As part of the Sydney’s Writers’ Festival and his appearance on 702Sydney, Jon Page @PnPBookseller from Pages and Pages (the best book store north of the Harbour Bridge), posed, among others, the question “How much do covers influence your decision to pick up a book?”
We all know the expression ‘never judge a book by its cover’, but in such a saturated market, do we have any other choice? Unless it’s an author we’re familiar with, or a book that’s been recommended by a friend, how else can we even begin to start searching for our next read?
Covers are the first and most prominent marketing tool book sellers have and I don’t really see what’s wrong with that. Let’s face it. My husband is probably never going to pick up a book with a hot pink, glittered high heel front and centre. And I’m unlikely to pick up a book with a cover depicting a dismembered body (actually, neither is my husband, probably). The cover tells you, very quickly, what genre the book is and who the target audience is.
Imagine if all the covers were blank, with just the title and author’s name.
A book about a couple in their 60s (their twilight years), or a romance set at sunset?
a book about ships and storms that would appeal to men?
is this a war story? Or a story about someone’s grandmother?
Without covers we’d be lost. They help us navigate the endless titles out there. Help us find our way.
How about you? “How much do covers influence your decision to pick up a book?”
S
keep chasing those pavements
current status: 2 fulls out, 2 partials out, and a frightening number of rejections in - in fact, let's stop counting those :)