Tuesday, February 28, 2023

IT'S ALL WATER OVER THE BRIDGE

Flood. Deluge. Squall. Gale. Tempest. Cyclone. Hurricane. Typhoon. Tsunami.

However you want to record it, EXTREME WATER EVENTS are terrible things. They are costly, destructive, and worst of all, deadly. I would prefer they exist only as fictional fodder in the pages of a book, or in the form of an illustration on its covers, and never in the real world. But they do exist in the real world, and they are increasing in intensity and numbers at a rate that should be alarming to all of us.

When I was a seasonal worker for the Colorado State Forest Service, I participated in the cleanup and restoration of the Big Thompson Canyon after its historic flash flood of July 31, 1976. It claimed the lives of 144 people and caused tens of millions of dollars in property damage. It was thought at the time to be a "once in a hundred year event." But thirty-seven years later, on September 11-12, 2013, it happened again, only this time it wasn't a freak flash flood but an increasingly heavy downpour that went beyond the Big Thompson Canyon, covering more than 4,500 square miles from Boulder to just over the Wyoming border. The flood damage was estimated at 4 billion dollars. Unbelievably, only nine people were killed this time around.

But so much for that old, "once every hundred years," theory.

Now of course we know exactly what is causing some of the extreme water events that have taken place in the 21st century. It's climate change. And not surprisingly, we have only ourselves to blame for it. If we don't get smart right now and make the necessary changes that are absolutely required to stop the Earth's temperature from rising, we will continue to face more and more extreme water events, and every other type of extreme weather event that the elements can deliver. And so will our children. And their children too. 

But don't take my word for it, listen to what the science is saying:

"Human activity is the main cause of climate change. People burn fossil fuels and convert land from forests to agriculture. Since the beginning of the Industrial Revolution, people have burned more and more fossil fuels and changed vast areas of land from forests to farmland. Burning fossil fuels produces carbon dioxide, a greenhouse gas. It is called a greenhouse gas because it produces a “greenhouse effect”. The greenhouse effect makes the earth warmer, just as a greenhouse is warmer than its surroundings. Carbon dioxide is the main cause of human-induced global warming and associated climate change. It is a very long-lived gas, which means carbon dioxide builds up in the atmosphere with ongoing human emissions and remains in the atmosphere for centuries. Global warming can only be stopped by reducing global emissions of carbon dioxide from human fossil fuel combustion and industrial processes to zero, but even with zero emissions, the global temperature will remain essentially constant at its new warmer level. Emissions of other substances that warm the climate must also be substantially reduced. This indicates how difficult the challenge is."  --- CANADIAN GOVERNMENT Climate Assessment, 2023.

"Given the tremendous size and heat capacity of the global oceans, it takes a massive amount of heat energy to raise Earth’s average yearly surface temperature even a small amount. The roughly 2-degree Fahrenheit (1 degrees Celsius) increase in global average surface temperature that has occurred since the pre-industrial era (1880-1900) might seem small, but it means a significant increase in accumulated heat. That extra heat is driving regional and seasonal temperature extremes, reducing snow cover and sea ice, intensifying heavy rainfall and changing habitat ranges for plants and animals—expanding some and shrinking others. Most land areas have warmed faster than most ocean areas, and the Arctic is warming faster than most other regions."  --- NOAA (National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration) Climate Assessment, 2023.

"The future is made of the same stuff as the present."                                              
                                       --- Simone Weil


ALL THAT BEING SAID, the books featured below were all written and illustrated in the 20th century, back when extreme water events were considered to be just a normal part of the natural cycle of weather, or Earth's mutability, or else the product of someone's incompetence, negligence, or criminal behavior.

You know, a simpler time in history when flood insurance was actually affordable. 


High Water was published in hardcover by Little Brown & Company in 1954. The jacket art depicts a rescue taking place on the rooftop of a flooded Mississippi River home, and was produced by one of the 20th century's most prolific book cover illustrators, Barye Phillips (1905-1968). Phillips was such an accomplished illustrator during his 30 plus years as a professional that I have no doubt he inspired countless others to follow in his footsteps.

Richard Bissell (1913-1977) was a Harvard graduate and the author of twelve books, a mix of fiction and non-fiction alike. Allegedly, after college he was able to "secure a mate's and pilot's license--both all tonnage--on the Upper Mississippi and Monongahela rivers, the only author so licensed since Mark Twain." I guess you could say Bissel was following in the footsteps of greatness too. 

"At about two miles an hour and mostly less the Royal Prince pulled out of St. Louis and started shoving a tow of eight coal barges upriver. And with all the water out of Minnesota, Wisconsin and Iowa coming down the valley, the crew was in no happy mood: FIRST MATE DUKE: I have been in floods before and they never bothered me a particle... but we weren't having no big time with this flood." CAPTAIN CASEY: "We are shoving damn poor... and what's more she is steering like we had left the rudders back at St. Louis." PILOT IRONHAT: "Next thing I expect to see is a whole town coming down-river including the courthouse and the depot." GREASE CUP, CHIEF ENGINEER: "We have all got a few bolts loose. We none of us have to be here unless we want to." Except Marie Chouteau, who was a refugee they took off a flooded farm house roof: Marie had on just a pair of blue jeans and a lot of mud... MARIE: "Yeah-- I'm in a hell of a fine shape. The farm is under six feet of water, Maw and Paw and Frank are all drownded... and I'm layin here  in a steamboat. Sure, I'm O.K." ARKANSAS, DECK HAND: "That's bad luck, havin a wooman aboard. You look at the record you'll find most always when a boat gets into some trouble or another why there was a wooman aboard." With the river working up to flood crest, and with the Captain right away feeling sorry for Marie-- "it sometimes is a shame the things that can happen..."

Rain of Terror is about an American reporter living in Rome who accepts an assignment in a mountain village to cover a regional flood, one that is still ongoing and has so far killed 32 people. Mix in a half dozen subplots involving murder, art thefts, political power struggles, a troublesome teenage waif, the reporter's clinging lover (the boss' wife wouldn't you know), and a hired killer bent on his demise and you have one hardboiled, convoluted mess of a razor-thin, entertaining disaster novel.

The powerful cover art by James Meese has our haunted protagonist attempting to rescue his lover from a torrent of water. Meese (1917-1971), who excelled at painting damsels, dames, molls and gumshoes in sometimes intense situations, was in constant demand by paperback houses in the 1950's and 60's, including Gold Medal, which published Rain of Terror in 1959.

"You pig!" she shouted. "I thought you'd been killed!"
    She stopped. She moved forward and put a hand on his head. "Darling, I'm sorry. The rain, the floods, all those men dead on the mountain. It's been terrible for you. I wasn't thinking. Forgive me."
    He tilted back his head. The hand slid over his forehead and then he was looking into her eyes. He said, "Your husband's dead, too. I saw him. He's deader than a doornail. He went floating off down the mountainside."
    Her eyes went a fraction wider. She stared. She shook her head and the tangled, wet hair tumbled around her face. A half-uttered sob died in her throat.
    She whispered, "Jake, you didn't..."
    They both sat without moving a muscle.
    "No," he said. "Did you
?"

Malcolm Douglas was a pseudonym of Ronald Douglas Sanderson, an Englishman who emigrated to Montreal, Canada in 1947. Sanderson (1920-2002) worked a variety of odd jobs at first, factory worker, waiter, retail clerk, and nightclub singer before finding permanency as a writer/producer for the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation. His first novel, a literary endeavor written in 1952, failed to find an audience and so he set his sights on writing crime novels instead, ultimately publishing 25 of them in his lifetime. The worldwide settings in his books were often a reflection of his own eventual travel wanderings, from Europe to Africa to America and then back to Europe, where he lived out his remaining days with his wife and kids in Alicante, Spain.



The Flood was published in hardcover by Hodder and Stoughton of London in 1956. The jacket artist is unknown. John Creasey (1908-1973) was among the most prolific writers in 20th century history, with more than 600 novels published in just under forty years using at least twenty-eight different pseudonyms. In one year alone (1937) he published 29 books. He often spent fourteen hours a day at his typewriter. Several of his fictional characters have become household names to crime fiction fans, such as The Toff, Gideon of Scotland Yard, The Baron, and Doctor Palfrey. Many of his novels were also adapted into radio, film and television. In 1962 he received the Edgar Award for Best Novel (Gideon's Fire), and in 1969 he received the Mystery Writers of America's highest honor, the Grand Master Award.

"The worst floods that have ever been known start to besiege the world. Islands disappear and Great Britain is on the point of extinction. In a state of National crisis Dr. Palfrey comes to the fore. But he is unable to do anything until he knows the source of the flood. A terrifying and thrilling adventure--all the more frightening because it seems quite possible.




Hodder published a paperback edition of The Flood in 1958. They used the same art that was on the original hardcover edition, but with the added figure of a woman superimposed over it. By default, paperbacks have always had to strive harder than hardbacks to attract attention.

"Islands had been disappearing-- under the worst floods ever known. Natural Disasters? Or something much more sinister? Dr. Palfrey was not alone in fearing the latter. Was it mere coincidence that Sir Gabriel Davos, the research chemist, had been in the vicinity of each island before it was overtaken by misery? And what were the mysterious crab-like creatures that had invaded the islands in their thousands? One thing Palfrey did now-- that unless he acted soon, the whole of Great Britain might be threatened. Not merely with floods, but with extinction!"  


 
Here in America it was Lancer that first published The Flood (1968) in paperback. Not having read the novel I wasn't quite sure what kind of creature was being depicted on the cover so I enlarged it. I still don't know what it is, but a good guess would be some kind of giant octopus (the Octi! Duh!), with a double hog snout for a nose.

An artist was not credited.

"Noah and the Ark... At times Dr. Palfrey was willing to admit that the world was less than perfect. He and the agents of Z-5, the international intelligence agency that he headed, had many times saved the world from the forces of darkness... but when the strange water creatures known as the OCTI invaded the land, bringing the powers of an ocean free from the barriers of the shore, it seemed that only the madman who considered himself the new Noah would survive--and with him his insanities, two by two!"







Why I failed to recognize the collectibility of the the Blackwater Series when they were first published in paperback by Avon in 1983 is something I can't explain. If I was to try and collect them now it would cost me a small fortune, assuming that I could even find high-grade copies for sale, which I doubt.

Michael McDowell (1950-1999), according to Stephen King and practically everyone else who has ever read his works, was a major genre writing talent, if not literary talent (even if he didn't believe so himself). If I told you what screenplays he also wrote that were made into films and TV episodes you would probably be amazed, even if I think only one of them has actually stood the test of time (hint: it combines Halloween with Christmas). McDowell was also a collector of death memorabilia, and after his passing from Aids in 1999, all seventy-six boxes of his unique collection was donated to Chicago's Northwestern University, where it went on display in 2013. Items included death pins, photographs and plaques from infant caskets, along with a bunch of other macabre things. Weird, to be sure, but from my experience the best writers have always been a little weird.

