The Dead Walked Book One: Outbreak will be available exclusively from
Amazon for 90 days and should be on sale from Amazon’s Kindle store
tomorrow, and will also be available from the Kindle lending library.
Early next year the book will also be available in all other eFormats.
The novella is the first in The Dead Walked Trilogy.
The cover art was done by Tony Masero, an artist whose works has
graced the covers of many a book – I came to know Tony from his work on
the Edge western series but he has over the years done many horror
novels including books by James Herbert and Dean Koontz.
Check out Tony’s work HERE
And below is look at what went into the creation of the cover art for
The Dead Walked, and what’s more later this week I will reveal Tony’s
cover art for The Dead Walked Book Two which will see print next March.
Showing posts with label tony masero. Show all posts
Showing posts with label tony masero. Show all posts
Monday, 19 December 2011
Visceral Images
Labels:
gary dobbs,
horror,
the dead walked,
tony masero,
VINCENT STARK,
zombies
Friday, 11 November 2011
A Man called Masero
Although best known as an artist (he did the cover for my forthcoming novel, The Dead Walked - you know) Tony Masero is making a name for himself as a western novelist.
Western fans could do worse than check out any of the titles listed below.
HARD RAIN MUST FALL available now from Amazon
IN THE DEVIL'S GRIP available now from Amazon
JOHNNY DOLLAR coming from Black Horse Westerns - publication due 2012
Western fans could do worse than check out any of the titles listed below.
HARD RAIN MUST FALL available now from Amazon
IN THE DEVIL'S GRIP available now from Amazon
THE RIFLEMEN Two Men Against an Army available now from Solstice Publishing and Amazon
JAKE RAINS available now from The Book Depository. From November 2011 - Black Horse Westerns and Amazon
THE PURSUED Some Old Friends Die Hard Coming soon from Solstice PublishingJOHNNY DOLLAR coming from Black Horse Westerns - publication due 2012
Labels:
tony masero,
westerns
Friday, 26 August 2011
Thursday, 18 August 2011
How the Dead Walked
Artist Tony Masero has added an interesting new page to his website that looks at the creation of his art from original sketches to finished piece, and he's used the cover image from the first book in my forthcoming, The Dead Walked trilogy as an example.
So if you're interested in knowing how we got from this:
To this:
Then CLICK HERE
![]() |
| From Tony Masero's webite |
So if you're interested in knowing how we got from this:
To this:
Then CLICK HERE
Monday, 11 April 2011
THE RIFLEMAN
The advent of eBooks has given often neglected genres like the western a new lease of life and there's a posse of interesting titles out there at the moment.
The Rifleman comes from Tony Masero, whom Archive readers will know as the artist responsible for many of the paperback covers for series such as Edge and Adam Steele. And now while his paintbrush is resting, Tony's taken up the pen and a full length novel, The Rifleman's just been released from Solstice Westerns in all the popular eBook formats.
The Rifleman comes from Tony Masero, whom Archive readers will know as the artist responsible for many of the paperback covers for series such as Edge and Adam Steele. And now while his paintbrush is resting, Tony's taken up the pen and a full length novel, The Rifleman's just been released from Solstice Westerns in all the popular eBook formats.
Mexico, 1868. Two men. One white, one coloured. Proficient in shooting with the long arm, the greatest long-range weapon of the age. The .50 calibre Sharps rifle.
The ex-sharpshooters Nick Guardeen and Thaddeus Johnston receive an invitation from the Arizona State Governor. He offers them something they’ve never had before: land. So, for the promise of their very own homestead, they accept a highly dangerous mission across the border into Mexico.
Hounded by a merciless gang of assassins, they press on into the desert redoubt of the self-styled and ruthless General Wyatt whose crazy ambition is nothing less than reinstating the Confederacy. Their only assistance comes from the beautiful and mysterious Christine Lenoir. She risks all as a spy in the heart of the renegade fortress, driven by her hatred for the General.
Nick and Thaddeus need all their skills and fighting technique to survive against Apaches, murderers and a reinstated army of rebel forces.
Check out the book HERE and expect a full review on the Archive very soon.
The ex-sharpshooters Nick Guardeen and Thaddeus Johnston receive an invitation from the Arizona State Governor. He offers them something they’ve never had before: land. So, for the promise of their very own homestead, they accept a highly dangerous mission across the border into Mexico.
Hounded by a merciless gang of assassins, they press on into the desert redoubt of the self-styled and ruthless General Wyatt whose crazy ambition is nothing less than reinstating the Confederacy. Their only assistance comes from the beautiful and mysterious Christine Lenoir. She risks all as a spy in the heart of the renegade fortress, driven by her hatred for the General.
