I was juggling a couple different possibilities for a cover for Public Policy Hooligan.
Just like in my real life – I couldn’t figure out what to do with that bomb on the cover. So I went with the cigar cover…
“As long as rulers are above the law,
citizens have the same type of freedom
that slaves had on days
when their masters chose not to beat them.”
I was juggling a couple different possibilities for a cover for Public Policy Hooligan.
Just like in my real life – I couldn’t figure out what to do with that bomb on the cover. So I went with the cigar cover…
I had this vision of a book cover put in my mind by some supernatural being from outer space, or maybe it’s just the medication.
I’m seeing a youthful Jim Bovard wearing a leather jacket (like Brando had in The Wild One) and an oversized Brixton hooligan cap (google it to see one) standing in a bathroom. Painted on the wall (near the top of the cover) in large letters: PUBLIC POLICY HOOLIGAN.
Perhaps an open can of paint with a brush in it is sitting on the floor. Jim is holding a large cherry bomb over a toilet and lighting it with a Zippo. The U.S. Great Seal is on the tank of the toilet.
At the bottom of the cover, there is a sort of tag line:
A Hooligan Confesses Why He Throws Cherry Bombs Into The Toilets Of Public Policy.
This thing needs to be done in the style of those sleazy pocket-book sized novels published in the fifties.
Maybe if you checked out a few nursing homes in the Bowery, you could find the artist that did the cover for this William Burroughs book:
http://2.bp.blogspot.com/_WSK3Pwm9c8w/S-sqfok-ciI/AAAAAAAAARk/EN4K3x_knt4/s1600/Junkie_2.jpg
As usual, Tom, you’re about 10 miles ahead of me (and probably everybody else) when it comes to design ideas.
Great idea for a cover. Not sure about the toilet – I was trying so hard to ‘go lofty’ on this cover design. But maybe the cigar & the railroad engineer cap in the final design blunt that aspiration as much as the toilet bowl.