Blackwater I, The Flood, was published by Avon in 1983 as a paperback original. Volumes II thru V were also published in 1983. The cover art on the series was produced by Wayne Barlowe, who became celebrated among science fiction fans in 1978 for writing and illustrating the outstanding Barlowe's Guide to Extraterrestrials. In 1996 he struck again with his Barlowe's Guide to Fantasy. In between and after he produced literally hundreds of outstanding genre book covers, and he's still at it today.

The Volume 1 Corgi paperback edition, with its hissing snake, was published in 1985. Although not credited, the cover art is most likely that of Welshman Terry Oakes, one of the United Kingdom's finest artists of the fantastic, with hundreds of jaw-dropping book covers to his credit.

"Elinor Dammert was rescued from her room in the flood-isolated hotel. What strange mission brought her there? How did she survive her isolation? Why was she in the Alabama town of Perdido that Easter morning in 1919? These questions would never be answered because larger and even more terrifying ones would be asked. She soon would become a strange presence in the wealthy Caskey family and their town. Horror, virtually unspeakable and nearly undescribable, follow."  --- Avon edition, 1983.




Torrential rains have infiltrated the Broderick copper mine on Hungry Hill, threatening its operation. In an effort to halt the water a hole is blown in the side of the mine to divert the water away from the shaft. Water then roars down the road engulfing everything in its path. A carriage occupied by the flame-haired Fanny Rosa and her young friend Jane is caught unawares in the torrent, overturning. John Broderick, Fanny's brazen husband, is seen here carrying his wife to safety. Don't even ask about poor little Jane.

Walter Baumhofer is the artist who produced the manly rescue scene on the cover of the 1951 Cardinal paperback edition of Hungry Hill, Daphne du Maurier's bestselling Irish family saga, though he wasn't the first to illustrate her novel. Among the notables that have are; Hugo Steiner-Prag, Bernard D'Andrea, Harry Bennett, Renato Fratini, Clark Raymond, Gene Szafran, and Fred Pfeiffer. Those names notwithstanding, Baumhofer is still a giant in the field of illustration and fine art. He provided pulp magazine covers and interior illustrations for decades, including and especially Doc Savage, before moving on to paperbacks, the slicks and art galleries.

"When Fanny-Rosa Flower married young John Brodrick, she brought a reckless train into the smug Brodrick blood. From this combination of opposing temperaments all of their troubles flowed. Here is the powerful story of the destiny that engulfed them. Here is the unforgettable drama of men and women who lived and loved with all the passionate wildness of the Irish country that surrounded them."
 


I've not been able to find one drop of information about the British book illustrator D. Brook. That he or she was a prolific cover artist is obvious, but only if you happen to be familiar with the written works of Elinor M. Brent-Dyer, one of the United Kingdom's most beloved authors of children literature. Brent-Dyer wrote more than a hundred books during her lifetime (1894-1969), which included the popular Chalet School series, all 57 volumes, set among the beautiful Tyrolean Alps. Brook illustrated dozens of her books throughout the 1950's and 60's for publisher W. & R. Chambers Ltd., and also for the other authors that they held in tow. It's a body of artwork that is as admirable in its accomplishment as it is just plain fun to look at. (Expect a post on Brook in the future, or the Chalet series itself).

The Chalet School and Richenda
was published by Chambers in 1958. The story is typical for this series aimed at teens: A young girl, Richenda Fry, is sent to the Chalet School as punishment for disregarding her father's instructions. She is quickly welcomed though, losing her sulkiness in the process, and with the help of her new school chums she finally makes amends with her deeply agitated father. A happy ending yes, but before we get to that Richenda and her friends are nearly drowned in a flooded river.


This is a solid cover illustration that I came across one day depicting what looks to be a flooded schoolhouse, or house anyway, according to its title, The House in the Floods. The novel was published by Blackie & Son of London in 1942. The only information about its author, Norah Pulling, that I could find was that she wrote maybe a half of dozen children's books between the 1940's and 50's. The jacket art was produced by Inez Topham, a prolific British illustrator of juvenile books during the 1930's, 40's and 50's, about whom very little has been written about.

CLICK ON IMAGE TO ENLARGE

Trying to describe in detail the many themes, or plot devices, in Nevil Shute's In the Wet, would probably take up more space than I am willing to commit, so here's an abridgment: Alcoholism, opium-addiction, disease, adventure, romance, sailing, flying, religion, reincarnation, soul-transference, extra-sensory-perception, futurism, democracy, voting-rights, nationalism, socialism, classism, racialism, a bomb (on a plane, of course), and oh yes, the Commonwealth and the English Monarchy. Oh, and I almost forgot---monsoon rains. That's what's coming down on the cover of the 1953 U.K. hardcover first edition published by William Heinemann.

The jacket art was produced by Val Biro (1921-2014). Biro was a Hungarian, but on the eve of WWII his father sent him to England to study art. He never left the Isles after that and became an extremely prolific illustrator of books for children and adults alike, and on both sides of the Atlantic.


Ballantine published this paperback edition of In the Wet in 1964. Their cover art was not credited, but I believe it could be the work of Robert Blanchard. Blanchard (1914-1993) was born in Massachusetts and learned to draw at the Worcester Art Museum. While serving in the Coast Guard during WWII he was sent to work on films in support the war effort at Disney. After the war he found work in NYC as an illustrator and Art Director for several publishing companies. In the late 1950's he began to produce cover art for Ballantine Books. He is noted today primarily for his fine art paintings, many of which are abstract, which he continued to produce well into his retirement.

"Woven into the richly dramatic background of Australia today, "the wet", is a story of tomorrow-- where the tensely moving love of an Australian flyer for an English girl has to take second place to a loyalty of the future that threatens to engulf their love and their lives."




Taken at the Flood is a novel that was first published in hardcover by Macmillan in 1957. The jacket art was produced by the aforementioned Val Biro. George Woodman based his story on the North Sea Flood which struck the East Coast of England on January 31, 1953 (as well as coastal areas in Scotland, Belgium and the Netherlands). The flood was borne by a combination of high spring tide, low pressure, and a severe windstorm over the North Sea. The storm tide rose 18 feet above sea level, crashing inland. Sea walls were breached in more than one-thousand places, inundating 250 square miles and forcing more than 30,000 people from their homes. 307 lives were lost in England alone (hundreds more at sea and in neighboring countries). According to the paperback blurb, Woodman, was "well qualified to write this novel for he was living in a house backing on the beach at Whitstable when the great flood of 1953 struck the town. He still lives there."
 



The first paperback edition of Taken at the Flood was published by Pan in 1959. Its cover art was produced by Englishman Stephen Richard Boldero (1898-1987). Boldero was a highly skilled illustrator who flourished on British paperbacks during the 1950's and 60's. 

"Death or Disaster came that night to many people in Hunstable. For a few it meant surprising change... The ATTEMPTED SUICIDE and her RESCUER each of whom found fresh hope-- and a new reason for living. The BANK ROBBERS whose long term plans so unexpectedly came off. The EMBEZZLER-- foiled in a quick getaway."  --- Pan edition, 1959.



Dutch native and American emigrant Jan de Hartog also wrote about the catastrophic North Sea Flood of 1953, but from the unique perspective of two children experiencing it in the Netherlands. The U.S. edition of The Little Ark was published by Harper & Brothers in the same year as the flood. The jacket art was produced by Shirley Smith, about whom very little is known.

"To millions of Dutch people the floods of 1953 were an occasion of tragedy and heroism. To Jan Brink and his sister Adinda, the small-sized hero and heroine of the story, the floods brought a magnificent adventure. They shared it with their friends, Bussy, a pup, Ko, a white rabbit, and Noisette, a kitten who was more adult than anyone suspected, and Prince, a tyrannical cock. This is a hard crew to keep together in a flood, but it was managed with the help of the toughest sailors afloat, and an unlikely collection of civilian rescue volunteers who hung grimly to their personal prides and jealousies through everything. When the waters have at last receded from the steeples and treetops, Jan and Adinda have seen the raw edges of many different men a d women, one murder, and a series of comic, inspiring and breath-taking events."  


Tempo Books was one of several U.S. publishers to issue de Hartog's novel. This paperback edition was published in 1972. The cover artist is unknown.

"The great hurricane of 1953 swept away the dikes of Holland, drowned thousands of farmers, and left others homeless, but it also brought in a tidal wave of human kindness from all over the world. Among the flood survivors were ten-year-old Jan Brink, a war orphan, and the half-caste little Indonesian girl, Adinda, both of the foster children of Parson Grijpma. Stranded first in the houseboat and then in a hospital ship, the waifs learned that disaster makes all men brothers, and that adults treat children more kindly than usual."



Floodgate was published in hardcover by Collins of London in 1983. The jacket art was not credited. It was one of the last novels that Alistair MacLean wrote, and like all of his work after Breakheart Pass it isn't in the same caliber as his early stuff (some would say Breakheart Pass isn't very good either, but I thought it was absolutely great!). I have no plans on reading any of his novels written after 1974, such as this one, but Floodgate's plot about the Netherlands being flooded by an act of terrorism does sound intriguing.

"Amsterdam Schiphol airport is under floodwater. Aircraft are trapped and silent. A sinister terrorist group, the FFF, has caused the chaos. The aim of the organization is not to murder. It is to demonstrate the destruction it can cause by blowing up strategically placed dykes and so reduce the Netherlands to a state of fear and helplessness. And ripe for blackmail. It is Lieutenant Peter van Effen's mission to sabotage their plans. Van Effen is a detective working under cover amongst the notorious Krakers--criminal gangs who specialize in drugs, in prostitution, in arms deals. He also heads the Amsterdam bomb disposal squad. Using his specialist knowledge in explosives and with the help of two friends, flamboyant George and young Vasco from Utrecht, van Effen attempts to infiltrate the FFF. The price for failure--the flooding and annihilation of Holland."


CLICK ON IMAGE TO ENLARGE

Fontana published the first paperback edition in 1984, using the same cover art as the hardback edition but now enhanced by a bright blue sky. As I've said, paperbacks always have to work twice as hard to achieve the same goal.

"Amsterdam Airport has disappeared. The mass of water in its place is the work of the FFF-- an Irish terrorist group who want to force Britain's hand. The Dutch call in Detective Lieutenant van Effen-- feared interrogator and undercover intimate of the criminal Krakers gang-- to sabotage the FFF's plan. If van Effen fails and the FFF get control of the vital dyke, either Holland will sink beneath the sea or Britain will be awash with blood."
 



In the start of John Bowen's novel, After the Rain (Ballantine, 1959), a lunatic inventor creates a second "Biblical Flood" by launching a weather-making balloon over a drought ridden Texas. The soggy drama then moves on board a large raft carrying a motley group of flood survivors---a raft of fools as it were---who, incongruously, are nowhere near North America. I wonder if Katherine Anne Porter read Bowen's novel before composing her own bestselling commentary on humanity, Ship of Fools

What is not found in Bowen's novel is a scene like the one featured on the cover. Apparently, it was merely a marketing ploy by Ballantine, but a brilliant ploy at that. Robert Blanchard produced the image, a classic one for the ages .

"If you like cataclysmic novels John Bowen's AFTER THE RAIN is as exciting as any deluge you can hope to find; but if you think deluges are too trivial, John Bowen has a surprise for you: his novel turns out to be satire of the first order."  --- Angus Wilson, from the back cover.
 




