This book is about the exciting life of a golf pro who plays near the beach. The cover is by Harry Barton.
Author Archives: Dazzling Erin
Artwork of the Day: Look Out For That Snake!

by Erin Nicole
April Fools!
These snake statues are all over the place at the Dallas Arboretum. I always jump a little whenever I sit down near the waterfall and suddenly see one of them near me.
Artwork of the Day: Magnus The Magnificent (by George Erickson)

by George Erickson
He certainly looks magnificent. As you can tell by the signature in the right hand corner, this cover was done by George Erickson.
Artwork of the Day: The Fool Beloved (by H.M. Brock)

I can’t lie, this cover made ma laugh. It’s from 1949. It probably made people laugh back then too.
Artwork of the Day: Manhunt (by Walter Popp)
Artwork of the Day: We Were Strangers (by James Avati)
This cover is from 1949 and was done by James Avati, whose work we have shared many times in the past and which we will probably share many times in the future.
Artwork of the Day: The Producer (by Raymond Johnson)

by Raymond Johnson
This novel was first published in 1951. The author was also a Hollywood director and screenwriter and the book was based on the people that he had actually worked with. I’m not sure when the edition above was published but it is known that the cover was done by artist Raymond Johnson.
Happy Oscar Sunday!
Artwork of the Day: Terror Detective Story (Artist Unknown)

This is from 1957. Don’t try this at home.
I Watched Coffee Shop (2014, dir. by Dave Alan Johnson)
Donavan (Laura Vandervoort) owns a coffee shop in a small town. Everyone loves her shop but she’s not making any money because she’s not a good manager and she lets her staff and her customers walk all over her. When Ben (Cory M. Grant) comes in the shop and tries to order tea, Donavan thinks that he’s the businessman who wants to buy her shop and turn it into a parking garage. She yells at him but then it turns out that he’s a playwright from New York who is just on vacation after his latest flop. Donavan and Ben fall in love but then the real businessman shows up and it looks like Donavan might lose her business. And then, on top of everything else, Donavan discovers that Ben is writing a play about her situation so she breaks up with him and tells him that he’s not welcome in her shop, even if he has the perfect plan to save it. Who thinks like that!? He’s so inspired by her and how much everyone in town loves her that he wants to immortalize her on stage. How is that a bad thing?
Even though this wasn’t made for Hallmark, it basically is a Hallmark film. There’s no profanity. There’s no sex. I don’t know why it was even rated PG. I liked the small town and the coffee shop looked like it would be a nice place to hang out. The story was too predictable and a lot of Donavan’s financial problem were due to her just being really bad at her job so I had a hard time feeling sorry for her. She should have let someone else run the coffee shop if she was that incompetent.
On a personal note: I’d like to own a coffee shop but I would want it to be located near a baseball stadium. Coffee and baseball is a combo I can get behind.
Artist Profile: Shannon Stirnweis (1932 — 2019)
The veteran illustrator Shannon Stirnweis passed away in 2019, at the age of 87. The following is taken from the obituary, which originally appeared in the Monadnock Ledger-Transcript on Jan. 23, 2019:
Serving in the Army in 1954, he was stationed in Germany where he illustrated for the Army. Working as an Illustrator in NYC, he was President of the Society of Illustrators and one of the founding fathers of the Graphic Artists Guild. Shannon illustrated over 35 children’s books as well as 3 books for Grumbacher Library, “The Art of Painting Dogs”, “The Art of Painting Cats”, and “The Art of Painting the Wild West”. He recently published a book on his life as a painter, “80 Years Behind the Brush”. He wanted to be remembered most for painting scenes of the American West.
Below is a small sampling of some of his work for the pulps:











