Do You Judge Books By Their Covers?

kuwisdelu

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The use of photographs for cover art is something I am never going to love.

Same here, but for me, that's mostly because lots of artists seem to want to design covers like movie posters, and both end up suffering from the "photos of the main characters posing and maybe something else remotely relevant in the background" syndrome which I find utterly boring.

If book covers were approached more like album covers, I might care.

As it is, I don't really give a shit about book covers. They don't affect me one way or the other.
 

BigWords

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For biographies it is fine for photographs to be used (even if most of them are utterly uninspiring), but on novels I find myself imprinting the photographs onto my thoughts of the characters - not something which is easily overcome. When the cover photograph is identifiable, this is even more of a distraction. I want to concentrate on the words, not the overlay of a person onto the character (if that sentence makes sense, I'll be surprised at myself).
 

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And e-readers are why riding the train or bus isn't as interesting as it used to be.

I'd like Kindles to anonymously broadcast whatever people in the vicinity are reading over Bluetooth. You could see what everyone in the train car is reading, but you don't know who's reading it. (Perhaps you'd say the feature is opt-in and only comes on when there are more than say five Kindles in range.) You'd get spontaneous book groups and stuff. (Hang on, I'm thinking of ways that could go horribly wrong now...)
 

Dave Hardy

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Nope, I do not.

Now I love me some good cover art, no mistake. But I've read too many absolute masterpieces with nothing but a plain hardback cover embossed with the title to mistake pictorial art for the literary kind.

I agree that part of the lure of paperbacks is a splashy, lurid cover. I really do love those, especially when there's a thrilling tale inside. But good cover art is no guarantee of good work inside, nor is mediocre, uninspired cover art proof that the writing is lame.

ETA: it would have to be pretty damn lurid to embarrass me. Way more than a pair of lips.
 
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phantasy

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I'm a designer in my day job...so I certainly do. I see the important of good design, how it catches the eye and creates a first impression. Writers/publishers might think the blurb on the back is what your first impression is...and I'm here to say its the cover, because its the first thing you see from across the room.

So if you're writing, do yourself a favor and hire a designer for your book cover. Get a student designer if you can't afford a pro. A well designed cover tells me you thought through all the elements of your book. And don't tell me looks don't matter...if you are selling anything such as I don't know..a book..looks matter.

And I'm the first to say a simple black cover is a good one. I'm not a fan of covers with people on them either, I'd like to create my idea of them myself if you don't mind. A good design can be very simple.
 

phantasy

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Same here, but for me, that's mostly because lots of artists seem to want to design covers like movie posters, and both end up suffering from the "photos of the main characters posing and maybe something else remotely relevant in the background" syndrome which I find utterly boring.

If book covers were approached more like album covers, I might care.

I totally agree with you here. Even if they were designed like those cool CD covers, they would look great.
 

kuwisdelu

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I'm a designer in my day job...so I certainly do. I see the important of good design, how it catches the eye and creates a first impression. Writers/publishers might think the blurb on the back is what your first impression is...and I'm here to say its the cover, because its the first thing you see from across the room.

Considering how most books are shelved, the title is usually the first thing you see across the room.

I don't generally rely on cover, title, or blurb when looking for books anyway, though.

I pretty much rely solely on recommendations, reviews, allusions, forewords, and prefaces.
 

Rhoda Nightingale

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Sorry! But they do sell very nicely, and you can usually still get the non-tie-in edition if you look.

Yeah. I do. All the time. They're not hard to find at all. I just think the movie-covers are tacky-looking.
 

kuwisdelu

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Sorry! But they do sell very nicely, and you can usually still get the non-tie-in edition if you look.

Yeah. I do. All the time. They're not hard to find at all. I just think the movie-covers are tacky-looking.

The fact that they can change the cover so lightly (just because a movie came out) kind of says everything about the "importance" of book covers to me. Book covers are just marketing, and not part of the actual content of the product, so why would I use it to judge the actual content? Meh. :(
 

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The fact that they can change the cover so lightly (just because a movie came out) kind of says everything about the "importance" of book covers to me. Book covers are just marketing, and not part of the actual content of the product, so why would I use it to judge the actual content? Meh. :(

Yeah, but they do have an effect on you, which is a different kind of importance. The more you like the cover - the more eye-catching it is - the more likely you are to pick it up. And the tie-in covers are a great way of saying 'hey, did you know there was a book of this movie you liked?'

Covers don't necessarily have to have any connection with the contents of the book - I have probably a few hundred SF paperbacks where the cover art just says 'SF', and doesn't reflect the story.
 