Ballantine's 2nd printing of After the Rain was published in 1965. The cover art was not credited, and there is no signature visible, but if I were to speculate I would guess it's the work of one of these two men: Ed Valigursky, even though his brushwork tended to be a little less sharply delineated than this, and Dean Ellis, whose brushwork practically mirrors this painting, and who seemed to swim into the publishing scene right around this time. But I'm probably wrong on both accounts.
 
   "You mean we've been saved from race-suicide by an act of--well, Nature if you like?" I said.
   "Nothing of the kind. If you wish to understand what I am saying, you will do better not to interrupt. Not only were men increasing their numbers at a terrifying rate, but the poorer, more brutish sort were increasing at a rate faster than the others. Have you any idea of the rate of mental deficiency in Great Britain over the past fifty years? No, of course you haven't. The proportion of morons and near-morons has increased because, although one can persuade intelligent people to practice birth control, one cannot teach contraceptive methods to idiots, and large families have persisted among people of low intelligence. In other words, men have increased their numbers while lowering their quality; idiots have increasingly outnumbered the intelligent, and, under a system of democracy, had as much political power." He [Arthur] took off his spectacles to polish them, and I noticed that his hands were trembling. "Lunacy! he said. "It was lunacy."
   "I see."
   "The Flood has wiped all that out. Only intelligent people will survive it, and such of the stupid people as they choose to carry with them."
   "Why carry any?"
   "For the rough work. You observed Mr. Ryle's physical proportions. He will be very useful to us when the waters subside, and we begin our settlement. And with careful cross-breeding---"
   "What if they never subside at all?"
   "Of course they will subside," Arthur said angrily. "Of course they will. Do you imagine Natural Selection intends to replace us with fish?"




Trial at Monomoy was published in hardcover by Harper and Row in 1964. The jacket artist was not credited and there is no signature visible. Trial at Monomoy is an allegorical work of fiction, detailing the inner lives and personalities of people in a small Cape Cod town as they are suddenly isolated by an unprecedented Atlantic storm.

John Masters was born in India in 1914, and became a regular officer of the Indian Army. In WWII, he served honorably with the Chindits behind enemy lines in Burma. After the war he and his wife Barbara moved to the U.S. and he took up writing to make ends meet. Masters "strove for accuracy and realism in his works, resenting it when people mistook his characters' views as his own. He was extremely hard-working and meticulously well-organized, both as a soldier and a novelist." Masters died following heart surgery in Santa Fe, New Mexico in 1983.

"It was on a Tuesday in February that Chief Boatswain's mate John Remington, in charge of the Coast Guard station at Monomoy (allegedly Provincetown, MA), saw the first photograph of the storm. It was a big one all right--they knew that--but it was way down off Florida and nobody was too sure it was going to hit and nobody really cared too much... On Valentine's Day the storm struck, and very soon the town of Monomoy (population 2,200) was cut off from the outside world--blanketed in swirling snow and swept by icy winds. There was no help to be had except from themselves, from each other. And as the crisis of survival mounts, the true faces of the citizens of Monomoy show themselves. Some rise to the challenge with a fortitude and assurance they had been unaware of; others collapse in weakness and despair. There are courage and cowardice, pettiness and nobility, selfishness and humanity. In the desperate hours and days that follow, the inner lives and personalities of the townspeople are revealed.




John Master's novel was also published in paperback by Corgi of London in 1975. The cover artist is unknown.

"In Cape Cod the temperature was 18 below zero. A relentless blizzard was creating snowy white mountains of up to twenty feet in height. This was the kind of storm that stripped a man of all social and moral conventions... stripped him down to the basic, selfish instinct of survival.... Most of the Monomoy folk gathered in the Longships Hotel, hoping for refuge. Power, fuel, water and communications giving out. The tide was coming so fast it threatened to wash the town into the bay. And the Longships itself was smack in the path of the raging ocean. Unless a miracle occurred the hotel and and all its occupants would be swept away by waves fourteen feet high, coming through it like express trains... Inside the Longships a fearful, elemental drama was being played out. And more than one appalled spectator felt that after the events of the past two days, the town might well be better off buried, like a modern day Sodom and Gomorrah..."
 
 

Storm
is not George Stewart's most famous novel, but that doesn't make it any less impactful. Told from multiple points of view, it is the story of a massive Pacific cyclone slamming into the West Coast of the United States, and of the twelve tense days leading up to it (each day a chapter in the book). The main protagonist is not human however, but rather the storm itself. And she has a name---Maria!

Penguin published the first mass-marked paperback edition in 1944, under its 'Infantry Journal' imprint. It was one of the first paperbacks that was issued with a protective jacket (seen top), a practice that didn't last long (the art on the inner cover, seen lower, is uncredited). The jacket artist was Denver Laredo Gillen. The Vancouver, Canada, born Gillen (1914-1975) came up the usual way, rendering catalog illustrations for clients like The Hudson Bay Company and Montgomery Ward. Then things picked up for him and he began to produce book covers for some of the biggest publishers in New York. In addition, he began providing illustrations for slicks like the The Saturday Evening Post, Collier's, Esquire, True and Outdoor Life, among others. He also established a long, lucrative association with Reader's Digest Condensed Books.

"Storm is the absorbing story of "Maria," a tropical hussy, a raging hurricane, that cannonballed out of Asia, swept across the Pacific and cracked down on the whole coast of Western United States. Author George R. Stewart tells how hussies like "Maria" are made-- what they do to people. He takes you into the heart of the men who run the San Francisco Weather Bureau-- it was one of them who named the STORM "Maria." With Superintendent Martley you crawl down a 250-foot ladder into the bottom of a great dam to release the sluice gates-- only to find on your return to the top that the raging water is out of hand, breaking over the rim... how will you get out alive? Storm will be one of the big adventures of your life! Don't wait! Buy it now! And read every single one of its 310 complete and unabridged pages in this edition!"  



Comstock, an outdoor or nature themed imprint of Ballantine Books, republished Storm in paperback in 1974. Walter Rane (1949-) produced the cover art, which shows a dam overflowing with storm surge water. Storm was one of Rane's first commissions, and he would go on to be an extremely productive, high quality cover artist for more than twenty years in New York City. Today he creates mostly fine art paintings, usually along religious themes. The LDS church has become one of his mainstay clients.

"Sweeping across the Pacific, a devastating storm wreaks havoc on San Francisco and the California coast and then moves relentlessly toward the Sierra Nevada, burying mountain passes and railroad tracks under tons of snow. First published in 1941, Storm presaged trends in literature and ecology that would appear decades later; an engrossing novel constructed by a master storyteller, it delineates an intricate web of humanity, wildlife, and landscape, all interacting in a drama that includes the weather itself in its cast of characters."
 

The title of this novel tells us the what, but not the why. For that all we need to do is look at the jacket art by John Woods and think of what would happen if that dam failed. Woods was a British book illustrator and comic book illustrator who thrived from the 1930's to the 1980's. He was also a contributing artist on several cool Dr. Who book publications: The Dalek Book (1964), The Dalek World (1965), and The Dalek Outer Space Book (1966), all of which have fantastic looking covers.

Village Under Water
was published in hardcover by Brockhampton of London in 1953. Eric Leyland (1911-2001) was trained as a librarian and worked for many years as Chief Librarian in Chingford, Essex, Great Britain. After this he became a Joint Principal, together with his wife, of Normanhurst School in Chingford. In his spare time he apparently liked to write books, lots and lots of books. At least 300 of them, or so it's been reported (many under pseudonyms). They were primarily juvenile genre novels, but he also wrote books for adults on occasion.


The Raging Flood
was published by Belmont Tower as a paperback original in 1975. The author, R. T. Larkin, is actually Rochelle Larkin (1935-2004), a Brooklyn native who wrote quite a few romances, mysteries and thrillers in her day, some under various pseudonyms such as Glen Chase. Her daughter, Julie Davis, is a commercial writer too. The cover art is signed O'Brien, who appears to have produced about a dozen or more horror and SF paperback covers beginning as far back as 1967. However, this O'Brien should not be confused with the currently famous and still very active book and magazine illustrator, Tim O'Brien, who was born in 1964.

"For nearly forty years the giant federal dam loomed over the desert gambling resort of El Paradisio. Right from the start, its construction was marked by violence and bloodshed, and now it was in the news again. An engineer named Cordovan warned that sooner of later the mammoth dam-- weakened by years of stress and shoddy construction-- would break, flooding half the state and killing thousands of people. The immense wall of concrete became a political football that was kicked back and forth from the country courthouse to the Oval Office in Washington. And all the time disaster was getting closer and closer and closer..."



Flood shares a nearly identical set-up with A Raging Flood: a shoddily built dam is looming like a ticking time-bomb over an unsuspecting desert town in New Mexico. And we know time-bombs always go off unless the red wire is cut. Or is it the yellow wire? Doubleday published Richard Martin Stern's dam disaster novel (no pun intended) in 1979. It was preceded by his first two disaster novels: The Tower (1973), filmed famously as The Towering Inferno, and Snowbound Six (1977), about a huge blizzard pummeling the mountains of New MexicoStern then wrote three more disaster novels after that: The Big Bridge (1982), about a giant suspension bridge collapsing over a New Mexico gorge, Wildfire (1985), about a forest fire exploding in the mountains of New Mexico, and Tsunami (1988), about a monstrous wave crashing into the California coast (sound familiar?).  Stern (1915-2001) stopped writing after that, but not because his books received bad press (critics did hate them but readers loved them), but because he felt it was time to relax after nearly forty years of relatively successful writing in various genres. He started off with a big splash too, winning an Edgar Award in 1958 for his first novel, The Bright Road to Fear. 

"Two towns lie in the valley--one bustling and thriving, the other submerged and forgotten, intentionally flooded beneath the waters of a big new dam. Jay Harper's mind is on the old town as he rows across the lake, stone buildings clearly visible beneath the placid surface. He doesn't know why he has come to see this place, but something inside him--a premonition--has led him here. The new town has long since forgotten the silent warnings of the old, and now ambitious entrepreneurs are trying to get the dam enlarged. But some, like Jay Harper, suspect the dam may not be safe. Trained as a geophysicist, he thinks the dam is too big, even as it is. There have been earth tremors, and bad weather is brewing. At any time, the dam could unleash its waters across the valley, blindly crushing everything in its wake. "Think of Johnstown in 1889," he says to disbelieving ears, "only this could be worse, much worse, with the whole city downstream." As factions in the town battle one another, the danger grows..."

Doubleday's 1979 jacket art was produced by Dave Christensen. Christensen graduated from the Art Center College of Design in Pasadena in 1973, about the time as I was graduating from high school. I always wanted to be a professional illustrator like Christensen, but for some reason I went into libraries instead (an easier path, no doubt), which after the fact turned out to be a choice I could live with. It's all water under the bridge now, and while I still firmly believe I could have made it as an illustrator, would I have ever been as successful as Christensen is? He did, after all, produce more than 150 book covers, including the first edition covers of Stephen King's Salem's Lot and The Shining, along with hundreds of film and television movie posters and advertisements. He also created the pulp styled illustration on the cover of the 1979 first edition of Peter Nicholl's The Science Fiction Encyclopedia (pictured below), an homage to the original painting by Frank R. Paul that was on the cover of the February, 1933 issue of Wonder Stories (also seen below in bigger format).





