My mother introduced me to Georgette Heyer when I was about thirteen.
She always bought the latest Georgette Heyer the moment it came out and, apart
from enjoying the stories, I also admired the covers. I quickly realized that
they were a pastiche of Regency prints – we had a number of prints by
Rowlandson at home, and my mother had a copy of Batsford’s plates from the Gallery of Fashion 1790-1822, which is
now mine, so I recognized the sort of clothes Heyer’s characters would have
worn.
Illustration from the ‘Gallery
of Fashion’
I don’t know what happened to all my mother’s first
editions of Georgette Heyers, unfortunately. I bought my own paperback copies, some with awful covers,
like this 1962 cover of The Corinthian.
The Pan Books 1962 cover of ‘The Corinthian’
Fortunately, some, like the 1963 Peacock cover by Victor
Ambrus, a well-respected book illustrator, are rather good. (Peacock was a
Penguin Books imprint which, age-wise, came between Puffin Books for children,
and Penguin Books for adults.) The Ambrus pictures have energy and movement which captures the restlessness and impetuosity of the young hero, Dominic, and the excitement of the story, perfectly. And, big plus, he'd obviously actually read the book.
I did manage to buy some hardback Heyers in second hand
bookshops, a number of which were first editions – but, as one of her early
books, These Old Shades, sold over
190,000 copies in hardback when it came out in 1926, first editions are not
particularly rare. Her books were automatic bestsellers, after all.
Georgette Heyer’s ‘Friday’s Child’, 1944, cover by Philip Gough
A number of Heyer’s early novels had books covers by Philip
Gough, and I particularly like his cover for Friday’s Child’ with the heroine gazing out of the window. We cannot
see her face and do not know what she’s looking at so intently, but it draws us
in.
I already had a paperback copy of the book, but I happily upgraded
it for this nice edition with the original cover.
Sprig Muslin by Georgette Heyer, cover design by Arthur Barbosa
I value my Georgette Heyers – they have given me a lot of
pleasure over the years. I have been known to buy a second hand hardback copy
of a Georgette Heyer simply for its cover, for example, Sprig Muslin. My own copy was a first edition hardback but it was coverless.
I bought this copy for £4.99 – not expensive, put the new cover on it, and
donated the book I’d just bought, now coverless, back to the Charity Shop.
'Sylvester' by Georgette Heyer, book cover by Arthur Barbosa
I did the same thing with Sylvester, which has another Barbosa cover. I was particularly
pleased with this purchase because I didn’t know what the original cover looked
like, so I was thrilled to find it.
I’d be very surprised to find that I’m the only Heyer fan to
do such a thing! It just goes to show that a classy cover really can sell a
book. And the continuing popularity of Heyer's novels.
A closing note
This is my last post for the Historical Romance UK Blogspot
and I’d like to thank all of you who have followed me. I hope you have enjoyed
the posts – I certainly enjoyed writing them.
I shall continue to blog every Sunday on my
Elizabeth Hawksley website and I hope that you will visit me there. http://elizabethhawksley.com/blog/ I also Tweet whenever I put up a new post. @Hawksley_E
I have recently expanded my list of Categories which has a number of areas of interest to readers of Historical Romance, for example: Castles (including Stately Homes); Exhibitions (King Charles II and Power Dressing; or historical royal
toys at Buckingham Palace); Exploring
London (Behind the scenes at the Royal Mews); Fashion (History of Underwear exhibition at the V & A); Jane Austen and her World (posts about
Georgette Heyer are listed here); Royal
Connections (from sexy John of Gaunt to a Medieval Queen’s bathroom at
Leeds Castle); Notable People (Lord
Byron, Georgette Heyer) There are eighteen categories in all and posts appear
in more than one category.
You are welcome to browse. Click on Blog, then on Categories.
You are welcome to browse. Click on Blog, then on Categories.
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I wish you all a happy and prosperous 2019.
Elizabeth Hawksley