Here you see a pose that appears over and over in vintage paperback art—one figure looming menacingly in the foreground as a second cowers in the triangular negative space created by the first’s spread legs. This pose is so common it should have a name. We’re thinking “the alpha,” because it signifies male dominance and because of the A shape the pose makes. True, on occasion the dominator isn’t male, sometimes the unfortunate sprawled figure is depicted outside the A shaped space, and sometimes the art expresses something other than dominance, but basically the alpha (see, that just sounds right, doesn’t it?) has been used scores of times with only minor variation. You’ll notice several of these come from subsidiaries of the sleaze publisher Greenleaf Classics. It was a go-to cover style for them. We have twenty examples in all, with art by Bob Abbett, Robert Bonfils, Michel Gourdon, and others.
Faced with this position surrender is the only option.
Greenleaf Classics, Peggy Swenson, Jack Usher, Robert Bonfils, Paul Merchant, Gregory Jones, J.X. Williams, Chris Davidson, Bob Abbett, Patrick Quentin, Doug Warren, Alan Marshall, Andrew Shaw, Darrel Millsap, David Dodge, Russell Trainer, William Kane, Bob McKnight, Mark Dunn, Jack Karney, Virgil Corning, Alan Robinson, Wilfred McNeilly, Leo Malet, Michel Gourdon, cover art, cover collection, literature