Good Show Sir’s Art Direction: What can I say we keep on winning with man tigers… but how could we improve it I hear you ask? Dinosaurs! Lots of them! With swords and shields! They don’t even need to be anthropomorphic!
Published 2016
Good Show Sir’s Art Direction: What can I say we keep on winning with man tigers… but how could we improve it I hear you ask? Dinosaurs! Lots of them! With swords and shields! They don’t even need to be anthropomorphic!
Published 2016
Good Show Sir’s Art Direction: Remember your expression when you walked in on me in the bathroom? Just like that, but with a floating huge mountain in front of your face instead of my dong.
Published 1991
Nigel Comments: Pish Posh and Balderdash! Let me finish off this doobie and I’ll conjure up another curious quest tale.
“It was a dark and stormy night …”
Published 1986
GSS Admin: Here’s the original artwork. Can’t find a higher resolution though.
It’s a Two-fer Tuesday – Virgin Planet special!
Good Show Sir Comments:
#1 It says “Cover design Lester, Larkin & Divers” on back cover. Took a three-man team to design an arse cover.
#2 OK lady but if you’ve never seen a man you’re setting your expectations up a little high.
Published 1969, 2000
Thanks to Raoul for sending one in! You might remember this from here and here.
Good Show Sir Comments: You’d be dripping drool too if your teeth never let you close your mouth.
Published 1969
Good Show Sir Comments: Always check the credentials of your Botox doctor.
Published 1971
Good Show Sir Comments: “I gotta stop drinking on Ambien.”
Published 1970
Thanks to Sérgio for sending this in!
It’s a Two-fer Tuesday – Planet of the Damned special!
Good Show Sir Comments:
1. Max Manspreading
2. Obviously passed-out ladies are central to the plot of this book.
Published 1980, 1981
Tom Luczycki’s Art Direction: I need a guy astride a giant walking fish-thing accompanied by a metallic angel with nippless bazooms. Could you have the guy holding an impossibly small and ineffective bow? Forget about the arrows. The bow is more a symbol for the subtext of the underlying metaphor. And moths. The moths should round things out nicely.
Published 1983
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