I was looking to borrow a new E-book from the library and saw that they have a "collection" of more than 100 books of World War 2 fiction. Recent fiction about WW2, that is, not fiction written during WW2. And I hadn't scrolled very far down the page before I started noticing a trend in cover design.
Perhaps you can notice it too:
Yes, I noticed that since you mentioned it. The thing that fries me with a lot of the new books is "The Girl" is in way too many titles and it absolutely turns me off. I liked the original "Girl" books but hate that other authors tried to capitalize it.
ReplyDeleteHappy Halloween.
xx, Carol
Perhaps it’s easier to imagine ourselves as the protagonists if we cannot see their faces? Amazing, though, how every cover was a landscape in the background and figures facing away in the foreground!
ReplyDeleteIt's sunbonnet sue! Maybe there is mystery that leads you to want more? Maybe they are just easier to draw without faces.
ReplyDeletethis gave me the giggles...so many backsides
ReplyDeleteAbout 10 or 15 years ago, I noticed a trend toward using feet on book covers -- with painted toenails, flip flops, high heels, etc.
ReplyDeletePeople with faces cost more to put on a cover.....
ReplyDeleteAll with their backs to the wall. I wonder why, just a trend perhaps?
ReplyDeleteBoy that sure displays a complete lack of creativity in the field of cover design!
ReplyDeleteIs it possible it's the difference between fiction and non-fiction? The book I'm reading now, Code Girls, has a photograph with the young women's faces on the cover.
ReplyDelete