Becky Black

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I don't want to, but I do. I was actually just thinking about it this weekend (because my latest cover arrived -yay!) and I think it's a question of quality. If the cover looks like it was slapped together in half an hour on a Friday after a long lunch at the pub, then I have to wonder what other aspects of the book the publisher skimps on. Editing? Formatting? Even if the content of the book is basically good, are there going to be such quality issues to distract me?

Essentially I'd say I judge a publisher by its covers. Any individual cover might be a bit of a dud, but if overall the covers are good quality, I'd have more faith in what I'm going to read in the book. But if most of their covers are bad, I'm more dubious. It comes over as unprofessional. I'd rather see a fairly plain simple cover in that case, if they're a small press who just can't afford great cover artists, and if they are spending the money elsewhere on the content of the books.

And if a publisher's covers are generally bad, I'd also think twice about submitting to them.
 
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bearilou

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Depends. The appeal of cover art (when seen) is what gets me to pick up the book. Once it's in my hands, blurb and random page reading determines whether it stays in my hand until the register or not.

If the cover isn't seen, it's the title that may entice me to pick it up.

So...if for whatever reason I'm not enticed to pick the book up, while I'm not actually judging the book based on it, I'm not encouraged to give it a chance either. Which would imply that I am still making some value judgment on the book based on what I see.

That rarely happens though because I'm also one who purchases more on reviews, recommendations and author appeal these days.
 

AnneGlynn

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More than once, I've been in a bookstore and purchased a novel because its cover was so enticing that I had to read the back of the book. Titles can draw my attention, too, (as bearilou just noted).
 

kuwisdelu

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Yeah, but they do have an effect on you, which is a different kind of importance. The more you like the cover - the more eye-catching it is - the more likely you are to pick it up. And the tie-in covers are a great way of saying 'hey, did you know there was a book of this movie you liked?'

Oh, I'm sure they affect most people. They're marketing, after all.

They don't have an effect on me, though. The way I look for books, I usually know whether I'm going to buy it or not before I even see the cover.

A few times, I've even finished reading a whole ebook before I even noticed what was actually on the cover.
 

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The more attractive a cover is, the more likely I am to check it out, and the more I'm probably going to want the book on my bookshelf. So then the cover description doesn't have to try quite as hard to get me to buy the book. But a book doesn't need an attractive cover for me to buy it. Then I'm happy to get it on Kindle :D
 

Chase

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I don’t judge books by their covers—not for real, and hopefully not in the metaphorical sense. Too many contrary lessons.

It was the author’s name that drew me to Stephen King’s The Colorado Kid, not Hard Case Crime’s lurid cover art depicting the come-hither look of the buxom, leggy girl in the little black dress. Stephanie McCann, the clean-cut college intern reporter for The Weekly Islander, never wore such a dress nor struck such a pose.

Nevertheless, Glen Orbik’s painting was fun bait ’n’ switch for one of the best mysteries I’ve read in a long while.

Orbik did it again for SK’s Joyland coming out June 4. This time Hard Case Crime’s cover girl is a busty blonde. Can’t wait for the book, even after I recover from its (gasp) uplifting art.:D
 

DizScare

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I usually care about the cover only when it doesn't fit with the story's synopsis, but even then it doesn't take off points.

Although an extremely appealing cover usually gets me to try the book, even if it's a genre/subject I'm not a fan of.
 

SelmaW

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I tend to be drawn to very clean-looking cover art. Maybe something subliminal about thinking that clean art = clean writing, lol.
 

KarmaHead

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Not at all, or rather, I try to keep an open mind while I browse.

A book cover can be misleading too, I've come across many books which have striking covers but their contents is something completely different.

That's why I always make sure to read the blurb...
 

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I definitely pick up books based on their covers but then decide whether or not to buy based on the blurb on the back.
 

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I think everyone judges the covers of books subconsciously. Whether it affects their purchase or not, most people generally have some opinion on the book's cover. Even a general reaction... I think it's immediate and inevitable.

I'm not ashamed to say that I do, and sometimes it may not make me want to read it (though I usually do anyway). I know that a lot of young adult readers judge books by their cover. YA book covers are really tacky.
 

measure_in_love

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I'm definitely guilty of this. Partly because I agree you can tell about a book's contents from its cover, also because I love pretty covers. I just can't help myself. Sometimes I do get disappointed in covers because they will be so pretty, but the content will be awful. Guess there's a bit of psychology in that if you apply it to humans haha.
 

Liralen

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At times. If it's got some sort of Fabio type cover art . . . highly unlikely I'm even going to pick it up.

If the cover art is by Thomas Canty I'm probably going to read it.

If the cover art is original and ART, I'm more likely to pick it up. To me, that signifies that there's a high probability that much thought and artistry went into the contents as well.