3.8.10

"Cover art only sells physical books."

En TOC se puede leer un lindo y breve artículo sobre las características y la función de las cubiertas en la industria tal y como la conocíamos y en la new digital era, escrito por James Bridle, autor del blog booktwo.org. Bridle va a ser uno de los ponentes en la Tools of Change Frankfurt Book Fair Conference 2010.
The covers [de Odyssey] are typographic, and hark back in particular to the famous Pelican cover for John Berger's Ways of Seeing, where the text starts on the front cover. But it struck me that they are not covers in any traditional sense: they have nothing to cover. They are icons. Signifiers. And more crucially, they're not there to sell the book directly; they are marketing material separated from the point-of-sale.
Cover art only sells physical books. In an ideal world we would get rid of cover art altogether. This is probably what JD Salinger desired, in his refusal to countenance any imagery at all on his book covers (a request that continues to be honoured, notably in Hamish Hamilton and Seb Lester's beautiful new editions).
If we're going to continue to use "covers" as marketing material, which presumably we will as long as digital texts have physical counterparts, we need to recognise that their reproduction is out of our control: they will be copied, linked, and reposted, at different resolutions and sizes (there's long been a muttering desire from publishers for the ability to supply Amazon with different covers for different size displays: this is one option, but not one Amazon seems happy with). We might also recognise that there are potentially many different jobs for the cover to do.
What do covers do now? They appeal aesthetically (something hard to do at 120 pixels high). They give space to blurbs and plaudits (it's OK, we're not space-limited any more). And they recommend (this is why all thriller covers look the same; why there is a blood-spattered crime vernacular; why every historical novel features a bodice and ruched velvet).

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