Susy. One illustration within this prairie-life romp is signed by J. A. Christie. Perhaps he designed the colourful ‘Suzette and Mrs Peyton’ on the cover? Other well-known artists designed covers. Aubrey Beardsley’s famous title-page design is repeated and gilt blocked on the royal blue cloth cover of Volume I of The Savoy, which was a rival publication to the Yellow Book. Irish-born Harry Furniss supplies a ‘gator’ and ‘Girlie’ image to George Farrow’s 1895 The Wallypug of Why, a children’s novel written in the tradition of Lewis Carroll’s Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland.]]> George Edward Farrow]]> Susy. One illustration within this prairie-life romp is signed by J. A. Christie. Perhaps he designed the colourful ‘Suzette and Mrs Peyton’ on the cover? Other well-known artists designed covers. Aubrey Beardsley’s famous title-page design is repeated and gilt blocked on the royal blue cloth cover of Volume I of The Savoy, which was a rival publication to the Yellow Book. Irish-born Harry Furniss supplies a ‘gator’ and ‘Girlie’ image to George Farrow’s 1895 The Wallypug of Why, a children’s novel written in the tradition of Lewis Carroll’s Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland.]]> George Edward Farrow]]>