Wednesday, August 15, 2018

Phyllis Paul in paperback

Hardcover editions of the eleven novels of Phyllis Paul (1903-1973) are increasingly elusive, and increasingly costly.  All eleven came out in British editions, while four appeared in hardcover in the U.S.  These four include her first novel, We Are Spoiled (William Morrow, 1934), and three of her later and more characteristic novels, Twice Lost (1960), A Little Treachery (1962), and Pulled Down (1965), all published by W.W. Norton. Two of these latter titles achieved publication in U.S. mass market paperback editions, though one was retitled. These paperbacks serve nowadays as more affordable reading copies for those interested in sampling Phyllis Paul.

The paperback publisher was Lancer Books of New York, a firm founded in 1961 which went bankrupt in September 1973. Lancer Books is notable for its many science fiction and fantasy titles, including Robert E. Howard's Conan stories.

In 1966, Lancer launched a series of Lancer Gilt-Edge Gothics, presumably so-called because of the gold-colored edges on the books.  The first two books in this series were by Phyllis Paul, Twice Lost  and Echo of Guilt, the latter being a retitled edition of Pulled Down

Here are the covers of these two books. Note the glowing reviews from the Springfield Republican on the rear cover of each book. And note the series numbering (1 and 2) near the top of the spine. The cover art is uncredited.



Twice Lost had a second printing in March 1973, some months before Lancer's bankruptcy.  Here it is just labelled a Lancer Gothic, though the page count is much higher than in the 1966 printing because of the larger font used in the "Easy Eye" series.


8 comments:

  1. I own the two Gilt-Edge books and they're lovely. I resisted the strong urge to get the rest of the Gilt-Edge series (I'd be interested in hearing if any are worthwhile).
    -Jeff Matthews

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    1. I don't know of many others in the series (and haven't read any others). The ones I do know of all came out in 1966, and include: Nina Bawden, The Solitary Child; Virginia Coffman, The High Terrace; two by Pat Root, The Devil on the Stairs and Evil Became Them; and two by Francis Swann, The Brass Key and Royal Street. Anyone read any of these?

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    2. I can now add one more title to the Lancer Gilt-Edge Gothic series: The Devil's Church (1966) by F. Draco.

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  2. I would've thought the Conan books were something in the nature of cash cows for Lancer, but obviously not enough to keep the company in good financial shape.

    The fashion for "Gothic" paperbacks seems, if my inattentive impressions are correct, to have lasted a few years and then dissipated.

    One grins at the thought of how Charles Williams's The Place of the Lion might've been marketed for this Lancer series -- with the typical fearful, pretty woman in the foreground, an impressive building in the moonlight, and a batlike pterodactyl silhouetted against the lunar orb.

    Dale Nelson

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  3. The popularity of the Gothics lasted nearly two decades, Wurmbrand. Well into the mid 1970s. I've read several Virginia Coffman books. She was a good plotter, wrote lively (as opposed to insipid) dialogue and aspired to real artistry in her writing. She was probably the least formulaic of her more popular, high selling Gothic paperback contemporaries. It is my opinion that she was responsible for the entire craze that dominated the mid 1960s. Unlike most of the Gothic writers she wrote in a variety of genres, and counts two western novels and one noir-ish crime novel reminiscent of Patricia Highsmith's work in her bibliography.

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    1. Thanks for the update on Virginia Coffman. It looks like the Gilt-Edge series went for off-trail interesting books.

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    2. The Lancer edition provided the one Paul book I've read. Hard to get through, but worth the effort.

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    3. The Lancer editions used to be more common, but not so much in recent years.

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