Granada, a United Kingdom publisher, issued Stern's Flood in paperback in 1980. Although the cover is merely a photograph, bold font combined with intense color, plus that bubbling drowned hand, does make for a rather effective presentation.

"For years the city on the plain had been shielded from floods by the massive Harper's Park dam. But now the brilliant young geophysicist Jay Harper has discovered serious fracturing at the dam's base. Day by day, as the freak weather moves ominously nearer, the city trembles on a grueling knife-edge of fear. Unless the rich and powerful in their storm-sheltered houses, and the poor Chicanos in their shanties by the sluggish river can unite to bury their differences and work together, all will perish in a cataclysmic disaster worse than anything the world seen since ancient times..."


The U.S. paperback edition of Stern's Flood was published by Ace in 1981. The cover art was not credited nor is is signed, but I love the way the artist made the giant wave look like some kind of monstrous, malevolent creature. What a great image to lure someone into the story.

"First there was THE TOWERING INFERNO, then EARTHQUAKE. Now the chilling reality of FLOOD.  Two towns lie in the valley-- one thriving, the other submerged and forgotten beneath the waters of the dam. Ambitious entrepreneurs want to enlarge the dam-- but it's already too big, dangerously so. At any time, the dam could unleash its waters across the valley, blindly crushing everything in its wake, dwarfing the disaster that was the Johnstown Flood of 1889."




Doubleday published the first edition of The Wave in hardcover in 1979 (top). The jacket appears to be a photograph and not an illustration, or at least I think it is. Christopher Hyde was born in Ottawa in 1949. Before becoming a writer he worked in various media outlets in Canada, as an editor, TV interviewer, and researcher, specializing in technology and the environment. The Wave was his fiction debut. It's a doomsday novel, about the failure of the largest dam in the world, located on the Columbia River. Hyde spent three years researching the story, his warning of a disaster that could be. To date he has written more than 30 thrillers, 16 of them as standalones. Many of his novels were published under the pseudonyms Paul Christopher and A. J. Holt. His brother Anthony is also a professional writer and editor and together they collaborated on a retelling of the Robin Hood myth, Locksley (Allen Lane, 1983), using the pseudonym Nicholas Chase.



Seal, Bantam's Canadian imprint, published the first paperback edition of The Wave in 1980. The cover art was painted by Lou Feck. I'm pretty sure this is a full wraparound illustration, but until I actually order one from the Great White North I won't really know for sure. I just wish those northern shipping costs weren't as high as Feck's wave.

"High above the huge Mica Dam, a mountain rumbles. Below the dam lies a nuclear reactor. A young scientist grasps the horrible truth; a landslide will unleash a radioactive wall of water 745 feet high. Millions will die. Cities will drown. The Pacific will become a dead sea. But someone is trying to kill the only man who can stop... THE WAVE."



Playboy Press published their paperback edition of The Wave a year after Bantam/Seal did, in 1981. The cover art was produced by James Dietz. Lou Feck, who was particularly adept at painting transportation equipment (and everything else under the sun), would've been thrilled with the work of Dietz, who is now one of the best illustrators of historical scenes involving transportation and military equipment in the world. This is one of his earliest book covers, but it's no less awesome by being so.

"Water. Jonathan Kane is afraid of water. An engineer for the government, Kane has discovered that a major dam is on the brink of collapse. Once it bursts, a deadly domino effect will be set in motion. From the Columbia River to the Pacific Ocean, a chain of dams will cave in-- forming the biggest wall of water mankind has ever seen. But then Kane and reporter Charlene Daly discover some frightening facts that point to a mysterious conspiracy. While they try to make them known, the first dam bursts and The Wave becomes a reality. Its speed: 100 miles an hour. Its height: over 600 feet. Its destiny: to smash everything in its path, including a nuclear generator in the hands of environmental terrorists. Unless Jonathan and Charlene can escape their would-be assassins, the entire Pacific Northwest-- and the Pacific Ocean itself-- will be contaminated for the next 5000,000 years."  



Deluge has to be one of the best disaster novels of the 20th century. It's packed with everything you ever hoped would be in such a story, and then some. But don't get attached to too many of its characters because you will have your heart drowned. Deluge doesn't show any mercy---it's as unrelenting as the swollen river water was coming down the Big Thompson Canyon.

Deluge
was Richard Doyles debut, published in hardcover by Arlington Books in 1976. The jacket art was not credited but it's very dramatic and I wish I had a better, flatter image of it to post. According to the flap Doyle was the great nephew of Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, and a great great nephew of Richard Doyle the famous Punch illustrator. Doyle was born in the Channel Islands in 1948, and spent the first twenty years of his life abroad, in Ethiopia, the Middle-East and North Africa. His wiki bio omits the nephew part but does reiterate his globe trekking lifestyle. Other stays were in Cape Ann, Massachusetts, and Gascony, France. Doyle also wrote one of the best aviation thrillers I've ever read, almost an epic really, titled, Imperial 109. It was a huge bestseller on this side of the Atlantic as well as in his native country, selling more that a million copies in paperback. In 2002 Doyle rewrote Deluge into Flood, adding among other things the Thames Barrier, a defense against sea surges, which in 1976 was only a work in progress. Of interest too is that Doyle became a respected expert on climate change and flooding, lecturing frequently on the subject, with regular appearances on TV and radio. Doyle, an avid yachtsman whose passion was shared by his wife and son, passed away in 2017.

"Deluge is a riveting novel about the almost total annihilation of London by a freak flood in winter and its horrendous aftermath. With the massive river barrier planned at Woolwich still unbuilt, due to strikes and official procrastination, Deluge traces the path of millions of tons of water from the North Atlantic into the North Sea during the night and onto the unsuspecting metropolis. Despite warnings from meteorologists and engineers, the authorities at first refuse to recognize the danger, until the thirty-foot surge, on top of a high tide, is less than an hour away from London Bridge. Even so, the predictions of the storm's horrifying power are belittled not only to stop panic but for fear of disrupting the imminent arrival on a state visit of The President of the United States. While the people of London continue, unsuspectingly, about their daily lives a belated warning is finally issued. The reconditioned air-raid sirens are sounded. In the storm conditions, however, few hear this pitiful warning and fewer still understand its significance. The flood sweeps up the river and falls upon the helpless city; seventy square miles of central London disappear as the water rises above the level of the bridges. A million and a half people are surrounded and cut off. In the Underground system hundreds are trapped and drowned. In all, over 1000,000 die creating one of the worst disasters in the history of mankind. The authorities are powerless, and from their secret control room beneath the streets of Holborn they can only watch and wait as the flood destroys the capital."


Pan published the first paperback edition of Doyle's Deluge in 1977. It has a terrific cover illustration, a scene shot from a helicopter's perspective, that again was not credited. 

"It was to be the day that the American President drove in state through the streets of London. By the middle of the morning those streets are under water already several feet deep and still rising. Freak winds and driving rain have pushed a thirty foot surge up the Thames and London is facing the worst disaster in its history. The death toll from drowning, injury and disease tops 100,000. A power station explodes like a bomb. The central London Underground system is flooded and passengers are trapped in trains. A barge is hurled into the first floor of St. Thomas's Hospital and parts of dockland are flooded to a depth of twenty feet..." 


Lou Feck produced the cover art on the U.S. paperback edition of Doyle's Deluge. It was published by Bantam in 1978.

"TRAPPED IN THE TUNNEL: Lungs bursting, the blood pounding in his head, he flung himself through, clutching with desperate strength at the hand rail as his feet slipped from under him on the slimy steps. Behind, he heard a tremendous boom of thunder and a single piercing scream of animal terror, before the water burst from the tunnel mouth like an erupting geyser. Clouds of spray vomited forth, half blinding him... Dimly, in the now almost total darkness, he saw the figures of his companions flung down the maelstrom that seethed around the iron gates... He made a last desperate attempt to clutch at the ladder, his fingers touching its rungs, then with a dull clang that rang through the chamber, the giant doors slid open and the whirling current swept him through the gates.



On the heels of Deluge came The Big Wave: The Day London Collapsed by Conrad Voss Bark. New English Library published it in paperback in 1979. The cover artist is unknown. Going by the blurb on the back cover, it would seem that Voss Bark upped the ante as far as flood casualties go. Wow, ten million! Seriously dude? Voss Bark (1913-2000) was a British journalist, ground-breaking parliamentary correspondent for the BBC, and the author 21 books, an equal mix of fiction and non-fiction. Among them are mysteries, fly-fishing instructionals, and a Lost Race novel (Sealed Entrance, 1947) that takes place in, of all places, Albania! 

"-- "One of the few, one of the very few, to survive by a miracle from among ten million Londoners dead in the greatest disaster of all time, was a reporter, Corrie Wilson of the London Daily Express."  Matt was a professional. No one else could have done it but he did. When he said "a reporter" something came alive in me. I don't remember what I said; words dissolve after you use them. I gave him facts--the stone cliffs above the tideline of the Mall, the twisted steel skeleton that had been New Zealand House, the heaped bodies along Whitehall, the search for the Queen..."



Cyclone by Hector Holthouse was published in Australia by Rigby in 1971. The jacket artist is unknown. Holthouse grew up in the heart of Queensland's original squatter country, milking cows and riding horses to school. As an adult he became a sugar chemist working in northern Queensland sugar mills, but history was always his passion and so he began writing articles for the Sydney Bulletin and other Australian journals which were eventually turned into popular books, 30 of them between the years 1967 and 1991. Upon his death in 1991 at the age of 76, his books and manuscripts were donated to the Bribie Island Library, where his legacy was honored with the naming of the "Hector Holthouse Room."

"Cyclone tells a century-long story of the monstrous elemental forces which rage out of the Pacific and Coral Sea to smash against the coasts of eastern Australia. Since the early days of settlement they have taken hundreds of lives, sunk scores of ships, and caused damage totaling many millions of dollars. The force of cyclonic winds seems incredible to those who have not experienced them, and has caused such tragedies as the 1875 wreck of the Gothenburg and the 1899 destruction of the pearling fleet. 307 lives were lost, and only one battered schooner remained. Humanity's only solution is to create systems which give some warning of impending assault. This was realized by the Queensland meteorologist Clement Wragge, a colourful character whose forthright and eccentric nature was somewhat cyclonic in itself. This book tells his story and those of many others who have fought, suffered, or died in these wars which nature wages."



Manor Books published Cyclone as a paperback original in 1975. The cover artist, while not credited (O'Brien?), should be commended for putting together a truly demonstrative scene. The story takes place in a small town in Texas, starting with a busload of passengers taking shelter in a municipal auditorium as a cyclone approaches. The set-up is basically the same as that great "bus episode" from Murder She Wrote, except toss in a whole series of harrowing sequences as townspeople are forced to scramble for safety against the cyclone.

