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Double Take, Part XIV

November 7, 2009 |

Here’s one with a recently released book and a book yet to be released. Remember what happened last time when two soon-to-be released titles had the same cover? Now, they’re not perfect double takes, but they’re really darn close.

First:


The Sky Always Hears Me and the Hills Don’t Mind is by Kirstin Cronn-Mills and was published September 1, 2009 by Flux. I like this cover a LOT – I like that we don’t get a face on shot of the girl and I love the cloudy sky. It fits the title so well. I’ve had this one on my to-read pile for a while but haven’t gotten there quite yet.


Dreaming of Amelia by Jaclyn Moriarty will be published April 2010 by MacMillan UK. Now on this cover, her hair is about the same color and has a similar aesthetic of loose pieces falling down her back, but the knot is on the side of her head, rather than on the back. She’s looking at the sky again, though this one is a light blue sky. The feel’s totally different than The Sky Always Hears Me but I like it.

Do you prefer one or another? It almost makes me think it’s a shot from the same photo shoot, so the same girl with a slightly different hair style. What do you think?

Filed Under: aesthetics, cover designs, Uncategorized

Double Take, Part XIII

October 25, 2009 |

Here’s another great double take for you!


Does This Book Make Me Look Fat? is a collection of short stories about body image. It was published in December 2008 by Clarion Books. Pretty memorable cover and I think it’s quite fitting to the book itself.


Check it out — it’s the same image but they’ve given this one a bit of a different crop. They did the same thing with the book, too.
Writing Great Books for Young Adults was published by Sourcebooks in September 2009.

Who did it better? I personally like the first one better because she looks more like a teen than the second one. Something about the cropping makes her look way older.

Filed Under: aesthetics, cover designs, Uncategorized, Young Adult

Another bad cover

September 30, 2009 |

Along the lines of Ten Cents a Dance in terms of a downgrade in cover design between the hard cover and the paper back is one of my other favorite reads in the past year, The Adoration of Jenna Fox.

This is the hardcover:


It’s intriguing and leaves a lot to the reader’s imagination. You have no idea what the story will be about, and for this book in particular, this is important. Readers who go in with an idea of the book won’t get the pleasure of unraveling the mystery.

But then, there’s the paperback:


Now, we have a picture of Jenna. And you know what? It ruins the story. Although the cover really doesn’t tell the story, readers go in with an idea or readers who go in blind and find out what happens will ultimately see this as a disservice. I think it looks like a lot of other covers and, well, it doesn’t draw me in as a reader as much as the hard cover — even the colors are gone!

Which do you like better? If you’ve read it, what do you think about the decision to add a person to the paperback? How about that big spoiler?

Filed Under: aesthetics, cover designs, Uncategorized, Young Adult

When the cover fails

September 24, 2009 |

I have to give credit to Bookshelves of Doom for this one.

One of my favorite books this year and perhaps in a very long time has been Christine Fletcher’s Ten Cents a Dance. It’s set in 1940s Chicago and follows Ruby as she becomes a taxi dancer to make money to move her family up in the world. It’s beautifully rich, with a great plot, great characters, and a fantastic setting and era. Here’s the cover:


Perfect! It captures a sense of time and place, and it doesn’t give you too much in terms of what the story’s about so that as a reader, you can make your own images.

Well, as has been a trend for a while now, the publisher has decided to change the cover for the paperback of this book. This is the paperback cover:


I’m really, really disappointed in this one. First, it kills any sense of time. Second, the male character there? He’s not in the story. And really, groping on the front cover? I don’t think this looks like a 17-year-old in 1940s Chicago at all. In fact, this books like every other book out recently set in contemporary times. It reminds me a lot of many of Simone Elkeles’s paperbacks.

I think this is a mistake — it’s now going to have a harder time finding its audience, who may be turned off immediately by a cover that not only looks like so many others on the market, but also because it doesn’t convey that it’s a historical fiction that’s not filled with boys groping girls (Ruby would actually be quite offended, I think!). Although I don’t require my books to give me anything on the cover, when a cover is such a success because it DOES capture the essence of the story, it’s disheartening to see that discarded for something generic.

What do you think? Have you seen any other hard cover to paper back cover changes that have made you cringe?

Filed Under: aesthetics, cover designs, Uncategorized, Young Adult

Double Take, Part XII

September 17, 2009 |

This one isn’t perfect but so close!

Snitch by Allison van Diepen was published by Simon Pulse in November 2007.


Permanence by Kip Fulbeck was published March 2008 by Chronicle Books.

I like both covers a lot. Edgy and artistic without being too risque.

Filed Under: aesthetics, cover designs, Non-Fiction, Uncategorized, Young Adult

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