The Mysteries of Cover Art
Oct. 29th, 2006 02:18 pmAs I may have mentioned in the past, my now ex-roommate is a sales rep for a publisher/book distributor. This means the house is full of books and nearly everyone she knows gets plied with advance copies of new releases to read and comment on. One of the books that recently ended up in my posession was The Floating Island, a YA fantasy novel that just so happened to be illustrated by Brett Helquist. I managed to read it in small spurts over the course of a few months, and ... it was OK. (...probably would have been better if I'd given it some real time...) It's the sort of quasi-fantasy that I tend to favour ('magical realism' I think it's called) and the world seems fairly well-imagined and original but it's not very dimensional, if that makes any sense. Same goes for most of the characters. Like I said, this may be because I never got 'into' it, by reading it in such a piecemeal fashion, but perhaps if I had been grabbed by very real characters and situations I'd have felt more inclined to read it all in one go.
Anyway, the point of this post: I was recently in a bookstore and saw The Floating Island on display, but it had a different cover. ARCs often don't have the final cover art but if they bother to print them in full colour on nice heavy cover paper, that's generally what they stick with. This was a very different cover. Not only was it not a Helquist cover, but it had a dragon on it. It had been a while since I'd finished the book so my memory was a little hazy, but I was pretty sure it didn't have any dragons. It does have Fire Pirates, a ghost, dwarfs, sailors, a magic box, a curse, a king, a mermaid, and a talking cat, but what it does not have is dragons. Or even a dragon. It is most perplexing. Do dragons sell? Have the marketing people even read the book? What will people think when they get to the end and realise they never encountered a dragon through the whole thing? Or was the main character rewritten in the months between ARC release and public release to be a dragon?
Anyway, the point of this post: I was recently in a bookstore and saw The Floating Island on display, but it had a different cover. ARCs often don't have the final cover art but if they bother to print them in full colour on nice heavy cover paper, that's generally what they stick with. This was a very different cover. Not only was it not a Helquist cover, but it had a dragon on it. It had been a while since I'd finished the book so my memory was a little hazy, but I was pretty sure it didn't have any dragons. It does have Fire Pirates, a ghost, dwarfs, sailors, a magic box, a curse, a king, a mermaid, and a talking cat, but what it does not have is dragons. Or even a dragon. It is most perplexing. Do dragons sell? Have the marketing people even read the book? What will people think when they get to the end and realise they never encountered a dragon through the whole thing? Or was the main character rewritten in the months between ARC release and public release to be a dragon?
![]() The ARC cover |
![]() The Final Cover |


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Date: 2006-10-29 10:56 pm (UTC)Plus, it's a good thing to do with graphic design. *laughs*
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Date: 2006-10-29 11:03 pm (UTC)no subject
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Date: 2006-10-30 12:49 am (UTC)Honestly, it drives me *crazy* when the book cover doesn't match the story. It shouldn't be that hard to at least ask the author what the main characters look like. For instance, in the books
Um, so now I'm done taking up space in your journal for my rant. *little bit sheepish* But if you like young adult fantasy, I really second the rec for Patricia Wrede's books - "Dealing with Dragons" is the first one.
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Date: 2006-10-30 12:50 am (UTC)no subject
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Date: 2006-10-30 01:11 am (UTC)Ahem.
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Date: 2006-10-30 01:36 am (UTC)What I did read was interesting. I don't remember much about it. Just that he didn't yet have facial hair or something and he was waiting for it, and he was well beyond mature in human years. I probably should have read it, but I'm a terrible reader.
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Date: 2006-10-30 03:27 am (UTC)There's a dragon on the cover of the book! (of the book!)
There's a dragon on the cover of the book!
Though it's about a magic flagon
On the cover there's a dragon
There's a dragon on the cover of the book!
And yes, the reason is, Dragons Sell. According to publishing wisdom, anyway. My first book had a dragon on the cover; a fierce green dragon, which is odd because the dragon in the story is rather effeminate and pink. I did some research later and learned that the cover art was painted in 1985. The book was written in 1990.
The relationship between cover art and story is often tenuous, and authors have no control over the cover art, so you get a lot of this sort of thing.
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Date: 2006-10-30 06:14 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-10-30 06:00 pm (UTC)I may be mistaken, but I would guess that preteens don't always buy their own books, but their parents or relatives get them books as gifts. "What does little Jessica want?" "Oh, she likes dragons" - and The Floating Island is sold.
Some of the newer translations of Aristotle, Plato, Sophocles, etc. that I've read have completely bizarre covers with unrelated Ancient Greek busts, columns, or ruins on them, or weird modernist abstracts on them. My school's publishing house regretably lets one of the professors do the cover art for some of its translations...
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Date: 2006-10-30 07:36 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-10-30 08:58 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-10-30 09:03 pm (UTC)a) Big, fearsome, impressive and deeply evil.
or
b) Small, cute-looking, pink or purple, and good.
That's why the dragons in my stories are big, impressive, fearsome, and good (generally), but cute they are not. They are also never pink. One is purple, but she's also fifty-seven feet long with very sharp teeth, so that makes up for it.
A series you might like is Temeraire by Naomi Novik. It's set in the Napoleonic Wars (well, parallel Napoleonic Wars), but as well as armies and navies (navys? What is the plural of 'navy', anyway?) there are air forces of dragons.
when life reflects art
Date: 2006-10-30 09:21 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-10-30 11:06 pm (UTC)Also, if your beasts rode into battle on horseback, dismounted, then fought, would they be dragoon dragons?
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Date: 2006-10-30 11:18 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-10-31 04:16 am (UTC)Apparently, the only thing dragons hate more than humans is other dragons, but they get lonely, so sometimes they keep humans as pets for their amusement; they always end up eating them in the end, even if they regret it because afterwards they miss their pets.
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Date: 2006-10-31 08:29 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-10-31 03:43 pm (UTC)A) It could be a smaller dragon
B) The dragon might be able to help the poor horse what with the lift available with its wings.
C) Hey, who'd mess around with that horse?
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Date: 2006-11-26 07:40 pm (UTC)His name is Josh Kirby and rarely has his painting been too faithful with Pterry's text.
Motivation? ...muh...that's a good question.