I have to thank Paperback Warrior, one of my favorite review blogs, for giving me a leg up on the author of Cyclone. I figured Eric Nilsen was a pseudonym, and I was right. Nilsen was actually Jack A. Nelson (1930-2015), a journalist by profession as well as a communications instructor at Brigham Young University. Nelson was also the Utah editor for Western Outdoors magazine and was passionate about outdoor recreation, especially trout fishing (like me!). Among his many pursuits in life were tennis (like me!), wheelchair sporting events, serving his church in various capacities, and fiction and non-fiction writing, with which he published seven books. His first novels were published under the pseudonyms Eric Nilsen, Jeremiah Jack and Helen Lee Poole. If you find a copy of his other Manor thriller, Train Wreck (Jeremiah Jack), about a passenger train caught in an avalanche, set your hook hard; it's as rare as catching a seven-pound brook trout in the mountain waters of Utah.




Judith Kazdym Leeds produced the jacket art on the first edition of Cat Five, one of approximately 3000 covers she produced over a long and distinguished commercial art career, which also included teaching workshops and giving demonstrations. William Morrow published this novel in hardcover in 1977.
 
Robert P. Davis (1929-2005) was a novelist, screenplay writer, and a director, and garnered an Academy Award in 1961 for Best Short Subject for his film, Day of the Painter. Davis published at least six books that I know of. Aviation adventure and natural disasters were his favorite themes.

"In the weatherman lingo "cat five" means a category five tropical cyclone with wind speeds in excess of 155 miles per hour--the worst possible storm. Hurricane Claudine looked as if she might become a cat five, at least to Steve Mitchell, the old-fashioned expert who could feel Claudine's every move in his bones. Keith Landon, a new-breed scientist who put his trust in computers, felt otherwise. The men battled over Claudine--and over the third member of the hurricane-tracking team, the beautiful Dr. Haughton. But all three knew that if Steve's storm materialized, landfall would be near Palm Beach. Oblivious to the goings-on at the hurricane center--and the seas and skies above and around--the beautiful people in Palm Beach carry on as usual. We meet Mel Hansen, an unscrupulous architect, and his wife, Denise, a cunning French movie star; Nicole Bouchard, the glamorous Belgian lesbian who has a sensuous hold over Denise which cannot be broken; the Baxters, whose social position is threatened by the Hansens; and finally, the lovable "Queen" of Palm Beach, Maggie Dunsmore, who rules over the resort as a social arbiter. As the great hurricane Claudine grinds out of the doldrums toward Palm Beach, rivalries surface and private dramas erupt in this playground for the very rich. Here is the story of a ferocious storm and what happens to the people caught in its whirling, killing path."



The paperback edition of Davis' Cat Five was published by Pocket in 1978. The cover art is not credited or signed, but I'm pretty sure it's the work of Robert Maguire, who was one of publishing's most distinguished cover artists from his professional beginning in 1950 until his death in 2005 at the age of 84. He produced more than 1,200 covers during that stretch, and is recognized especially for his exceptional skill at rendering the female figure. 

"CAT FIVE on the Cyclone scale-- the worst that nature can do to man! No force of land, sea, or sky ever equaled Claudine! Yet the Palm Beach jet-setters and spoiled rich, the con men and the careless lovers, make jokes about the raging fury headed straight for them. Then Claudine hits. Water rises at an astounding rate. Tiger sharks slip through now-panicked crowds, buildings explode and are ripped away. And as Claudine's victims frantically struggle along roads that go nowhere-- or into luxury towers rising out of the sand-- they cling to lives that take on a new meaning as their world tumbles down around them! CAT FIVE will draw you into its vortex-- and leave you battered and shaken!"



I don't read French so I don't have a clue about the plot of this novel, other than gale winds are blowing fiercely behind our embracing couple. Cyclone sur la Jamaique (Cyclone in Jamaica) was written by Robert Gaillard and published in hardcover by Fleuve Noir of Paris in 1970. Frenchman Gaillard (1905-1975) was responsible for quite a few romantic novels, thrillers and historicals in his heyday and looks to have been imprisoned briefly during WWII in a Stalag, where he became friends with Francois Mitterand, France's long-standing future President.

The cover art was produced by Frenchman Michel Gourdon (1925-2011). Gourdon and his famous artist/sculptor brother Alain (known professionally as Aslan), had a thing or two for painting beautiful women (men too I suppose). Between them they created scores of pin-up style paintings and illustrations for use in magazines, posters, postcards, and what have you, but Michel in particular favored book covers, so we have lots of those from him as well.



You know a storm is bad when you have to lash yourself to a tree in order to survive (and yes, that's a baby she's clutching). The Hurricane was written by Charles Nordhoff and James Norman Hall and published by Little, Brown in 1936. It was reprinted many times and filmed twice, in 1937 and then in 1979. Better yet, it was adapted for the CBS Radio series The Campbell Playhouse in 1939, using the voice talents of Orson Welles, Mary Astor, Ray Collins, Everett Sloane, and George Coulouris, among others. I loved listening to that program but the book is still superior to it and all of the movie versions. As a young teen the novel was an absolute page-turner for me.  

The jacket art on The Hurricane was produced by N. C. Wyeth. The first time I saw a Wyeth painting in a museum I was mightily impressed. Before that not so much, because all I ever knew were poor paper reproductions in or on books. To finally see one of his paintings up close and personal was simply amazing. It's a day I won't forget.

"THE HURRICANE is a modern story of one of the small islands of the Low Archipelago, that sprawling group of dots on the map of the Pacific that spreads over a thousand miles from Tahiti to Pitcairn. The population consisted of one hundred and fifty Polynesians and four Europeans; Monsieur and Madame de Laage, the stern French Administrator and his wife, Father Paul, the tender-hearted priest, and Dr. Kersaint, the medical officer. Captain Nagle, the English skipper whose trading schooner was their only link with the outside world, was an occasional visitor. The serenity of this island paradise is shattered by the return of a native son, Terangi, an escaped convict. In the hue and cry the white men and the natives are brought into subtle opposition. But the issue is decided not by man but by nature, for there sweeps down upon the island a storm, overpowering, inhuman, majestic---a hurricane which tests the strength and temperance of these different races to the breaking point. Here is a novel of such force and beauty as will not soon be forgotten."





Numerous paperback versions of Nordhoff and Hall's The Hurricane have issued over the years; these three, I believe, are the only ones that favored cover illustrations over boring movie-tie-in photos.

Barye Phillips produced the cover art on the Pocket Books edition published in 1942 (top). This was one of his very first illustrations on a book. He had just been "discovered' working for the Columbia Pictures advertising department, and brought over by Pocket's resident art editor and cover design illustrator Sol Immerman, who needed someone to draw glamorous women, something Sol couldn't do. Barye fit the bill nicely.

Edward Mortelmans produced the cover art on the Four Square edition published in 1960 (middle). Mortelmans (1915-2008) was a British illustrator who was noted for his many Tarzan covers for the same publisher. He was extremely prolific though, providing illustrations for nearly every other U.K. publisher, magazine publishers too. He also provided some cool advertising art for the British Railways.
 
Chuck McVicker produced the cover art on the Pyramid edition published in 1963 (bottom). I can't be 100% certain, but I'm pretty sure Chuck is actually Charles, a retired assistant professor of art who is 92 years old now and still painting up a storm in New Jersey--fine art watercolor painting that is--the illustration market having tanked for him and hundreds of others when computers bullied their way in. McVicker also did the Pyramid cover art for Nordhoff & Hall's Botany Bay, and dozens of other paperback and hardback covers.

"A thrilling story of man vs. man---of the violent clash between a powerful native leader, a living legend among his own people for his courage and heroism, who runs afoul of French law---and the French Resident-General, proud and stubborn with a will of steel, who lives only to blend the elusive chieftain beneath his own terrible brand of justice. As these two play out their inexorable drama of danger---on hair-raising manhunts through impenetrable forests, on deadly bouts of hide-and-seek among treacherous coral reefs, in violent battles on open, shark-infested seas---and in one last encounter in the rage of a titanic South Seas hurricane when their bitter rivalry is decided in a final, desperate test of wit and will..."



The Night the Water Came by Clive King was published by Longman Young Books in 1975. Mark Peppe produced the cover art. Peppe was born, along with his twin brother Rodney, in Eastbourne, England in 1934, and both men became writers and illustrators of children's books. Between the two of them they've published at least 100 books.

Englishman David Clive King was educated at Downing College, Cambridge, and the School of Oriental and African Studies, London. He served in the Royal Navy, voyaging to "Iceland, twice to the Russian Arctic, to India, Sri Lanka, Australia, East Indies, Malaysia and Japan, where he observed the ruins of Hiroshima within months of its destruction." Civilian postings as an officer of the British council allowed him even more travel opportunities. These places feature prominently in some of his 19 books for children. His best-known book, Stig of the Dump, was adapted as a television program in 2002.

"A boy who survives a cyclone that destroys his island home off the coast of Bangladesh is mystified by the efforts of rescue workers and wants only to return to his old way of life."




Hurricane was published by Leisure in 1976, and it is one of many unsung novels that the award winning comic book writer Gardner Francis Fox wrote in his lifetime (1911-1986). Fox needs no introduction to comic fans, but for those who have never heard of him, listen up: He wrote more than 4,000 comic stories, 1,500 for DC alone. He co-created some of the biggest names in superhero characters including my two favorites, Flash and Hawkman, and he was the guy who formulated The Justice Society of America and its morph, The Justice League of America. That alone puts him on my personal pedestal of greatness, but as I mentioned he was also a writer of novels (and short stories), his first efforts coming out in pulp magazines back in the 1930's and 40's. Later of course his works were published in paperback form, many under pseudonyms. Fox's Hurricane is a blast to read, but the blast comes not from the hurricane smashing into the fictional Northeastern hamlet named Dunes Point, which barely makes up a quarter of the book, but from the sexual romps of its many fleshed-out characters. 
 
Antonio J. Gabriele produced the cover art on Hurricane. I don't know much about him, age, nationality, or otherwise, except that he is credited with producing cover art for a heady score of genre paperbacks; western, romance, gothic, and also adventure--but no science fiction, fantasy or horror that I know of.

"It was born in the Caribbean, fashioned of winds that swirled above the sea, gathering in strength and intensity. The prevailing winds rushing into a low-pressure area, fueled by the rotation of the Earth itself, began their counterclockwise spiral. There was a hollow center to the winds, the eye. Men named her Hurricane Hedda. She picked up forward momentum as she reached into the temperate zone. She brushed by Cape Hatteras and took off as though it had been a springboard, moving north and eastward. Dunes Point lay directly in its path..."



There are novels that become special even before you finish reading them. They're that good, that gripping, some from the first page on. You just know they won't disappoint, and they don't. Wyatt's Hurricane was that novel for me. Collins of London published it in hardback in 1966. It was the second book by Desmond Bagley that I read, and it convinced me more than the first one to go ahead and collect as many paperbacks as I could by this author, knowing the odds were in my favor that I would enjoy reading each and every one. Bagley has often been compared to Alistair MacLean, one of the greatest, if not greatest, adventure writers of the 20th century, and that's a fair comparison in my opinion. His stuff, or what I've read of it so far, is every bit as tight and twisty as MacLean's best. 

