Notice: Undefined variable: p in /home/linweb28/c/castaliahouse.com/user/htdocs/wp-content/plugins/page-theme/pageTheme.php on line 33
Forgotten Sword and Sorcery Artists: Charles Moll – castaliahouse.com

Forgotten Sword and Sorcery Artists: Charles Moll

Sunday , 18, June 2017 5 Comments

The psychedelic era of rock music had a distinctive look for album covers. That artistic style spilled over into mass paperback book covers.

One could argue that Charles Moll was the most psychedelic artist for sword and sorcery fiction paperbacks. There is nothing out there on Charles Moll. He painted covers for paperback books in the science fiction and fantasy genres from 1971 to 1982.

Within the realm of sword and sorcery fiction, Moll like so many others worked for Lancer Books. Moll did the covers for Michael Moorcock’s The Dreaming City (1972) and The Sleeping Sorceress (1972).

Frank Frazetta did the cover for David Mason’s Kavin. Moll painted the cover for the sequel, The Return of Kavin (1972). Mason has some interesting stories surrounding him that he was a soldier of fortune, swam to shore with his pet wolf when his house boat sank, and died from a mysterious disease.

Moll did some work for Ace Book including “Andre” Norton’s Huon of the Horn (1973). He also did some covers for Signet/New American Library. Some of you may remember covers for Poul Anderson paperbacks.

He produced some movie posters, the most famous probably being for Logan’s Run.

During the late 1970s, most of his work was for Pocket Books. The style became less psychedelic. Moll did the covers for reprints of four of John Jakes’ “Brak” series in 1977-78. The 1970s Robert E. Howard boom sparked by Zebra Books has set off another round of sword and sorcery publishing. There is a unified look to the paperbacks but they don’t have the vigor of the earlier Frank Frazetta and Michael Leonard covers. Brak looks like a surfer dude instead of a muscular wandering barbarian. The anatomy just does not excite the way Jim Steranko does.

Moll has had a few isolated paperback covers since 1982. His style of trippy dippy cover art was of a specific time. He is truly a forgotten sword and sorcery artist.

5 Comments
  • deuce says:

    Yeah, Moll never did much for me. His rendition of Brak was just lame.

    However, I would have to nominate Patrick Woodroffe as the most craptastic, baroque, psychedelic S&S artist of the ’70s.

  • Xavier Basora says:

    And it also spilled out to the French BDs as well. The comics are ugly,an insult to good taste and really really dated in its esthetic.

  • Christopher Heath says:

    Since the artist and artwork are the main subject of the article, it’d be nice to click on the thumbnails and see larger versions of the cover art. Just hard to discern the artwork in all its glory or lameness, as the case may be.

  • Codex says:

    James Lileks called it: The era of execrable taste. So Chas. Moll is literally it’s poster boy.

    Unless one were already a fan of the authors work, this author’s covers would keep you from picking it up.

    Compare to another Charles M. (Mikolaycak) who turned me on to Dahvlov Ipcar via his cover for A Dark Horn Blowing back in the day.

    https://www.bing.com/images/search?q=charles+mikolayak+covers&FORM=HDRSC2

  • Leave a Reply to Codex Cancel reply

    Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *