Nov. 27th, 2010

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Rudolph Belarski (born 27 May 1900 in Dupont, Pennsylvania - died 24 December 1983) was a renowned artist of pulp magazine, paperback and men's adventure magazine covers.

Belarski’s professional career started with a simple illustration on a whitewashed wall at a Dupont, Pennsylvania coal processing plant. Once the artwork was discovered his bosses set him to painting safety posters while still in his teens. At the age of 21 he enrolled at the Pratt Institute in Brooklyn, New York to fine tune his enormous talents. The management at Pratt Institute was so impressed with his talents, in 1929, several years after he had graduated, Belarski was invited back to teach commercial art.





more covers )

It was in the late 20’s that pulp magazines beckoned while he was still instructing at the Pratt. Pulpwood magazines had a voracious appetite for artwork, as newsstands were filled monthly with their provocative four-color covers. His first covers were destined for the air pulps being published by Dell. Aviation covers dominated Belarski’s easel with only a few exceptions until the mid-30’s when he started doing covers for Ned Pines and the Thrilling Group of titles. The number of titles being produced by Thrilling far exceeded those being produced by Dell, and Rudolph Belarski was one of the main illustrators for the publisher.

Early in 1937 Frank A. Munsey Company, publisher of Argosy and several detective titles, commissioned Belarski for their magazines, while still hard at work on covers for Thrilling. It was during busy times that Belarski would split his time between New York and cabins in Maine or Canada. Painting covers in the light of day while camping. Sometimes polishing off a canvas and shipping it out in a cardboard box overnight.

During World War II, Belarski continued to send work in to Ned Pines, and also entertained troops overseas in British hospitals. Between paper shortages during the war and a shrinking market for pulps, Belarski made the partial jump to paperback covers for Popular Library, also owned by Pines. It was late in 1951 that Belarski made the jump to strictly paperbacks, forever leaving the ragged edged pulpwood magazines behind. It’s a testament to Belarski’s talent that avid collectors of both paperbacks and pulps value his work highly.

Living skeletons. Walking boneyards. Specters of dread and doom. Fantastic images designed to evoke an emotional response to shock and titillate the reader. Rudolph Belarski’s use of these skeletal remnants span from aviation pulps through hero and detective magazines as well as where you’d imagine they’d be, a weird menace cover.

Belarski’s beady-eyed hooded allegory of death jumps off the printed page like a thunderbolt. It commands our attention and was a favorite cover scheme of not only Rudolph Belarski but used by a number of the great pulp artists. George Rozen used the same theme for The Shadow covers and other magazines. Norman Saunders had a dancing skeleton on Complete Detective. Frederick Blakeslee had animated corpses flying World War I airplanes against G-8 in G-8 and his Battle Aces.

For Belarski, the constant theme he stressed was involving the reader in his action. The covers for pulp magazines were designed to appeal to the reader before they even knew what they were getting inside. Fantastic images, bold color, outrageous action, all crammed on the newsstands of Depression Era America. The American pulp publisher knew that their audience was looking for escape. The pulpwood editor knew that action and adventure counted more than intricate plot. The art director and publisher knew which artist would sell more magazines. It was a cold hard fact that some publishers couldn’t pay their authors for stories, but the artist’s fee was paid for up front because it would be the cover that sold the magazine not the half-cent per word starving unknown author. Rudolph Belarski’s career lasted through a depression, and the eventual death of the pulps. He continued on in paperbacks, but the best work of his career was with those 128 page untrimmed wonders known as the pulps.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rudolph_Belarski
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Rudolph Belarski (born 27 May 1900 in Dupont, Pennsylvania - died 24 December 1983) was a renowned artist of pulp magazine, paperback and men's adventure magazine covers.

Belarski’s professional career started with a simple illustration on a whitewashed wall at a Dupont, Pennsylvania coal processing plant. Once the artwork was discovered his bosses set him to painting safety posters while still in his teens. At the age of 21 he enrolled at the Pratt Institute in Brooklyn, New York to fine tune his enormous talents. The management at Pratt Institute was so impressed with his talents, in 1929, several years after he had graduated, Belarski was invited back to teach commercial art.





more covers )

It was in the late 20’s that pulp magazines beckoned while he was still instructing at the Pratt. Pulpwood magazines had a voracious appetite for artwork, as newsstands were filled monthly with their provocative four-color covers. His first covers were destined for the air pulps being published by Dell. Aviation covers dominated Belarski’s easel with only a few exceptions until the mid-30’s when he started doing covers for Ned Pines and the Thrilling Group of titles. The number of titles being produced by Thrilling far exceeded those being produced by Dell, and Rudolph Belarski was one of the main illustrators for the publisher.

