blogging about a bunch of vintage Parkers I’ve recently come into possession of. Because in a really quite remarkable multiple Westlake Score, a couple of weeks ago I managed to get my filthy mitts on four—count ’em, four—U.S. first edition paperback originals, all from the same local book dealer. What’s more, three of them comprise a run of the first three Gold Medal editions of the Parkers (the fourth I’m saving for a separate post as it dates from earlier in the series), and are in about the best condition I’m ever likely to see, with nary a cracked spine between them.
To recap (yet again—feel free to skip this paragraph if you’re already au fait with the publishing facts from previous posts . . . or indeed if you have a life): in 1967 Fawcett/Gold Medal acquired the rights to the Parker novels from previous rights-holders Pocket Books, who published the initial eight Parkers from The Hunter (1962) to The Handle (1966). Gold Medal would go on to publish the next four books in the series and bring The Hunter and The Seventh (1966) back into print under new titles reflecting their movie adaptations, i.e. Point Blank! and The Split respectively. Whereas the Pocket Parkers all had cover art by Harry Bennett, the Gold Medal Parkers had cover art by Robert McGinnis.
Anyway, back at the start of the year, I was idly perusing AbeBooks looking for a cheap, decent condition first edition of the eighteenth Parker novel, Backflash—my battered ex-library copy being in danger of falling apart—when I came across a listing from a bookseller based in Brighton (just down the road from where I live in Lewes): Alan White Fine Books. I was immediately intrigued; I’d been under the impression that I was aware of every secondhand bookseller in the area, and yet here was one I hadn’t come across before. I took a look at Alan’s website and discovered that he had a number of other Richard Stark books besides Backflash (he still has . . . just not quite as many now) . . . including some American paperback originals, all in reportedly excellent condition. A number of emails later, and as well as the copy of Backflash (I’ll be offloading my ex-library copy onto a local charity shop soon, so in the unlikely event that you happen to find yourself in Lewes in the near future, look out for it), for a very reasonable price I had procured the following:
The Rare Coin Score, Parker #9, published in the U.S. in paperback by Gold Medal in 1967. This was Gold Medal’s first Parker, and it boasts to my mind Robert McGinnis’s best representation of the man himself—looking, incidentally, not unlike Josh Brolin, who I reckon would’ve been a much more suitable choice for the lead in the above-mentioned movie featuring a cold-hearted taciturn career criminal. Ahem.
The Green Eagle Score, Parker #10, also published by Gold Medal in 1967, again with McGinnis cover art. Now, this one might ring a bell with Existential Ennui/Violent World of Parker regulars, as I blogged about this very same edition in both places in November as a Westlake Score, which I won on eBay. That copy was a bit battered, however, whereas this one is in pristine condition. And if it strikes you as odd that a body would buy two copies of exactly the same book . . . well, you clearly haven’t spent enough time lurking on Existential Ennui.
And the third and final Gold Medal Parker I acquired from Alan White was The Black Ice Score, Parker #11, published by Gold Medal in 1968, cover art by McGinnis. In truth this is one of my least favorite Parkers, but I saw a copy of the Gold Medal edition get snapped up right in front of my eyes at last year’s London Paperback & Pulp Bookfair before I could reach it, which kind of rankled (us collectors can be sore losers), so I was dead chuffed to find this lovely copy in Alan’s possession. And even more chuffed to relieve him of it.
And since I already have on my shelves the Gold Medal editions of Point Blank! and The Split, that means I now only need the Gold Medal edition of The Sour Lemon Score (Parker #12, 1969) in order to complete my Richard Stark/Gold Medal collection. Rest assured that I’ll be posting an equally prolix update if and when I obtain one.
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Envy!
These covers would make great posters.
I’ve said it one hundred times and I’ll say it one hundred more–that cover of The Rare Coin Score is my favorite Parker cover by a country mile. I would give my eye teeth for the original McGinnis painting.
Nice score! All of it.
I posted this on EE, but I’ll put it here as well: I really, really like these covers. Except for The Split. Parker looks like he’s wearing a mask of a bizarre combination of Burt Lancaster and Ronald Reagan. It actually frightens me.;-)
My personal favorite is the original PB edition cover for “The Seventh”. You know Parker would have to be super tough, if he actually looked like that!
I particularly like the teaser blurbs that go with the pictures.
They’re really hard to choose from, but right now I pick The Green Eagle Score cover as my favorite. Something so 60’s and cool about it.
The only thing: I don’t personally envision Parker as being as handsome as these covers make him.