Overall, an awesome book. It's the British counterpart to the other book on book covers I read recently. Now I know, if I ever get sucked back in time to the 40s, 50s, or 60s, I'll go to England. They seem to have skipped the butt-ugly modernism stuff, or done a variation that's a lot more palatable. I like most of the styles in this book much better than the American one.
The only thing I really didn't like about this one is it often talks about other book covers that aren't shown in the book, or if they are, I couldn't find them. What's up with that? If you're going to talk about it, put it in there! The worst offense was talking about the salacious cover that was designed for one of J. D. Salinger's books, and how it was so outrageous, J. D. Salinger never worked with the same guys again and was adamant about control of the covers of his books ever after... but instead of showing that cover, all this book shows is two boring J. D. Salinger book covers for other books, both flat gray with plain black type and a single rule for decoration. What???
This book is full of book covers, and the ones it has are explained in detail, including a lot of bits of meaning I would have missed. I just don't understand talking about the covers not present. If they're so important or interesting as to warrant mention, why not include them?
(ILL book, ran out of time)