Nick and Thaddeus need all their skills and fighting technique to survive against Apaches, murderers and a reinstated army of rebel forces.
Check out the book HERE and expect a full review on the Archive very soon.
Labels:
the rifleman,
tony masero
Friday, 10 September 2010
JOHN WAYNE TRIBUTE WEEKEND: Hanging with the Duke: Tony Masero
I became friends with Tony Masero because of George G Gilman's western series, Edge. I was a fan of the books and Tony was the artist responsible for many of the original Edge paperback covers. He is also the man behind the artwork for the first of the Edge eBooks.
Now Tony, being a man of impeccable taste, reads the Archive daily and when he heard of the John Wayne tribute weekend, he sent us this example of the artwork he did for the VHS release of Hellfighters.
It's great to see the original painting alongside the finished video cover. Tony also did a painting for True Grit and he's promised that if he can dig it out he'll send it along for the enjoyment of readers of the Archive.
Tony can be found HERE - check out his gallery of artwork covering his many years as a professional illustrator and artist.
Now Tony, being a man of impeccable taste, reads the Archive daily and when he heard of the John Wayne tribute weekend, he sent us this example of the artwork he did for the VHS release of Hellfighters.
It's great to see the original painting alongside the finished video cover. Tony also did a painting for True Grit and he's promised that if he can dig it out he'll send it along for the enjoyment of readers of the Archive.
Tony can be found HERE - check out his gallery of artwork covering his many years as a professional illustrator and artist.
Labels:
john wayne tribute weekend,
tony masero
Wednesday, 11 August 2010
Touching up the Edges - Tony Masero
When the possibility that the Edge series would be revived became a certainty we found ourselves facing a major problem - the artwork on the original books had become iconic, particularly the appearance of Edge himself. How could we relaunch the series for the digital age without keeping that classic look? We could of course opt for an entire new look and this was considered for the briefest of moments but when Terry Harknett, the man behind the George Gilman name suggested contacting Tony Masero, the artist responsible for many of the original Edge covers and making him an offer he couldn't refuse - namely, give us a new cover, pretty please! the response was better than expected.
Not only did Tony, by combining two of his original works, produce a cover for the first Edge eBook that was totally new but retained the classic feel, he also threw himself into the project wholeheartedly. Following the publication of Edge: The Loner later this month, the Edge series will settle into a schedule of quarterly releases. The books will be released in the correct chronological order but with two of the original novels in each eVolume. As well as the 61 Edge novels originally published by New English Library Terry also wrote three team-up novels featuring two of his most popular characters, Edge and Adam Steele and as soon as Tony learned that the plan was to offer the first of these team-up novels to readers free to coincide with the publication of the second Edge eBook, which will contain the novel Ten Thousand Dollars American and Apache Death, he jumped in by promptly creating a cover for that book also. The image is exclusively revealed here. And in my humble opinion Tony's new image is even better than the cover he produced for the original paperback - the colour scheme and font this time out are far more eye-catching. The title Steele/Edge, a nod to the popular fanzine of the day which was edited by Mike Stotter, also works far better than having Edge's name leading as in the original paperback series.
I caught up with Tony and fired a few questions his way.
GD: I read somewhere that the original depiction of Edge was based on the footballer, George Best. Is this true?
TM: The story goes that the look of Edge was conceived by both the original illustrator, the late Dick Clifton Dey and the New English Library Art Director at the time, Cecil Smith. Clifton Dey used George Best, the footballer, as a basis for the character with some of his own worry lines and wrinkles to add character. When I came on the scene and took over the cover artwork it was an existing look and obviously needed to be maintained at least to some degree to give continuity to what was proving to be a growing series.
Clifton Dey was a very fine illustrator who I had great admiration for but obviously we all have our own techniques and style, so I was eventually able to bring my own look to the covers. Across the years I felt some calls were needed for change every so often as taste and inclination progressed amongst the buying public, the shift to a looser oil painting style in No. 45 forinstance. Then latterly, more design based images using airbrush as in No. 58.
Where the original cover look succeeded I believe, was in the minimalist content - main figure and some kind of suggestion of violence in the background. A simple and effective shorthand which gave the main character predominance and repetitively created a visual personality the reader could identify with.
GD: When commissioned for a paperback cover painting - western or otherwise, how much freedom did you have in deciding on the painting?
TM: It varied greatly, some clients were very particular about following the synopses or manuscript I received. Others, as was the case with the Edge and Steele series, I had a great deal of leeway and was usually allowed to come up with my own ideas with maybe an element or two from Terry’s synopses (Mexicans or Noah’s Ark! - the guy had some weird ideas sometimes) to give the cover relevance. Every cover had to have a pencil visual which needed to be okayed by the publisher before going to artwork and usually this was a rubber stamp procedure.
