1955’s The Ripening is a novel in the vein of Steinbeck by Eugene Wyble about oppressed southern tomato pickers (we were thinking those were apples, but no) subsisting according to the whims of a cruel cannery operator. It was poorly reviewed and soon forgotten, but we appreciate the cover art, especially the shadow on the girl’s thigh (her name is Teenie, as befits the mandatory nubile farmer’s daughter you often find in this genre of fiction). Notice how the shadow of the hand—it could be his or hers, but we’re thinking it’s his—becomes a sort of beastly claw grasping her leg, yet is kept in balance with the male figure so it’s an extension of him and a signifier of his violence and lust. That’s clever. Unfortunately, the artist was not clever enough to get credit for his/her work. You may notice the Ace logo says “double” but this not one of their celebrated double-sided novels, with two front covers and the second book printed upside down relative to the first. It’s a double-size novel. So you get only one book and one cover here.
Asking for it? How is calling you a big smelly sub-mental mutant who has manners like a badger asking for it?