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What is depicted in the top left illustration on the front cover of the Penguin edition of the Earthsea quartet, see for example here?

Presumably it is something from "A Wizard of Earthsea", as the other three illustrations are easy to identify and are from the next three books. But it appears to show Ged as an adult, and on land rather than at sea. That for example would rule out his conflict with Yevaud, in which it is clearly stated that he insisted on confronting the dragon over the water. Could it be the first appearance of Ged's shadow on Roke Knoll? - I don't think so as my impression is that it should have been a much smaller being, and moreover I don't think Ged would have had a mage's staff at that stage.

A larger version can be seen here from the 1991 Roc Books edition:

enter image description here

Any ideas?

David
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  • I originally answered this with Yevaud because I can't think of any other creature it could be. However you're right to point out the confrontation was over water - I can't explain this, I suspect it's just down the the illustrator's interpretation. – Liath Sep 08 '14 at 07:49
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    Illustrations - and especially covers - don't always 100% accurately correspond to the books. For a glaring example, see "1633" by Flint - and the general story that Flint gave in Grantville Gazette that they actually had a pattern of cover picture being made BEFORE the story and then he wrote the story to try and match it. – DVK-on-Ahch-To Sep 08 '14 at 09:17
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    ... Or see http://scifi.stackexchange.com/questions/48499/what-is-the-speaker-for-the-dead-cover-depicting – DVK-on-Ahch-To Sep 08 '14 at 09:18
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    I loathe this 'realist' illustration style. Given me the heavily stylized and evocative illustrations on the Bantam Books editions (including The Wind's Twelve Quarters) any day. – Lexible Sep 08 '14 at 15:33
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  • @Liath Maybe you're right and it's illustrator's licence. That would be disappointing however, as the other three pictures are relevant and accurate. – David Sep 08 '14 at 23:44
  • I felt that my answer to this one was about as good as it gets. Is there anything else you'd like me to add before considering an acceptance? – Valorum Jul 02 '16 at 11:42
  • @Valorum No, there is nothing else I would like you to add. Re: acceptance: I have already considered it. – David Jul 04 '16 at 00:28

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As far as I can tell, the only part of the book that fits the image shown is Ged's confrontation with Yevaud.

  • Massive dragon - Check
  • Wizard holding staff - Check

Obviously Ged is in a boat in the actual passage (and presumably wouldn't stand with his back to the fire-breathing dragon), but this is easily dismissed as simply being a result of deliberate misreading by the illustrator or the editor:

Many years had the dragon sprawled on the island where golden breastplates and emeralds lay scattered among dust and bricks and bones; he had watched his black lizard-brood play among crumbling houses and try their wings from the cliffs; he had slept long in the sun, unwaked by voice or sail. He had grown old. It was hard now to stir, to face this mage-lad, this frail enemy, at the sight of whose staff Yevaud, the old dragon, winced. “You may choose nine stones from my hoard,” he said at last, his voice hissing and whining in his long jaws. “The best: take your choice. Then go!”

“I do not want your stones, Yevaud.”

“Where is men’s greed gone? Men loved bright stones in the old days in the North…I know what it is you want, wizard. I, too, can offer you safety, for I know what can save you. I know what alone can save you. There is a horror follows you. I will tell you its name.” Ged’s heart leaped in him, and he clutched his staff, standing as still as the dragon stood. He fought a moment with sudden, startling hope.

Valorum
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