Normally I would strap on the gunbelt and Navy Colt, grab the model Winchester and snap off a set of shots using a Polaroid - there was a little shoe box I had set aside for all the Edge bits and pieces; black shirt, necktie, etc. Then it was a matter of finding reference for the background and stitching Edge’s head correctly in place instead of mine. Movie stills played a big part as a reference source and scouring the movie shops and convention halls for these was an ongoing mission.
GD: Any particular favourites among your work?
TM: Edge favourites: No. 30 - pleased with the painting, which was a lot of detailed gouache work with a ‘000’ sable brush and with a difficult lighting source to achieve. No. 20 - just like the gouache paint work on this one which I think was particularly successful. No. 48 - personal reasons really, because I used my (then) young son as a model.
GD: Your new mesh-up for the first Edge eBook is spot on and obviously shows an understanding of the character, so what is it about Edge do you think that gives him this evergreen status when many other western series are forgotten?
TM: The archetypal anti-hero image, I suppose. Man in black, standing alone against all odds, a format that fits so well into the Western genre.
Tony's personal website HERE contains many examples of his distinctive work and not only in the western field - over the years Tony has worked in just about every genre there is. His work for the Dr Who Books must be seen to be believed. Readers may also like to check out the detailed interview with Tony over at Western Fiction Review.
And there's more Edge to come on the Archive when creator, Terry Harknett joins us around the virtual campfire.
![]() |
| Archive Exclusive - the new cover for the forthcoming free eBook, Two of a Kind |
I caught up with Tony and fired a few questions his way.
GD: I read somewhere that the original depiction of Edge was based on the footballer, George Best. Is this true?
TM: The story goes that the look of Edge was conceived by both the original illustrator, the late Dick Clifton Dey and the New English Library Art Director at the time, Cecil Smith. Clifton Dey used George Best, the footballer, as a basis for the character with some of his own worry lines and wrinkles to add character. When I came on the scene and took over the cover artwork it was an existing look and obviously needed to be maintained at least to some degree to give continuity to what was proving to be a growing series.
Clifton Dey was a very fine illustrator who I had great admiration for but obviously we all have our own techniques and style, so I was eventually able to bring my own look to the covers. Across the years I felt some calls were needed for change every so often as taste and inclination progressed amongst the buying public, the shift to a looser oil painting style in No. 45 forinstance. Then latterly, more design based images using airbrush as in No. 58.
Where the original cover look succeeded I believe, was in the minimalist content - main figure and some kind of suggestion of violence in the background. A simple and effective shorthand which gave the main character predominance and repetitively created a visual personality the reader could identify with.
GD: When commissioned for a paperback cover painting - western or otherwise, how much freedom did you have in deciding on the painting?
![]() |
| "Edge 30 . A lot of gouache work." |
TM: It varied greatly, some clients were very particular about following the synopses or manuscript I received. Others, as was the case with the Edge and Steele series, I had a great deal of leeway and was usually allowed to come up with my own ideas with maybe an element or two from Terry’s synopses (Mexicans or Noah’s Ark! - the guy had some weird ideas sometimes) to give the cover relevance. Every cover had to have a pencil visual which needed to be okayed by the publisher before going to artwork and usually this was a rubber stamp procedure.
Normally I would strap on the gunbelt and Navy Colt, grab the model Winchester and snap off a set of shots using a Polaroid - there was a little shoe box I had set aside for all the Edge bits and pieces; black shirt, necktie, etc. Then it was a matter of finding reference for the background and stitching Edge’s head correctly in place instead of mine. Movie stills played a big part as a reference source and scouring the movie shops and convention halls for these was an ongoing mission.
GD: Any particular favourites among your work?
TM: Edge favourites: No. 30 - pleased with the painting, which was a lot of detailed gouache work with a ‘000’ sable brush and with a difficult lighting source to achieve. No. 20 - just like the gouache paint work on this one which I think was particularly successful. No. 48 - personal reasons really, because I used my (then) young son as a model.
GD: Your new mesh-up for the first Edge eBook is spot on and obviously shows an understanding of the character, so what is it about Edge do you think that gives him this evergreen status when many other western series are forgotten?
![]() |
| ALL NEW EDGE |
TM: The archetypal anti-hero image, I suppose. Man in black, standing alone against all odds, a format that fits so well into the Western genre.
Tony's personal website HERE contains many examples of his distinctive work and not only in the western field - over the years Tony has worked in just about every genre there is. His work for the Dr Who Books must be seen to be believed. Readers may also like to check out the detailed interview with Tony over at Western Fiction Review.
And there's more Edge to come on the Archive when creator, Terry Harknett joins us around the virtual campfire.
Labels:
ebooks,
EDGE,
george g gilman,
tony masero
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