Early in 1937 Frank A. Munsey Company, publisher of Argosy and several detective titles, commissioned Belarski for their magazines, while still hard at work on covers for Thrilling. It was during busy times that Belarski would split his time between New York and cabins in Maine or Canada. Painting covers in the light of day while camping. Sometimes polishing off a canvas and shipping it out in a cardboard box overnight.

During World War II, Belarski continued to send work in to Ned Pines, and also entertained troops overseas in British hospitals. Between paper shortages during the war and a shrinking market for pulps, Belarski made the partial jump to paperback covers for Popular Library, also owned by Pines. It was late in 1951 that Belarski made the jump to strictly paperbacks, forever leaving the ragged edged pulpwood magazines behind. It’s a testament to Belarski’s talent that avid collectors of both paperbacks and pulps value his work highly.

Living skeletons. Walking boneyards. Specters of dread and doom. Fantastic images designed to evoke an emotional response to shock and titillate the reader. Rudolph Belarski’s use of these skeletal remnants span from aviation pulps through hero and detective magazines as well as where you’d imagine they’d be, a weird menace cover.

Belarski’s beady-eyed hooded allegory of death jumps off the printed page like a thunderbolt. It commands our attention and was a favorite cover scheme of not only Rudolph Belarski but used by a number of the great pulp artists. George Rozen used the same theme for The Shadow covers and other magazines. Norman Saunders had a dancing skeleton on Complete Detective. Frederick Blakeslee had animated corpses flying World War I airplanes against G-8 in G-8 and his Battle Aces.

For Belarski, the constant theme he stressed was involving the reader in his action. The covers for pulp magazines were designed to appeal to the reader before they even knew what they were getting inside. Fantastic images, bold color, outrageous action, all crammed on the newsstands of Depression Era America. The American pulp publisher knew that their audience was looking for escape. The pulpwood editor knew that action and adventure counted more than intricate plot. The art director and publisher knew which artist would sell more magazines. It was a cold hard fact that some publishers couldn’t pay their authors for stories, but the artist’s fee was paid for up front because it would be the cover that sold the magazine not the half-cent per word starving unknown author. Rudolph Belarski’s career lasted through a depression, and the eventual death of the pulps. He continued on in paperbacks, but the best work of his career was with those 128 page untrimmed wonders known as the pulps.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rudolph_Belarski
reviews_and_ramblings: (Default)
Promises and Lies by Rowena Sudbury
Publisher Link: http://www.dreamspinnerpress.com/store/product_info.php?products_id=2060

When Sean Murphy meets Jeff Hayes in a park one day, he's charmed by the simple pleasure Jeff finds in walking his dog, and despite Jeff's guardian, Jesse, hovering over them, a friendship is born. Sean realizes there’s something different about Jeff, something that would explain his timid nature and fear of disappointing Jesse, and he suspects Jeff has been a victim of abuse.

Sean works hard to earn Jeff's trust, but there are so many challenges to meet: Jeff's unusual dependency upon Jesse, Sean's devil-may-care attitude toward the past, and old nightmares and disabilities that continue to haunt Jeff to this day. Their growing love might not be enough. Jeff will have to find courage from somewhere deep within to take control of his life and decide if he wants Sean to be a part of his future.

Excerpt )
reviews_and_ramblings: (Default)
Promises and Lies by Rowena Sudbury
Publisher Link: http://www.dreamspinnerpress.com/store/product_info.php?products_id=2060

When Sean Murphy meets Jeff Hayes in a park one day, he's charmed by the simple pleasure Jeff finds in walking his dog, and despite Jeff's guardian, Jesse, hovering over them, a friendship is born. Sean realizes there’s something different about Jeff, something that would explain his timid nature and fear of disappointing Jesse, and he suspects Jeff has been a victim of abuse.

Sean works hard to earn Jeff's trust, but there are so many challenges to meet: Jeff's unusual dependency upon Jesse, Sean's devil-may-care attitude toward the past, and old nightmares and disabilities that continue to haunt Jeff to this day. Their growing love might not be enough. Jeff will have to find courage from somewhere deep within to take control of his life and decide if he wants Sean to be a part of his future.

