Sex Life of a Cop
We have eaten our own words since we've been able to speak. We have torn up our own script since we've been able to bind it, and continued to do so under many guises. Words hurt. Words attempt to hurt. And words do nothing. But in the early 1960s a sleaze kingpin, Reuben Sturman, would find his way to the iron cage, and he did it with a book called "Sex Life of a Cop." published by Sanford Aday's "Saber Books" subsidiary. There are a few representations of the case, which lasted 20 years or more, on the superhighway, and can be found with some ease, provided you get off at the right exits. At the book shows and fairs of my experience, I have never seen a copy, and upon further investigation, one finds that like many books this one had more than one printing. This was of course common with nearly all of the adult paperback companies, even the ones which weren't "adult." Prices were low to begin with, rose a dime every 8-10 years, and have held steady at Shitty. Or what seems to be that, given the fact that I can find a copy of a book I know to have worth for nearly nothing. Obviously I am not the only one doing research on this area of art, else I would not have discovered the wolf amongst my sheep. The true first edition of this hardly naughty little novel, with not as much pork as one might wish save the brief effigies of law enforcement on the front covers, is as such: an angry beer-drinking low-impact police chief with a combover reprimanding his bewildered cadets, one of which has pulled his weapon (likely before the chief could pull his).
$350 - Very Good plus Sex Life of a Cop Oscar Peck Saber Books number SA-11, 1959 |
$50 - Near Fine Sex Life of a Cop Oscar Peck Saber Books number SA-11 (third printing, Special Edition) 1967 |
The second (actually third: the book was retitled shortly after publication, then with the approach of a more relaxed media, re-retitled to its original) edition was labeled "SPECIAL EDITION" probably anchoring on the idea that the general public was open to the recently unfolded court hearings and would be naturally curious and generous (they hiked the price up 60 cents, over a period of 8 years). The angry cop has vanished and a slick and innocent-looking police cruiser with sirens hushed and passengers reclined has resumed. The piggy pinks have left and the cool-to-the touch forrest colors or pride implant the scene:
the moon is there too, how quaint, "Oh nothing to see here, Officer." "All right, Chief, we're goin." "Now, where wear we? Oh I believe I was reading you your Miranda Rights." "Teehemmm! You're not going to pull out your night stick, are you?" "Get the fuck back into the car."
And the cop proceeds to fuck her. It is only to those events before hand that the consuming, and therefore impressionable, public were witness. Oddly, we stumble upon the subsequent "frisking" with the second edition. Important as well, is this edition introduces the actual court proceedings and results, with assumed names and places.
I am not going to guess at the cover artists for both of these editions, and can not attribute them to Saber's oft-commissioned, and GLORIOUS artist, Bill Edwards. His knack for curves and soft colors really presume a regal essence. The first edition, of the two, bares more in resemblance to the work of Edwards than the second, if with regard only to the shading of the figures. Edwards stuck to people too, mostly, like Robert Bonfils, Robert McGinnis, Robert Maguire, and many other Roberts.
This marks an occasion. The occasion is heard popping champagne and the glug of something else, a thickly clouded room of people in ties and button-down shirts and red dresses with lace and phonograph record players and lovely lamps and business men and greaseballs and hot housewives who would have sold this shit themselves had they a computer.
CURRENTS: Denise Bidot, Vanessa Lake, something cooking in the crockpot, and maybe the latest Sports Illustrated Swimsuit edition.
I am not going to guess at the cover artists for both of these editions, and can not attribute them to Saber's oft-commissioned, and GLORIOUS artist, Bill Edwards. His knack for curves and soft colors really presume a regal essence. The first edition, of the two, bares more in resemblance to the work of Edwards than the second, if with regard only to the shading of the figures. Edwards stuck to people too, mostly, like Robert Bonfils, Robert McGinnis, Robert Maguire, and many other Roberts.
This marks an occasion. The occasion is heard popping champagne and the glug of something else, a thickly clouded room of people in ties and button-down shirts and red dresses with lace and phonograph record players and lovely lamps and business men and greaseballs and hot housewives who would have sold this shit themselves had they a computer.
CURRENTS: Denise Bidot, Vanessa Lake, something cooking in the crockpot, and maybe the latest Sports Illustrated Swimsuit edition.
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