Pino Dell'Orco produced the jacket art on Wyatt's Hurricane. A childhood interest in comic books led the Italian into a life of illustration, first in his native country and then later in England, where he produced scores of comic style illustrations for Fleetway Publications, as well as book covers for Collins and many other prominent British publishers. War, aviation and adventure scenes tended to be what he leaned towards, and many of these paintings are now in private collections and galleries all over Europe. The artist died in 2013.

"A U.S. Naval Aircraft on a routine weather patrol in the Caribbean encounters Hurricane Mabel. There is nothing abnormal about Mabel except her ferocity; she should pass harmlessly among the islands; but David Wyatt, a civilian weather expert whose family have lived for centuries in the region, has developed a sixth sense about hurricanes. He is convinced that Mabel will change course to strike the island of San Fernandez and in particular its capital, St Pierre. Scientific evidence is against him; the Commander of the U.S. Base refuses to evacuate; and Wyatt's lone voice is suddenly overwhelmed by a cataclysm of another sort. From the hills a rebellion against the tyrannical dictator who rules San Fernandez sweeps down on the threatened city of St. Pierre. Tormented by anxiety for the safety of the American girl he has come to love, eager to see liberal rule replace tyranny, determined above all to secure the evacuation of St. Pierre and save its inhabitants, Wyatt pits himself against seemingly insuperable odds, aided only by a small and diverse group of English and American civilians-- and by Hurricane Mabel herself. How he accomplishes his objectives and harnesses Mabel to the rebels' victorious cause makes this dramatic and sweeping thriller Desmond Bagley's best and most suspenseful yet."



The Companion Book Club published their edition of Wyatt's Hurricane also in 1966. British artist Roger Payne produced the jacket art, a mix of ink and watercolor wash from the looks of it. Payne produce a lot of gouache illustrations for books, but is recognized more for his body of gay themed illustrations.

 


The first U.S. hardback edition of Wyatt's Hurricane was published by Doubleday in 1966. Kiyoaki "Kiyo" Komoda  produced the jacket art. Komoda was born in Japan but studied art in the United States, at Los Angeles City College and Chouinard Art Institute. He is known primarily for illustrating children's books. His son Paul is also an artist and sculptor.
 


The Readers Book Club of Australia also published Wyatt's Hurricane in hardback in 1966. I guess you know you've made it as an author when more than one Book Club makes a grab for you. Vernon Hayles produced the jacket art for this edition. Hayles was born in London but moved to Australia at an early age, finding work almost immediately as a freelance artist. He drew comics for decades including single page humor strips before moving on to books covers for publishers like Colorgravure (Readers Book Club), who became one of his major clients. Hayles died in 1990 at the age of 77.

 
CLICK ON IMAGE TO ENLARGE

Harry Bennett produced this cover art for Wyatt's Hurricane. Pocket published it, the first U.S. paperback edition, in 1968. I have always been ambivalent towards Bennett's artwork, but this cover is as powerful and visceral as anything in this post. Bennett was an award winning painter and illustrator who produced more than 1000 book covers in his career, starting in the 1950's and ending in the 1990's. Bennett was said to be a kind, gracious man and a mentor to many. He passed away in Maryland in 2012 at the age of 93.




My Bride in the Storm
was published by Avon in 1950. The cover artist is unknown. The author, Theodore 'Ted' Pratt (1901-1969), bounced around a lot of places globally before settling permanently in Florida. He wrote 30 novels, four of which are mysteries published under the pen-name Timothy Brace. He also published two collections of short stories. Pratt was often noted for trying to accurately portray the regional peoples depicted in his articles and stories, which at least once got him in hot water. While living and working as a young journalist in Majorca, Spain, Pratt wrote an unfavorable article about the locals, citing them as "among the cruelest people to animals extant in the civilized world", and that "they make inept servants--and when not shirking their work from pure laziness or contrariness, they are stealing food to take to their own home." Not long after the article was published Pratt and his wife were forced to leave their paradise home in Majorca and move back to the United States.

"Drama and Violence... in the Big Blow country. One Man Against the Elements-- and a Girl Who Was Also a Wildcat! Young Wade Barnett had come from Nebraska's tragic dustbowl country to try to wrest a living from the more hopeful soil of an almost-forgotten part of Florida--where dirt roads led to sinister forests, and men were as hard as nature made them. How Wade fought a stubborn battle against rival farmers who considered him an "intruder," and how the rhythm of his life reached a breathtaking climax when beautiful Celie--a wilderness girl--complicated his days and nights by stirring a passion he never knew he had, makes MY BRIDE IN THE STORM one of the most exciting novels you have ever read."




Imagine being trapped with a faceless killer inside a big old spooky house on an island as a tropical storm rages outside, and knowing that you are going to be their next victim! Sure, that sounds like standard thriller fare, and it is, but Mignon G. Eberhart was always good for providing strong characterizations and atmosphere to go along with her mystery plots, making them all that much more palatable. Eberhart (1899-1996) was in fact an exceedingly popular American writer of mystery, crime, suspense, romance and historical fiction for most of her career. In 1970 she received the Grand Master Award from the Mystery Writers of America, in part for her amazing longevity (her first novel was published in 1929 and her last in 1988), but also for her many successes, the House of Storm being one of them. 

Bantam published the House of Storm in paperback in 1951. The cover artist is unknown.

"I can't take any more," Jim Shaw said. "If I don't leave I'll kill her."
     He left Beadon Island that day.
     But he came back that night, secretly, quietly, gun in hand. That night Hermione died!
    It looked like an open and shut case to everyone but Nonie. Nonie knew Jim wasn't guilty; she      knew why he had come back...
     She had to tell the truth about herself and Jim. She Told-- and learned the fury of a killer's rage!
"




Popular Library republished Eberhart's novel in 1964, with cover art by the prolific William Teason (1922-2003). Teason was noted for having illustrated practically every Agatha Christie title that was ever published in paperback, as well as those from Eberhart, Leslie Ford, Doris Miles Disney, Mary Roberts Rinehart, Shirley Jackson, and, well, the list just goes on and on and on. Teason's work ethic was second to none.

"Trapped by a raging hurricane inside the strange old house, pretty young Nonie felt a sudden chill. There was a human fury within the house greater than any storm-- and before the night was over, dark and violent murder would be done."   





George Gross (1909-2003) was extremely dependable as a cover artist, whether it was delivering the goods for paperbacks, like here on John D. MacDonald's hurricane fused masterpiece, Murder in the Wind, or for men's magazines, a medium he is synonymous with. Dell published this paperback original in 1956.

John D. MacDonald wrote some of his best stuff in his early years, but not because he was young and in his prime, but because he was less apt to be influenced by what others thought he should write--you know--the downside of gaining success and catering to what your editor thinks the public now wants. MacDonald wrote intrinsically back in those days, and that difference can be felt in Murder in the Wind.

"This is the story of a tempest that began building up at three o'clock on the afternoon of Sunday, October 14th. Thirteen people were feeling the mounting tension as they looked at the darkening sky, listened to the weather reports and still went ahead with their plans. With the wind came rain, but by early morning of the 16th, six cars were on the highway, heading in the same direction. Sheets of rain whipped against their windshields, but they had already gone too far to turn back. And then the warning was heard on each car radio: "This is the beginning of a violent hurricane. All motorists proceed with caution to the nearest shelter." Shelter was a deserted house just off the main road. And once behind its bolted doors and shuttered windows, the thirteen discovered that the unleashed forces inside them more than matched the primitive storm outside."



Robert Hale Limited of London published the first hardcover edition of Murder in the Wind in 1957, changing the title to Hurricane, perhaps in the hope it would appeal to a wider audience. The jacket art, by an unknown artist, is an almost exact duplication of George Gross's earlier cover art.

"AUTHOR'S NOTE: Certain minor liberties have been taken with the geography of the Florida West Coast. There is a Waccasassa River and a bridge over it on Route 19. However there is no by-pass road or wooden bridges. And, of course, the old house does not exist. To anyone who might be skeptical of the possibility of Route 19 being inundated during a hurricane, it can be pointed out that this highway was under water in the vicinity of Yankeetown and Withlacoochee Bay during the 1950 hurricane known in the area as the Cedar Key Hurricane. Residents of Yankeetown were evacuated because of fear that the Florida Power and Light Company dam might burst. By the time it became apparent that it would have been a far better idea to evacuate the residents of Cedar Key, Route 24 was under water and impassable. Though the chance is statistically remote, there need only be the unfortunate conjunction of hurricane path and high Gulf tide to create coastal death and damage surpassing the fictional account in this book."




Pan published the first U.K. paperback edition of Hurricane (Murder in the Wind) in 1963. The cover art here is also uncredited. My guess is that it was produced by Sam Peffer, a prolific British illustrator who generally signed his work as Peff.

"High seas surge remorselessly inland, fierce winds whip the coast, driving horizontal sheets of rain against six slowly-moving cars. Thirteen travellers (among them a vicious psychopath, a beautiful and lonely woman and a ruthless tycoon) are forced to seek the only refuge in sight--a derelict house just off the highway. But, once they are inside, the tension within them is unleashed with a ferocity that equals the destructive forces outside..."



Back in America, publishers still favored MacDonald's original title, Murder in the Wind. Fawcett Gold Medal was one of those, releasing this edition with its rain driven cover in 1972. Robert McGinnis, who produced the cover art, is one of those paperback illustrators whose femmes fatales don't always jibe with me, but I know I'm mostly alone in that regard. Some folks, like Neil Gaiman, actually requested his style when softcover reprints of his works were being negotiated; "I want that bloke who did all those sexy covers back in the 1960's!" So the 90-year-old McGinnis was found and hired. Gaiman gets what Gaiman wants after all, but I'll always wonder if he was really recalling the gorgeous gals of Robert Maguire and not McGinnis.
   
"A hurricane of terrifying intensity is looming over Florida. Along a state highway, a handful of foolhardy souls trying to outrun the storm are forced to seek shelter in an abandoned house. Thrown together by nothing more than chance, this disparate bunch of misfits includes an undercover agent seeking revenge for a personal tragedy, a burgeoning criminal in over his head, a beautiful young widow trying to start over, and a businessman whose life's work is crumbling before his eyes. Their refuge from the awesome power of nature becomes a sort of grand and grisly hotel--especially once the invisible hand of flying death descends."




Here's another Robert McGinnis hurricane cover, but from years earlier, in 1963. Theodore Pratt's potboiler, Tropical Disturbance, was published by Gold Medal as a paperback original. And while I know I chirped loudly about not always liking every female model McGinnis used (actually, there's one lanky, tall one in particular that sorta turns me off), with this model and pose I've got no issue--she's simply stunning to look at.  

"Her name was Jane, but she was no lady--she was a cataclysm of rising tides, cruel blasting winds, and interminable driving rains. And she rocked Coquina Beach in a nightmare of limitless destruction. While she raged, you waited. You watched as she tormented her victims with a wild game of havoc. you saw her strip sane people of their senses, turn a civilized woman into a wanton. You stood by, helpless, as she turned your home into a desolate monument to a hurricane's relentless fury..."