Excerpt )
reviews_and_ramblings: (Default)
AEQUITAS BOOKS
Read more... )

AMBER ALLURE (http://www.amberquill.com/AmberAllure/)
Read more... )

ASPEN MOUNTAIN PRESS (http://www.aspenmountainpress.com/)
Read more... )

BELLA BOOKS (http://www.bellabooks.com/)
Read more... )

BOLD STROKES BOOKS (http://www.boldstrokesbooks.com/)
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BREATHLESS PRESS (http://www.breathlesspress.com/)
Read more... )

BRISK PRESS (http://www.briskpress.com/)
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BYWATER BOOKS (http://www.bywaterbooks.com/)
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CARINA PRESS (http://ebooks.carinapress.com/)
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CHANGELING PRESS (http://www.changelingpress.com/)
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CHELSEA STATION EDITIONS (http://www.chelseastationeditions.com/)
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CIRCLET PRESS (http://www.circlet.com/)
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CLEIS PRESS (http://www.cleispress.com/)
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COBBLESTONE PRESS (http://www.cobblestone-press.com/)
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DREAMSPINNER PRESS (http://www.dreamspinnerpress.com/)
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EPIGRAPH
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EXTASY BOOKS (http://www.extasybooks.net/)
Read more... )

HARPER COLLINS (http://www.harpercollins.com/)
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INTAGLIO (http://www.intagliopub.com/)
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LETHE PRESS (http://www.lethepressbooks.com/)
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LOOSE ID (http://www.loose-id.com/)
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LOVEYOUDIVINE (http://www.loveyoudivine.com/)
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LULU PRESS (http://www.lulu.com/)
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M&V TAILZ (http://www.allromanceebooks.com/)
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MACMILLIAN (http://us.macmillan.com/)
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MANIFOLD PRESS (http://manifoldpress.co.uk/)
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MLR PRESS (http://www.mlrbooks.com/)
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NOBLE ROMANCE PUBLISHING (http://www.nobleromance.com/)
Read more... )

NU PRESS (http://www.nupress.northwestern.edu/)
Read more... )

ORMIDON PUBLISHING
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PENGUIN BOOKS (http://us.penguingroup.com/)
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PHAZE BOOKS (http://www.phaze.com/)
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PINK PETAL BOOKS (http://pinkpetalbooks.com/)
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POWERHOUSE BOOKS (http://www.powerhousearena.com/)
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PURPLE SWORD PUBLICATIONS (http://purplesword.com/)
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QUOTE EDITIONS (http://quoteeditions.com/)
Read more... )

RANDOM HOUSE (http://www.randomhouse.com/)
Read more... )

RAVENOUS ROMANCE (http://www.ravenousromance.com/)
Read more... )

REBEL SATORI PRESS (http://www.rebelsatoripress.com/)
Read more... )

RESPLENDENCE PUBLISHING (http://www.resplendencepublishing.com/)
Read more... )

SAMHAIN PUBLISHING (http://www.samhainpublishing.com/)
Read more... )

SEAL PRESS (http://www.sealpress.com/)
Read more... )

SHADOWFIRE PRESS (http://www.shadowfirepress.com/)
Read more... )

SILVER PUBLISHING (http://silverpublishing.info/)
Read more... )

SIMON & SCHUSTER (http://books.simonandschuster.com/)
Read more... )

SIREN PUBLISHING (http://www.sirenpublishing.com/)
Read more... )

SPUYTEN DUYVIL (http://www.spuytenduyvil.net/)
Read more... )

TORQUERE BOOKS (http://www.torquerebooks.com/)
Read more... )

TOTAL-E-BOUND (http://www.total-e-bound.com/)
Read more... )

UNTREED READS PUBLISHING (http://www.untreedreads.com/)
Read more... )

VANILLA HEART PUBLISHING (http://www.vanillaheartbooksandauthors.com/)
Read more... )

WAVE BOOKS (http://www.wavepoetry.com/)
Read more... )

ZUMAYA BOUNDLESS (http://www.zumayapublications.com/)
Read more... )

For Publishers: If you would like to be add to the weekly releases post, please contact me.

