Cover art by Bob Haberfield, 1976.
• I’ve been reliably informed that Australian artist Bob Haberfield died recently but I can’t point to an online confirmation of this so you’ll have to take my word for it. “Science” and “sorcery” might describe the two poles of Haberfield’s career while he was working as a cover artist. His paintings made a big impression on British readers of fantasy and science fiction in the 1970s, especially if you were interested in Michael Moorcock’s books when they appeared en masse as Mayflower paperbacks covered in Haberfield’s art. Haberfield also appeared alongside Bruce Pennington providing covers for Panther paperbacks by HP Lovecraft, Clark Ashton Smith and others, although his work there isn’t always credited. Dangerous Minds collected some of his covers for a feature in 2017. (The US cover for The Iron Dream isn’t a Haberfield, however.)
• “Like Alice, who can only reach the house in Through the Looking-Glass by turning her back to it, Gorey reversed the usual advice to ‘write what you know’ and wrote the apparent opposite of his own situation.” Rosemary Hill reviewing Born to Be Posthumous: The Eccentric Life and Mysterious Genius of Edward Gorey by Mark Dery.
• “Orvil…wanders the countryside, visits churches, rummages in antique shops, and encounters strange men to whom he is no doubt equally strange.” John Self reviewing a new edition of In Youth Is Pleasure by Denton Welch.
• At the Wyrd Daze blog: Q&A sessions with Stephen Buckley (aka Polypores), Gareth Hanrahan, and Kemper Norton.
• “Fellini liked to say that ‘I fall asleep, and the fête begins’.” Matt Hanson on Federico Fellini’s phenomenal films.
• A Beautiful Space: Ned Raggett talks to Mick Harris about the thirty-year history of Scorn.
• Deep in the dial: Lawrence English on the enduring appeal of shortwave radio.
• Clive Hicks-Jenkins on making a picture for Annie Darwin (1841–1851).
• DJ Food looks at pages from Grunt Free Press circa 1970.
• Mix of the week: Fact Mix 814 by Loraine James.
• New music: Clash (feat. Logan) by The Bug.
• At BLDGBLOG: Terrestrial Astronomy.
• LoneLady‘s favourite albums.
• At Dennis Cooper’s: Porn 2.
• Betrayal (Sorcerer Theme) (1977) by Tangerine Dream | Science Fiction (1981) by Andy Burnham | Sorceress (2018) by Beautify Junkyards
Synchronicity, John – I picked up a copy of that very same edition of Clark Ashton Smith in my local Oxfam Books earlier this week, the first time I’d ever seen it. And here it is again!
That was a lucky discovery, the charity shops round here seldom have any paperbacks like this any more. I got most of the Panther CAS titles in the late 70s but Tales of Science and Sorcery always eluded me, to my great frustration. I eventually found a copy on eBay a couple of years ago that wasn’t as extortionately priced as they often are.
Haberfield’s covers for ‘Lurker At The Threshold’, ‘The Shuttered Room’ and ‘The Tomb’ are what first made me pick up on H.P. Lovecraft as a teenager because they were so disturbingly trippy; a fact for which I am eternally grateful.