I love it when people post book cover scans; old Penguin and Puffin Classics are so delightful, and I'm not above buying a copy of a book I already own because the cover is really great.  Generally these are old books I'm digging out of a stinky pile at the local thrift store, while my paramour holds his nose and sags noticeably with every passing minute.  He doesn't like standing around in musty second-hand shops.  Unfortunately for him, I love it.  If all I had to do all day was sift through other people's attics and closets looking for weird old junk, I would be a happy lady. As it is, the bread, she must be earned.  And the kettle chips.
Anyway, old books.  Here are a couple that I'm particularly fond of.  And because we are in Canada, a land peppered liberally with native French speakers and frustrated French students, these castoffs are in French, and all from le Livre de Poche.
La Jument Verte - Marcel Ayme, 1933
The back.  "A well of health and good humour." (Very roughly.)  I guarantee Rene Lalou never though his review would look so funky.  If book backs could be this well-designed now, people might bother reading them with some interest.  There are more words on the backs of some books than in them, and for what?  Abandoned self-congratulation, methinks.  This, however, is beautiful.  Your local bookstore could display this thing backwards.
le Diable au Corps - Raymond Radiguet, 1923This book belonged to Odette. Charmed.
When Jean Cocteau says you're a phenomenon, and compares you to Rimbaud, and says that your genius is basically a giant burden, you jot it down and fax it to your editor, asap.  Probably that's not what happened here, but it's a good tip for any aspiring writers out there.
Le seigneur des anneaux - Tolkien, 1954I take it back, he's not goofy, he's hilarious and I would like to watch him eat scones and fight dragons in a mountain:
