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Micki
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Jun 24, 2013 02:56AM

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But science-fiction's covers are very often quite ugly. I don't know why, it's a shame. On the other hand, the cover of “The sharing knife”’s books are beautiful and accurate. And perhaps no so accurate (because more romantic-romantic than romantic-pragmatic) but wonderful (I love the illustrator, Amandine Labarre) is the french cover of "Beguilement": http://www.goodreads.com/book/show/37...

But science-fiction's covers are very often quite ugly. I don't know why, it's a shame. On the other hand, the cover of “The ..."
Oh, yes, those French covers are quite fine. (And very French.) Curiously, HarperCollins swapped out the original Julie Bell Sharing Knife covers for more generic graphic ones on the last reprint. Sales experiment, I gather. I doubt it was very revealing, since any paperback packaging experiment at the moment is likely to have been swamped by the impact of e-books on the mass-market market.
Ta, L.

Thanks!
Ta, L.

Heh.
L.


*Snrch*, L.
(That said, I always did like the Baen cover for Memory.)

Oh, yes. The infamous "battle nightie" cover.
That was very early in my career. Baen had this big wrap cover painting left over in stock that had been rejected for, iirc, a Keith Laumer novel. In the original painting, the command chair was empty. So to recycle it, they sent it back to the artist to paint in a Miles-figure sitting down in the command chair (which also had the sales-image advantage of disguising his height.) The unfortunate uniform choice dogged my career for years...
Sigh. And yet I and my career seem to have survived. If one looks back over a lot of classic SF novels from the past, many of them had dire original covers as well. So I guess it's just a part of paying one's dues in this field.
Ta, L.

That Memory cover is good. I also love the Baen cover for The Vor Game - the expressions are perfect and for once it all fits pretty well.

That would be a good explanation: I was just thinking that the face of the person in the suit was really feminine - and Miles's isn't at all! He's short, for sure, but absolutly manly. Hurmf.
Some of my covers aren't pretty, but give the right impressions of the characters, and I like to look at them: these ones, for instance:
http://www.goodreads.com/book/show/76...
http://www.goodreads.com/book/show/76...
Of course, Miles is sitting in the first, and we can only see his head on the second...


The Cetaganda cover is great.


You're right; we shouldn't choose a book for its cover. But I must confess that if I read blindly the new books of my favorites author (and Lois' are!) and those that readers with same taste as mine had appreciated, when I'm just looking around, frolicking on internet (as I mostly read in english and live in France I rarely buy books in shops anymore) the first thing that makes me slow and have a look at a book is the cover. Maybe because I have an interest in illustrations, paintings, drawings? And sometimes, as in the video, I just stop because the cover is so bad, or so silly that I'm curious to see the insides of the book!
On the other hand, titles do nothing to get my attention, they don't bother me, but I also frequently forgot them: it's, most of the time, just a manner to point the right book.
I’m often wondering if authors have as little to say for the choice of the name of their books as for the illustrations…

And for the choice of the titles when translated into different languages!

And for the choice of the titles when translated into di..."
And even the choice of translation of some names of the story!
In the Sharing Knife the nickname of Fawn, which is Spark, has been translate in "Etincelle" in french. Well, that's the literal translation, for sure. But the huge problem is that “Etincelle” rings rather silly, in a Disney Tinker Bell's way. "Spark" is quite different: it's sharp, like a dog's name, it converts a sense of brilliancy, sharpness of intellect, reactivity in adversity: it’s the real personality of Fawn! "Etincelle" gives an impression of someone sweet, pretty, decorative - but never clever. It's a very bad choice, it gives a silliness to the relation between Dag and Fawn!
It's criminal… :3


http://www.goodreads.com/book/photo/5...
I noticed that one a while back, and it made me giggle. I failed to guess, however, which characters any of those people were supposed to represent. :)

http://www.goodreads.com/book/photo/5...
I noticed that one a while back, and it made me giggle. I faile..."
Yep, that would be the one.
I sometimes wonder how my career ever survived.
Ta, L.

Other authors with bad covers can take heart from this, though. Covers matter, but the writing and story can shine through. Admittedly, one of the least practical-looking ship's bridges I've ever seen, nightie aside.

Do find that Rish on the back of CVA looks a little like Wesley Snipes in body paint and drag?

Do find that Rish on the back of CVA looks a little like Wesley Snipes in body pai..."
Rish looks remarkably like Rish in that painting, I think, pretty much exactly as she was described in the book. (Well, the haircut is a bit too brushy.)
Ivan isn't handsome enough (and his uniform isn't a proper forest green), but the attitude is right, and I suspect the artist was trying to differentiate him from all the Flandry covers he'd just painted for Baen.
http://www.baen.com/author_catalog.as...
If the Captain Flandry image was only a bit more befuddled and feckless in expression, he'd be a good ringer for Ivan. But I suppose one wouldn't want readers mistaking the one series for the other.
Ta, L.


(link to original: http://fav.me/d382sl8)
It beats out the cover on my copy:

I still can't tell if those are both supposed to be Miles, but I'm quite positive that their expressions terrify me.

I love this image! Thank you for pointing us to it.


And thank you, too, Carly, this drawing is beautiful ; of Gregor ? I like very much Gregor, I would have love to read a book especially about him...
And the other cover is (again, sorry) really funny. But then, it does attract the attention, the composition of the illustration is good, the colors plentiful... you can't ignore it !

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2L253V...
Thankfully he prevented me from wasting my time on a book that would likely have resulted in an aneurism.
THANK YOU for writing exciting, wonderful works that don't make me feel like I'm killing off brain cells.