Submitted by NotWhoYouThnkItIs t3_z8jpi0 in books

We've seen trends of book cover art, from that flat motion graphic style to photorealistic, and more. Were there any that caught your eye particularly?

​

For me it was the bold colorful covers...until a bunch started to look like that. Now wondering what the next "trend" will be but would love to know your favorites or thoughts?

7

Comments

You must log in or register to comment.

oddfeett t1_iybzf8s wrote

Covers with closeups of characters on them, in a realistic style particularly or a photo from a movie adaptation.

34

Negative-Arachnid-32 t1_iyc4ki9 wrote

Any movie adapted book cover. I read books so I can picture how everything and everyone looks myself. Besides that, I just find them ugly. Usually. Especially when it has some kind of non-removable sticker.

'Now a major motion picture...' 'Now on netflix' 'Now an original series on Prime Video'

We get it...

21

KSAFD t1_iyc20oz wrote

The incredibly minimalistic cartoony contemporary romance cover that's been popular for several years now.

Also, the girl in a fancy dress YA covers from 2010-2015ish. I especially hated it when it didn't even make sense for the story that the girl on the cover be in a fancy dress.

18

Mehitabel9 t1_iybxlvx wrote

These book cover trends bug me. I walk through a bookstore and the NYT paperback top seller section is just one book after another with covers that all look alike. And in a year or two they'll be different from this year, but they will still all look alike. It's annoying.

11

jefrye t1_iyc0xx8 wrote

I don't have one. I mean, there are definitely cover styles that repel me as a potential reader—ones that feature shirtless men, teen girls in fancy dresses, anime characters, etc.—but that's because I don't read those genres and those covers are completely successful in communicating that to me as a potential reader. In other words, they're good covers.

I suppose, then, the covers I dislike are covers that misrepresent the novel, intentionally or not. That's not a style, but it's as close as I'll get.

On the other hand, my favorite style is probably anything pattern-based. Think Coralie Bickford-Smith's gorgeous Penguin covers, or the original Barbara Plume hardback designs. I find them visually more interesting then a more traditional picture, and it takes an incredible amount of nuance to hint at a novel's tone, themes, etc. when working in a very abstract style.

11

reachedmylimit t1_iyclfkv wrote

Women (especially WW II women) looking away.

9

serrybrisco t1_iyc3qwm wrote

"Now a netflix original" Especially when it's not just a sticker I can remove! (I know that's not a style, but still!

6

South_Honey2705 t1_iybz8ls wrote

It seems like all the rom-com books use colors and people who are just paintings so annoying because there are so many books out there like that. Would be nice to see something different from the norm once in a while.

5

Radio_gugu t1_iyddu1s wrote

Covers having images of their movie/tv adaptation ruins it for me.

Also it's a shame how many sci-fi gems used to have these tacky techno images as covers.

I prefer if I can clearly read the name and author, because I tend to go to independent bookstore and explore books, or even in the library. When it is so stylised that it isn't legible that is a bummer.

4

benjiyon t1_iyc5y5s wrote

Any book cover that’s obviously trying to trick the customer into getting it. So covers the imitate the cover of best sellers; covers that use the same font style and colour schemes, etc.

3

toshirodragon t1_iycyghf wrote

The current trend of romance covers with pastel colors and cartoon drawings. Fortunately I read mostly on my Kindle so I don't have to see them constantly.

3

Fictitious1267 t1_iyduwfe wrote

"Now a major motion picture/Netflix series!" with the actor's fact on it.

3

RoseIsBadWolf t1_iydfw2i wrote

Not a style per-se, but I really dislike covers that show the characters, be it romance or whatever genre, and then the characters don't look like the book descriptions.

Like cover, you had ONE JOB.

This may be the reason I prefer covers without character pictures. So the recent trend of not showing characters is fine by me.

2

lucia-pacciola t1_iydbhxd wrote

Book covers where the title and/or the author's name are lost in the art. Either one of them is printed really big and the other printed really small, or the cover is so busy it's hard to make out one or the other.

I get most of my books on e-reader these days, and sometimes it's hard to tell from the store page if the cover I'm looking at is the title and author I'm looking for.

1

rohtbert55 t1_iydv24g wrote

I HATE when put a movie poster as a cover. It just destroys a liitle part of the enjoyment of a book, IMHO (exception being my Starship Troopers copy)

1

imaginmatrix t1_iyelcqt wrote

I’ve always been drawn to more dynamic covers with semi-realistic portrayals painted- no photos. Examples I can think of are the Percy Jackson book covers, Ella Enchanted, Mistborn, The Locked Tomb Series, etc.

Those are among some of my favorite covers that drew me in because of the art, and while there have been plenty of books I was interested in too because of more abstract covers, the style I referenced above continues to impress me the most.

As for least favorite, I agree with movie image covers. Hate them lol

1

helen_twelvetrees t1_iyeymhk wrote

As a kid I absolutely hated when book covers of illustrated books would be paintings of the kids in the book which looked absolutely nothing like the book illustrations of the same kids. This was particularly common with paperback editions of kids' books back in the day, like some older editions of the Ramona Quimby books, Harriet the Spy, etc. Why not just use the book illustrations on the cover?

More recently, I have basically stopped reading books with the cover image of a woman in old-fashioned clothes with her face obscured. Just way overdone. And I'm almost at the same spot with the colorful abstract collage-style designs covers. Enough already, publishers!

On the other hand, I love book covers that utilize cutouts in their design. I'm convinced that a good portion of the reason V.C. Andrews's books got so much attention back in the day was those eye-catching cutout covers. I also remember when The Secret History came out with that opaque cover overlay -- really brilliant design work.

1

twilightsagawebcomic t1_iyf7nw6 wrote

I can’t stand the dark shirtless / scandalous book covers that are just sexualizing men and women. I cannot read a book with a cover like that, even if the book itself is harmless

1