Condominium by John D. MacDonald is a big novel with a big cast of characters and a big storm to make everyone tremble in fear. Pan published it in paperback in 1977. The cover, from an unknown artist, is one of my favorites from among MacDonald's 46 standalone novels and 21 Travis McGee series novels. I just love the clever building design and the tone of that threatening sky.

"In the grip of a business Mafia that has saddled them with soaring leases, the residents of a plush, jerry-built apartment block on the polluted Florida coast can despair of their hopes of a happy and secure retirement; the concrete is cracking, and Hurricane Ella is brewing up..."


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The U.S. mass-market edition of Condominium was also published in 1977, by Fawcett Crest. Its cover art, also by an unknown artist, omits any warning of the impending hurricane but it still fascinates with its cracked lens, a metaphor for the condominium's cracked foundation.

"Welcome to Golden Sands, the dream condominium built on a weak foundation and a thousand dirty secrets. John D. MacDonald's biggest, most powerful novel to date. Here is a panoramic look at the shocking facts of life in a Sun Belt community: the real estate swindles and political payoffs, the maintenance charges that run up and the health benefits that run out, the crackups and marital breakdowns, the disaster that awaits those who play in the path of the hurricane..." 

 
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Lou Feck could go as big as anyone when it was required, especially when it concerned a hurricane slamming into the Florida coast. Passion in the Wind was published in paperback by Popular Library in 1977. It was one of six novels, two of them mysteries, that longtime (now deceased) Florida resident Herman Nathan Weiss wrote during his time away from his day job as a Photo-Processing manager. 

"The rain on his face was painful; he had to escape. Before he could turn, he heard the rumbling. Lifting his eyes, he was horror-stricken. In the bay, on the other side of the causeway, a mountainous wall of water was racing in his direction. It hadn't reached the road yet, and it was impossible to judge its distance. The roaring was tremendous. His fists, knees and chest tried to burrow into the soft mud. He thought his ear-drum would burs and he glanced upward. The sky was a solid green mass, dark and foreboding. But an instant later, he realized it wasn't the sky. He was under the wall of the monster wave... This was Larry Toren, trapped in his desperate race against time to reach the house where his pregnant wife lay exposed to the approaching terror. He was just one of the people about to be swallowed up in an unleashed fury that would turn each life into a savage drama of sheer survival."

I think these two covers of Gale Force, Elleston Trevor's storm-battered sea novel, compliment each other quite well. One shows the devastating effect the storm has on humans, and the other on the vessel itself.

Stanley Zuckerberg
produced the cover art on the 1960 Bantam edition (top). American born Zuckerberg (1919- 1995) was a great artist whose oil paintings sometimes transcended the very paperbacks they were transposed on, especially if they were given edge to edge coverage, like here. He produced more than 300 of them too, and he also supplied illustrations for most of the major slick magazines of his era, including McCall's and The Saturday Evening Post. In 1965 he left the publishing field altogether to concentrate instead on fine art painting, producing maritime and coastal scenes for galleries and exhibitions. 

"Captain Harkness felt the signs. The SS. Atlantic Whipper had been pummeled and thrashed and violated by hungry seas and gale-force winds. Now in her last struggle to keep afloat she had still another enemy--fear, a fear that made passengers into bumbling nuisances, seamen into dangerous rebels. The only strength lay in the unyielding authority of her captain." --- Bantam edition.

Christopher Mayger produced the cover art on the 1971 New English Library edition (bottom). Mayger (1919-1994) was one of Britain's leading painters of maritime scenes, be it historical or contemporary, and he represented some of the biggest authors in maritime literature, including Alexander Kent, Nicholas Monsarrat, Farley Mowat, Patrick O'Hara and Douglas Reeman.

 "She was a big deep-water merchantman. Six thousand tons and forty in her crew. On this trip she was carrying ten passengers and a cargo of grain. 200 miles off Land's End at the close of her swift Atlantic crossing she runs into a storm. This is a novel about a struggle of classic proportions. The struggle of one man against the gale forces of the Atlantic in a desperate effort to save his ship, his life and his self esteem."  --- NEL edition.

Englishman Trevor Dudley-Smith (1920-1995) changed his name legally to Elleston Trevor after the success of his first novel using that pseudonym in 1946. He wrote more than 100 novels after that, many of them bestsellers, even ones that were still published under additional pseudonyms. Trevor was in fact about as good and entertaining a writer of adventure, mystery and espionage as we've ever had. 


Here are two covers from Hammond Innes's classic mystery-adventure novel, Atlantic Fury, each depicting the savage fury of the sea during a storm. They remind me of why I'm a land-lubber, and why I shall remain so.

Howard Terpning produced the cover art on the Dell paperback edition published in 1963. Terpning (1927-) was a prolific illustrator or slick magazines and book covers. He also produced over 80 movie posters, among them Cleopatra, The Sound of Music, Lawrence of Arabia, The Sand Pebbles and The Guns of Navarone. In 1974 he decided to leave commercial art to try his hand at creating Western style paintings and selling them in galleries. Forty-two awards later says it was the right decision. Two of his paintings recently sold for more than $1 million dollars each.

"The smashing power of the sea, the roaring might of the wind and the valiant endeavor of men in the face of Nature's wildest fury... Innes has no equal when it comes to describing a storm at sea... and this tale must, by all odds, stamp him as a sea-writer as great as Joseph Conrad and C. S. Forrester." --- Springfield Sunday News and Leader.

Paul Wright produced the cover art on the Fontana paperback edition published in 1978. Wright should not be confused with the British fine arts painter of the same name, who was just five-years-old when this cover was created. Wright was born in England in 1947, and studied at the Farnham School of Art and Wimbledon College of Art in the 1960's. He is one of Britain's finest painters of maritime scenes, and a longstanding member of the Royal Society of Marine Artists, with scores of book covers in a variety of genres to his credit.

"Laerg, forbidding and mysterious, rising out of the Atlantic like the last peaks of a submerged continent, provides a perfect setting for the story of two brothers, one an artist, the other a soldier. For both of them the lonely islands holds a fatal fascination. At last, on the island itself, the brothers confront each other, and the soldier's tragic secret is torn from him in one of the most powerful scenes this master storyteller has ever written."  --- Fontana edition.

Hammond Innes (1913-1998) wrote more than 30 outstanding adventure novels, in addition to books for children and travel. Four of his novels were adapted into films, and one into a six-part television series in 1979. Innes's "great love and experience of the sea as a yachtsman, was reflected in many of his novels." In 1978, he was appointed a Commander of the Order of the British Empire for his services to literature.


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Robert "Bob" Chronister produced the cover art on this 1978 Ballantine paperback edition of Innes' Atlantic Fury (and yes, more reason to stay outta the water). I don't know much about Chronister personally, but he was extremely active throughout the 1970's and 80's, representing authors as diverse as Ben Bova, Mary Higgins Clark, James Herriot, Lou Cameron, Miriam Lynch and Carolyn Haywood, among others. 
 
"On a forbidding island in the storm-lashed Hebrides, two brothers confront the past's black secrets--and each other! IAIN--a wild and brooding wartime deserter, presumed dead for twenty years. Or was he really alive, using the identity of a soldier he had murdered? Somewhere--on the wild crags or deep in the primeval caves of an abandoned island--Iain's terrible truth was buried. DONALD--Iain's younger brother, driven by love and hate to solve the mystery. After savage shipwreck and the merciless fury of wind and rain, the past was excavated and the two men faced the awesome present." 



Don Stivers produced the cover art on The Angry Ocean. It was published in paperback by Manor in 1979. Don of course produced scores of great book covers before embarking, much like his colleague Howard Terpning, into the world of fine art. In Don's case it was military and historical art, a niche that has become extremely popular with collectors and much sought after by museums.

Ronald Johnston was a British Sea Captain and the author of several maritime novels and mysteries, including his best known work, Disaster at Dungeness. Mystery elements are generally present in his books, and nearly all feature his series character, James Bruce. The ship on the cover and in his story is a super-tanker, a quarter of a mile long and a half a million tons deadweight.

"Phoenix Island disappeared four minutes after nine o'clock. It disappeared in the biggest explosion ever recorded. The pressure wave from Phoenix circled the earth ten times. The explosion was heard at distances of almost four thousand miles. The energy released was equivalent to the detonation of between one and two million hydrogen bombs. The tidal waves were three hundred feet high as they started on their journey across the Pacific. And in their path was the Emperor, the world's largest ship, on her maiden voyage."




Oscar Liebman (1919-2002) produced the jacket art on Typhoon. It was one of hundreds of book jackets and paperback covers that the artist produced over a long career that began in the early 1950s. Liebman was noted for his Broadway show posters and album jackets too, among them, "Gypsy," "Man of LaMancha," and "New Girl in Town." He also dabbled in other art forms, such as mixed media collages.

Typhoon was published by Doubleday in 1979. Rhodesian born John Gordon Davis was essentially an adventure writer, primarily of fiction but sometimes non-fiction. He was inspired to write by a chance meeting with an old college mate, Wilbur Smith, the profession having benefited him greatly. "Jesus." said Davis, "if an arsehole like you can publish a book, imagine what I could do." Smith replied: "Well, don't tell me about it, go and do it!" And so Davis did, to the tune of 16 books, his first novel (Hold My Hand I'm Dying) even being adapted into the 1988 film, Blind Justice, starring Christopher Cazenove, Oliver Reed and Edita Brychta.

"Out in the China Sea a typhoon is roaring toward Hong Kong, about to devastate that notorious city. But to Jake McAdam, former intelligence officer, an even more awesome natural force is the gorgeous young American journalist who has just entered his life. She has startled him with her sexual venturesomeness, moved him with her warmth and honesty and penetrated his calloused heart. She has also penetrated Hong Kong's major secrets--its hidden scandals involving drugs, land and power. As the typhoon nears, here investigations bring her closer to the one secret Jake cannot let her learn."



Al Rossi was a graduate of the Pratt Institute in New York, so you know he can paint a powerful storm when it was required--or a giant wave--or a handsome man--or a beautiful woman (or two beautiful women!). Which is exactly what he did here on Leonardo da Vinci's novel, The Deluge, published in paperback by Lion in 1955. Rossi excelled at creating bodice rippers back in the 1950's and 60's, along with illustrations for men's adventure magazines. It paid the bills his wife Martha said. In the 1970's Rossi moved away from book covers and took employment with Ideal, Matchbox and LJN, designing and illustrating their toy cars. After retiring in 1989 he started painting landscapes for galleries and accepting private commissions.

I can't keep wondering though if da Vinci ever drew his own cover art for this, his only known novel (if indeed he wrote it). Sounds like another mystery angle for PBS to explore.

"One man... two women... haunted by terror, pursued by destruction, caught up in the desperate coils of mob frenzy, of unfulfilled desires, of the primal hunger for survival...  From the monumental works of Leonardo da Vinci have come some of the most thrilling discoveries of all time-- among them the manuscript for THE DELUGE, a powerful and violent story of life and love in a time of blazing turmoil and savage upheaval."




