Jennifer Bohnhoff
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Code Name: Cover

7/21/2014

5 Comments

 
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Everyone knows the saying "Don't judge a book by its cover." Everyone also knows that everyone does exactly that.  Mark Coker, the guy behind Smashwords, one of the premier sites for self-pubed ebooks, says "your cover image is the first impression you make on a prospective reader. A great cover image makes a promise to the reader. It tells the reader, “I’m the book you’re looking for.”

So how do you decide what images will make readers decide that your book is the one they're looking for?  Tricky question.


Just how tricky this question is to answer becomes obvious when you look at the five different covers that have graced Elizabeth Wein's new YA historical fiction Code Name Verity.  Wein's novel is about what happens to two women whose plane crashes in Nazi-occupied France in 1943, and it's told in first person through the writings of the two women.  The cover on the left pictures a plane trailing blood-red smoke as it goes down, a dark silhouette of a woman, and a rose, and I can say without giving too much away that all three images are appropriate, although I am not enough of an airplane enthusiast to tell you if the plane on the cover is the right kind or not.  The next cover shows two women's arms bound together, and while it does show how the two characters are emotionally bound to one another, I first wondered if this novel was about lesbian lovers or bondage rituals.  The middle cover shows two old bicycles against a stone wall, with bombers in the background and is, like the first cover, appropriate although not as mysterious or dark as the first cover.  The remaining two covers have women's faces and the suggestion of imprisonment: one with high strung barbed wire and the other with the shadow of fencing.  One features a red gash across the woman's face; the other, the bombers again.  Two of the women seem to have dark hair and eyes.  The third looks like a blue-eyed blonde, which is what the woman whose code name was Verity was.


I've added a little more about this book to my web page on Code: Elephants on the Moon, in the for further reading section.  
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I first came across this novel when I was looking specifically for cover ideas for Code: Elephants on the Moon, and at that point the only cover I saw was the center one.  I liked the bombers and, since bombers also feature in my novel, I decided to include them in my cover design.


So what do you think?  If you had to judge Code Name Verity by its cover, which would you choose?


    Judging Code Name Verity's cover

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5 Comments
Jennifer Bohnhoff
7/21/2014 03:52:49 am

Just checking to see if this really works.

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7/17/2015 07:58:46 pm

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9/10/2015 04:13:16 am

I Really like this post very informative and knowledgeable thanks for the great post.

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Anna link
10/14/2015 10:12:26 pm

The next cover shows two women's arms bound together, and while it does show how the two characters are emotionally bound to one another, I first wondered if this novel was about lesbian lovers or bondage rituals.

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Android App Developers link
4/12/2016 11:43:52 pm

Excellent posts to read keep it up and keep going on this way. And keep sharing these types of things Thanks

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    ABout Jennifer Bohnhoff

    I am a former middle school teacher who loves travel and history, so it should come as no surprise that many of my books are middle grade historical novels set in beautiful or interesting places.  But not all of them.  I hope there's one title here that will speak to you personally and deeply.

    What I love most: that "ah hah" moment when a reader suddenly understands the connections between himself, the past, and the world around him.  Those moments are rarified, mountain-top experiences.



    Can't get enough of Jennifer Bohnhoff's blogs?  She's also on Mad About MG History.  

    ​
    Looking for more books for middle grade readers? Greg Pattridge hosts MMGM, where you can find loads of recommendations.

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