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Thomas Canty is credited with pioneering a style of book cover painting and design influenced by such 19th century romantic artists as Alphonse Mucha, Gustav Klimt, and the Pre-Raphaelites. His paintings are featured each year on the cover of the award-winning Year's Best Fantasy and Horror volumes, as well as on numerous other books in the ...
Thomas Charles Renwick Adams (March 29, 1926 – December 9, 2019) [1] [2] was a US-born Anglo-Scots illustrator and painter. Long active in a variety of visual formats, he is known for his work in book cover art, portrait painting, poster, advertising and album art.
File:Cover of 'Brilliant!' art exhibition catalogue.jpg; File:Cover of Carol Wax catalogue raisonne.jpg; File:Cover of Tarsila do Amaral by Stephanie D'Alessandro and Luis Pérez-Oramas.jpg; File:Cover of When Tom Met Alison.png; File:Cover to Drawing Down the Moon, The Art of Charles Vess.jpeg; File:Cucalon.jpg; File:CuteManifesto.jpg
Atlas/Seaboard Comics is a line of comic books published by the American company Seaboard Periodicals in the 1970s. Though the line was published under the brand Atlas Comics, comic book historians and collectors refer to it as Atlas/Seaboard Comics to differentiate it from the 1950s Atlas Comics, a predecessor of Marvel Comics. [1]
A collection of essays with the same title was published in 1962 in the UK by Penguin Books. [2] This edition was a reprint of an earlier collection entitled Selected Essays published in 1957. The collection contains the following essays: "Inside the Whale" "Down the Mine" (a passage from The Road to Wigan Pier) "England Your England"
Down These Mean Streets is a “book claimed by [many] literary traditions, such as U.S. Latin[@] literature or Hispanic literature of the U.S. and Puerto Rican literature written in English.” [16] Anne Garland Mahler of the University of Virginia, on the other hand, classifies Down These Mean Streets as “an autobiography and bildungsroman ...
Mary lives in a hallucinatory world of memories, guns, and above all, murderous rage. After viewing an ad placed in a popular magazine, she becomes convinced that the former leader of the Brigade, Lord Jack, is commanding her to bring him the child she was carrying when her life was suddenly turned upside down.
Taylor attended Norwich School of Art and Design in 1991. Then he studied illustration at Anglia Ruskin University in Cambridge, graduating in 1995. [3]In 1997, Taylor painted his first professional commission, a cover illustration for a children's book, Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone, by then unknown author J. K. Rowling, for which he was paid a flat fee of two or three hundred ...