Shock Wave was published by New English Library (NEL) in paperback in 1981. It appears to be the only novel by Nick Everett, assuming that Everett is the authors real name and not a pseudonym. It's a short novel, only 143 pages long, but according to the single review on amazon-UK, it's a "favourite" that has been read more than once. The cover artist is unknown.



Wave Rider was published in paperback by Pocket in 1980. I've studied all of the Pocket science fiction and fantasy covers for 1980 in the hopes of identifying this cover artist, and my best guess so far is that it's David Schleinkofer. Actually, I'm pretty confident in that guess. Pocket employed a wide group of illustrators back in those days, including the uber talented Schleinkofer from time to time, which resulted in some of the best cover art to be found from any publishing house. If I could go back in time I would collect nearly every paperback they issued.

Hilbert Schenck (1926-2013) was trained as an engineer, and taught at the University of Rhode Island. In addition to textbooks, he wrote three science fiction novels and at least a dozen short stories. Wave Rider collects five of those stories, one of which, "The Battle of the Abaco Reefs," was nominated for both the Hugo and Nebula Awards.

"Five unique experiences linked by the awesome power of an alternate universe. Feel the thrill and rush and peace of those who ride the waves.  Through the power of telepathy a man merges with the ocean to prevent the greatest of all sea disasters... A chemical is released that kills all underwater life and lives and grows to kill again... Nine hundred feet down is a trapped, embattled sub, frantically seeking the technology to reach the surface--or to lie forever beneath it... A society of children, joined by a sensory link, fight a fearsome battle with their weapons of ocean currents and solar mirrors... One extraordinary man charts and finds the wave that, if ridden, will forever make him one with the sea..."



The Earth's temperature was already warming when The Day the Ocean Overflowed was written in 1964. But science fiction writer Charles L. Fontenay (1919-2007) was probably unaware of that fact, and of the consequences that rise in temperature would have on our planet fifty years later. His plot to slowly melt the polar regions with atomic heat to create additional living space for a burgeoning human population is absolutely ridiculous (sheesh!), but that's never stopped us from reading these disaster novels. We read 'em to be entertained, and this slim, 128 page novel does just that.
 
Ralph Winton Brillhart (1924-2007) produced the cover art on the 1964 Monarch first edition. Brillhart was primarily a realist, but he also painted abstracts, some of them mirroring the works of Richard Powers. He began creating SF and fantasy covers as far back as the early 1960's but then he seemed to vanish for a while only to reappear in the 1980's with an even more mature style on display. I suspect his absence away from SFF may have been spent producing cover art for other genres or perhaps even advertising.

"It was November, 1997, and the governments of the world had pooled their scientific resources to solve the population explosion. Their plan was to open up an entire new continent by slowly melting the polar regions with atomic heat. The project had been in operation only a month when a sudden buildup occurred in the reaction. Before it could be checked the most massive hydrogen explosion the world had ever seen was set off. Tidal waves 150 to 200 feet high swept over the Earth. Torrential rains and earthquakes claimed millions; property damage was incalculable; refugees swarmed over the country like locusts, looting and killing in their quest for survival. It was a world where only the most ruthless men could hold out against the terrible flood that threatened extinction for the whole human race."




The Bridbooks edition of Fontenay's The Day the Oceans Overflowed was supposedly published in 1965, for likely distribution in Europe, Israel, Australia and New Zealand. The cover artist is unknown.

 

 
Mike McIver produced the jacket art on Richard Martin Stern's disaster novel, Tsunami. It was published in hardcover by W. W. Norton & Company in 1988. As far as I can tell, a paperback edition has never been released. McIver was a graphic book designer who was active from the 1970's through the 1990's, representing authors as diverse as Aaron Marc Stein, David M. Raup, Howard Berk, Stephen Jay Gould, and William Harrington, among others.

"With all the craft, drama, and storytelling magic for which he is known, Richard Martin Stern traps his readers in the web of ambitions, professions, love affairs, intrigues, politics, and passions of the community of Encino Beach, California. Meanwhile, deep under the sea, Great forces are building toward a massive geologic shift that will start a great wave, a tsunami, racing across the ocean at 400 miles an hour. At first it is a wave no more that a foot high, moving at fantastic speed. But as it reaches the shallower waters near land it begins to slow and rise. In constricted bays and coves, it becomes a mountain of water hundreds of feet high, capable of instantly destroying anything made by man. The citizens of Encino are warned, and thus they begin their own, human, seismic upheavals--when the tsunami reaches the shore, Mr Stern's story reaches an overwhelming climax. This is also a story of people, intelligent people. good people, bad people, courageous people, frightened people, some generous, some selfish, some scarcely worth consideration except that they are part of the whole--reacting to a natural catastrophe."


In Crawford Kilian's disaster novel, Tsunami, a massive earthquake has caused the Antarctic icecap to break apart, creating the titular event. A similar earthquake today would of course have the same effect, but now with climate change we have additional concerns outside of earth's frequent fizzures, such as the ice shelf which holds back the Thwaites "Doomsday" Glacier in Antarctica melting to the point where the glacier will collapse into the ocean, raising the sea level more than two feet, which would be enough to devastate coastal communities around the world. In the 21st century, if it's not one thing it's another.

Ken Steacy produced the jacket art on the 1983 Douglas & McIntyre hardcover first edition, a wraparound which unfortunately I don't have a full image of. Steacy is a Canadian artist of both book covers and comics who in 2009 was inducted into the Canadian Comic Book Creator Hall of Fame. Since 2011 he has been teaching art at a small college in Vancouver. Years ago I exchanged emails with him about our mutual admiration for Lou Feck. At the time, Steacy was considering publishing a book of Feck's artwork. Alas, it never came to fruition.

Crawford Kilian (1941-) was born in NYC but grew up in Mexico and Los Angeles. Somewhere along the way he migrated north, to British Columbia, and became a college professor and a writer, resulting in hundreds of published articles and dozens of published books, which include science fiction, fantasy and of course, disaster novels.



John Conrad Berkey produced the cover art on the 1984 Bantam paperback edition of Crawford's Tsunami. Berkey (1932-2008) was one of the most innovative and influential artists in publishing, producing hundreds of impressive paintings for books of all genres, which also included movie posters and magazine and advertising work. He is recognized mostly though for his big concept science fiction art, the breadth of which is enormous. It seems he was a master too at painting waves, really big waves--tsunami style! 
 
"Devastating solar flares wipe out the earth's protective ozone layer. Ultraviolet rays scorch vegetation and blind livestock. No one ventures outdoors without dark glasses and sun-block creams on his skin. It seems nothing could be worse. Then, the unthinkable. Vast Antarctic eruptions hurtle a monstrous tidal wave--tsunami--onto America's west coast. In seconds whole cities are crushed, followed by raging fires, nuclear leaks, countless deaths. San Francisco becomes a battle zone as millions fight for food, medical supplies, survival. The government is in chaos, the police powerless. For San Francisco scientists Don and Kirstie Kennard, one hope remains for the stricken city. Together, they can save millions of lives--if they can survive for a few more days... if the tsunami does not come again."



Bonus Image: THE WAVE by John Berkey, date unknown.


CLICK ON IMAGE TO ENLARGE

John Berkey also produced the cover art on Joseph DiMona's The Benedict Arnold Connection, one of his most awe inspiring paintings to date. Dell published it in paperback in 1978. Joseph Dimona (1923-1999), wrote five novels and five non-fiction books, two of them in collaboration with famed Los Angeles coroner, Thomas Noguchi. He also was the ghost writer for Watergate culprit H. R. Haldeman's memoir about the Nixon-Watergate scandal, The Ends of Power. His fiction is where his strength really lies though--all of it is pure page-turning entertainment. You would be hard pressed to find a better writer of espionage-oriented thrillers than DiMona.

"Mr. President, I have the stolen nuclear MIRVs in my possession. I intend to explode them. A tidal wave will be created at 6 P.M July 2 by an underwater explosion in the Atlantic Ocean off New Jersey. When the wave reaches the shore it will be 100 feet high, filled with radioactive poison. One man can stop this catastrophe. He knows who he is. I don't.  949 747 832 .... "

"The terrorist's threat was awesome. A radioactive tidal wave one hundred feet high would break upon the coastal cities of New Jersey and Long Island, caused by a nuclear explosion. And the terrorist who stole three nuclear bombs must be insane because the threat did not include a single political or financial demand. It merely told the American people the tidal wave would occur in thirty-six hours, and no one could stop ti. What did the terrorist want? The President turns to George Williams, the Justice Department's most skilled investigator, for help. Williams can find only one clue to the terrorist's intentions, a fragment of an authentic Revolutionary War map left near the empty missile silo from which three nuclear MIRVs were stolen. On the margin of the map is a note which reads: "For revenge of Nancy, beloved of Benedict Arnold," written two hundred years ago by this country's arch traitor. And part of the tidal wave threat that arrives at the White House contains the same secret code which Benedict Arnold used when he corresponded with the British. Williams must track an obsessed terrorist who once was one of the Deep Men, an anonymous group of assassins whose sinister intrigues are only now becoming known. For George Williams the challenge seems overwhelming. The clues are too puzzling, the time too short, the Deep Men too powerful for Williams to discover--before it is too late--the terrifying secret of the Benedict Arnold Connection."



"The waters rose, submerging New York City. But the residents adapted and it remained the bustling, vibrant metropolis it had always been. Though changed forever. Every street became a canal. Every skyscraper an island. Through the yes of the varied inhabitants of one building, Kim Stanley Robinson shows us how one of our great cities will change with the rising tides. And how we too will change.

According to Kim Stanley Robinson in his book, New York: 2140 (Orbit, 2017), and confirmed by his jacket illustrator Stephen Martiniere, sea levels in the 22nd Century will rise to heights of 50-feet or more due to climate change. Thankfully, Robinson's book is just speculative fiction, but that doesn't mean a rise in sea level isn't in reality imminent. Scientists are saying now that a rise between 2 and 4 feet can be expected by the year 2100, which would mean portions of New York City would be flooded, pretty much like it is in Robinson's book.

In the author's fictional future history the hundred plus years between now and 2140 were devastatingly traumatic: sea levels rose ten feet by 2050, then forty more by 2100, resulting in the deaths of billions of people. But Robinson is also an optimist and one of science-fiction's best utopians, so his New Yorkers have adapted amazingly well to their new watery environment just like 19th & 20th century Venetians did to theirs. Midtown office towers have been turned into apartments with their own docks, dining halls and rooftop farms. Commuters use vaporettos, or skim to their destinations in speedboats. Pedestrians travel through the city via a network of skybridges, essentially big plastic reinforced tubes that span the gaps between buildings. Living in a water-slogged Big Apple isn't so bad after all, according to the Panglossian Robinson.

BUT I'M not a Panglossian, I'm a cynic, and I think how we will fare in our coastal regions will look a lot more like the drowning image below painted by artist Charles Moll...


But I sure hope I am wrong!  

GLUB.... GLUB... GLUB



[© February, 2023, Jeffersen]