For the past couple of weeks, the Tuesday blogposts have
been devoted to good-looking logos
and other visual
branding. I’ve enjoyed batting ideas around with you, getting your feedback
on why some things work and others don’t.
This week, still keeping a critical eye out for what makes a
good design, I decided to browse the shelves of the Southern Writers Bookstore
to find some covers I thought you’d find especially appealing. These stand out
as great examples we can draw inspiration from.
PICTURE PERFECT
Using photos on a book cover can be an iffy proposition,
because more often than not it looks amateurish. The photography must either be magnificent, or must be complemented by design that keeps it from looking like
something that was merely pulled out of a photo album.
Devon O’Day is a
familiar face to her fans, so appearing on the cover of My
Angels Wear Fur cuddling her canine comrades was barking up the right
tree. The little girl on the cover of Mary
DeMuth’s memoir Thin
Places not only speaks volumes by hiding her face as she stands in
front of barbed wire, but the subtly colorized B&W photo implies, correctly,
that this book dwells in the past.
John Koblas’ Old
West tribute The
Outlaw Billy Stiles sports a vintage headshot in an antique frame,
accompanied by an equally old background and a western star motif and
typestyle. (Imagine that same cover if it had just been the photo of Billy
Stiles with some plain text.) A similar
treatment graces Orlean
Puckett: The Life of a Mountain Midwife by Karen
Cecil Smith, and benefits from the lush green coloring. An eery blue tint,
meanwhile, lends the right atmosphere to the photos on Kala Ambrose’s Ghosthunting
in North Carolina.
A LITTLE ROMANCE
These love stories by Allison
Chase, Jennifer
Hudson Taylor, Tamera
Alexander, Rita
Gerlach and Lena
Nelson Dooley have the classic romance novel look without being smarmy
or over the top with heaving bodices. Each is a beautiful painting so realistic
you could almost see the heroine stepping right off the cover. This particular guy
has never read a romance novel, but if he did, he would be tempted to start
with one of the above.
MAGICAL MYSTERY TOURS
From the desolate blueness of Robert Whitlow’s Water’s
Edge to the cleverly shaped cinnamon sprinkles on Sandra Balzo’s Brewed,
Crude and Tattooed, you know there’s intrigue ahead. Jonna Turner’s New
Pictures of an Old Murder depicts blood red film, and Pentecost
by Joanna Penn suggests a church
wall in a particularly fiery moment. Note that Ally Carter’s Out
of Sight, Out of Mind doesn’t have the traditional look of these other
thrill rides, but it is modern, girly and absolutely perfect for the Young
Adult market Ally targets.
EVERY PICTURE TELLS A
STORY
You gotta love a cover that makes you want to read the book
even if you didn’t know its title.
Cowboy boots on a Japanese girl is a brilliant way to say “Southern
Fried Sushi” by Jennifer Rogers
Spinola. Before even learning who The
Strangers on Montagu Street are, the interesting house with the light
in the upstairs window makes me want to find out. (It doesn’t hurt that there’s
a building that I pass every day that looks a great deal like this house. Every
time I see it, I think of Karen White’s
book cover.)
The photo on Micca
Campbell’s An Untroubled
Heart is so masterful and emotional it could be a museum piece. The
heart-shaped snowball held by mittened hands shouts hope that lasts till next
Christmas. Meanwhile, all the humor of Sandra
D. Bricker takes the cake on Always
the Wedding Planner, Never the Bride. Finally, Emily P. Freeman’s Grace
for the Good Girl features a bird who’s been freed from her cage and
enjoys her freedom so much she can be comfortable still hanging around.
Hats off to all these authors and their graphic designers.
And that’s just the tip of the iceberg. There are many other examples of fine
book design amongst the 100+ authors who’ve appeared in the first five issues
of Southern Writers, and if you browse the bookstore you’ll discover
countless more there wasn’t room for here.
One last thing. You’ll notice in almost every case that
while the book title is often in a creative font, the author’s name is in a
pretty standard one; always nice but rarely fancy. Observe too that there are
cases when the size of the author’s name rivals or even surpasses that of the
title. When you have many successful books under your belt and develop a
following, you get away with that.
I hope to see your name in big letters very soon.
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