Jack Gaughan's cover art for S.O.S. from Three Worlds by Murray Leinster, 1967.
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'Peter Parker: The Spectacular Spider-Man #101' by John Byrne.
Officially licensed 24" x 36" screen print, in a numbered limited edition of 100 for $60.
On sale Tuesday April 23 at 12pm ET through Bottleneck Gallery.
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A book you very likely don’t have on your shelf #554
Cover by Terry Maloney -- 1952
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Action Comics #1067 (DC, July 2024) variant cover by Ben Oliver
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(From Shannon's Instagram, on the new cover reveal )
My humble response:
No, our Lord Hunkyhair is not looking especially hunky on the new cover. He's not bad, but he just looks a little wrong.
Yes, I am somewhat bothered that our Fearless Miss F is not on the cover. KOTLC has been hijacked by a side character, and as much as we all love Keefe, he's stealing the show by now. Hogging the narrative rather than haunting it.
Yes, the new cover is absolutely a different feel from all the others. Again, not bad, but it does make it feel all the more like we're branching off into a different story. That being said, it's kinda cool to have a different mood to the new cover art because it's set in the human world and therefore of course the vibes would be different. (However, the Legacy cover is also capturing a moment from the human world, with Big Ben in the background and all, and yet it still has that fantasy feel.)
Yes, unfortunately our boy *could* look more awesome. No disrespect to the artist, but this time Keefe just doesn't quite look like the Keefe in the other cover illustrations.
I am liking the plain, ordinary, simpler feel of the setting depicted in the new illustration since it's the Forbidden Cities and not sparkly elf town, as Ro would say. And I am liking the ominous looking hoodie guy looming in the background, and the way he seems to be aware of Keefe while Keefe is maybe not aware of him. I do think this is possibly a critical part of the story somehow.
But I'm still not crazy about how the whole cover is so Keefe-centric and the one and only Moonlark is nowhere to be seen. It's just a little sad to me, and I see it as an indication of how the focus of the plot has shifted from where it started. I'd be fine with having a Keefe short story or a Keefe side story, but he needs to quit hogging that narrative.
Okay, end of rant lol
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Dune Messiah by Frank Herbert, 1972 edition, with cover by Bruce Pennington.
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