
This cover got us to finally look up spats in a dictionary to find out what they were for. Apparently they weren’t just fashion statements. They were designed to protect shoes and socks from mud and dirt. Blood and spittle too—at least on this vintage cover for Donald Henderson’s Clark’s debut novel Louis Beretti, which deals with the rise of a 1920s era New York City hoodlum. He’s an immigrant kid who grows up on the East Side, serves in the army during World War I, and returns during Prohibition to be drawn into bootlegging, which he leverages into restaurant ownership and a position of respect and influence. But you know what they say—you can take the man out of the hood, but never the hood out of the man. The book was originally published in 1929, but this Avon Edition is copyright 1949, with cover art by an unknown.





