For Authors: If you would like to post an excerpt, please contact me.
reviews_and_ramblings: (Default)
AEQUITAS BOOKS
Read more... )

AMBER ALLURE (http://www.amberquill.com/AmberAllure/)
Read more... )

ASPEN MOUNTAIN PRESS (http://www.aspenmountainpress.com/)
Read more... )

BELLA BOOKS (http://www.bellabooks.com/)
Read more... )

BOLD STROKES BOOKS (http://www.boldstrokesbooks.com/)
Read more... )

BREATHLESS PRESS (http://www.breathlesspress.com/)
Read more... )

BRISK PRESS (http://www.briskpress.com/)
Read more... )

BYWATER BOOKS (http://www.bywaterbooks.com/)
Read more... )

CARINA PRESS (http://ebooks.carinapress.com/)
Read more... )

CHANGELING PRESS (http://www.changelingpress.com/)
Read more... )

CHELSEA STATION EDITIONS (http://www.chelseastationeditions.com/)
Read more... )

CIRCLET PRESS (http://www.circlet.com/)
Read more... )

CLEIS PRESS (http://www.cleispress.com/)
Read more... )

COBBLESTONE PRESS (http://www.cobblestone-press.com/)
Read more... )

DREAMSPINNER PRESS (http://www.dreamspinnerpress.com/)
Read more... )

EPIGRAPH
Read more... )

EXTASY BOOKS (http://www.extasybooks.net/)
Read more... )

HARPER COLLINS (http://www.harpercollins.com/)
Read more... )

INTAGLIO (http://www.intagliopub.com/)
Read more... )

LETHE PRESS (http://www.lethepressbooks.com/)
Read more... )

LOOSE ID (http://www.loose-id.com/)
Read more... )

LOVEYOUDIVINE (http://www.loveyoudivine.com/)
Read more... )

LULU PRESS (http://www.lulu.com/)
Read more... )

M&V TAILZ (http://www.allromanceebooks.com/)
Read more... )

MACMILLIAN (http://us.macmillan.com/)
Read more... )

MANIFOLD PRESS (http://manifoldpress.co.uk/)
Read more... )

MLR PRESS (http://www.mlrbooks.com/)
Read more... )

NOBLE ROMANCE PUBLISHING (http://www.nobleromance.com/)
Read more... )

NU PRESS (http://www.nupress.northwestern.edu/)
Read more... )

ORMIDON PUBLISHING
Read more... )

PENGUIN BOOKS (http://us.penguingroup.com/)
Read more... )

PHAZE BOOKS (http://www.phaze.com/)
Read more... )

PINK PETAL BOOKS (http://pinkpetalbooks.com/)
Read more... )

POWERHOUSE BOOKS (http://www.powerhousearena.com/)
Read more... )

PURPLE SWORD PUBLICATIONS (http://purplesword.com/)
Read more... )

QUOTE EDITIONS (http://quoteeditions.com/)
Read more... )

RANDOM HOUSE (http://www.randomhouse.com/)
Read more... )

RAVENOUS ROMANCE (http://www.ravenousromance.com/)
Read more... )

REBEL SATORI PRESS (http://www.rebelsatoripress.com/)
Read more... )

RESPLENDENCE PUBLISHING (http://www.resplendencepublishing.com/)
Read more... )

SAMHAIN PUBLISHING (http://www.samhainpublishing.com/)
Read more... )

SEAL PRESS (http://www.sealpress.com/)
Read more... )

SHADOWFIRE PRESS (http://www.shadowfirepress.com/)
Read more... )

SILVER PUBLISHING (http://silverpublishing.info/)
Read more... )

SIMON & SCHUSTER (http://books.simonandschuster.com/)
Read more... )

SIREN PUBLISHING (http://www.sirenpublishing.com/)
Read more... )

SPUYTEN DUYVIL (http://www.spuytenduyvil.net/)
Read more... )

TORQUERE BOOKS (http://www.torquerebooks.com/)
Read more... )

TOTAL-E-BOUND (http://www.total-e-bound.com/)
Read more... )

UNTREED READS PUBLISHING (http://www.untreedreads.com/)
Read more... )

VANILLA HEART PUBLISHING (http://www.vanillaheartbooksandauthors.com/)
Read more... )

WAVE BOOKS (http://www.wavepoetry.com/)
Read more... )

ZUMAYA BOUNDLESS (http://www.zumayapublications.com/)
Read more... )

For Publishers: If you would like to be add to the weekly releases post, please contact me.

For Authors: If you would like to post an excerpt, please contact me.

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