The Jacket Designer's Challenge: To Capture A Book By Its Cover (2024)

Fresh Air

PublishedOctober 16, 2014 at 1:25 PM EDT

Peter Mendelsund estimates he's designed "somewhere between 600 and 1,000 book covers," ranging from Crime and Punishment to Girl with the Dragon Tattoo. But the self-taught, sought-after designer says he spends a lot of time reading, too.

"It's always surprising to people when they come to my office or they walk by my door and they see me with my feet kicked up with a manuscript," he tells Fresh Air's Dave Davies. "But I read constantly from the moment I wake up to the moment I go to sleep."

Now Mendelsund has designed the covers for two new books of his own. Cover is a collection of hundreds of his book covers, including many that were rejected, along with commentaries on his technique. What We See When We Read is about how words give rise to images in our minds.

"When I'm reading, I'm marking up the text and I'm trying to be very alert for anything in that text that has structural importance or a particular kind of emotional weight," he says. "I'm trying to establish what the affect of the book is, in general, because mood is very important on a book jacket. ... You're just trying to translate the feeling of what it's like to read that book."

Interview Highlights

On what a book jacket is and does

I think there are two primary jobs that a jacket has to do: It has to represent a text and it has to sell it. In a way, a book jacket ... is sort of like a title that an author comes up with. It's one thing that has to speak to a big aggregate thing, which is the book itself. And it has to be compelling in some way such that you're interested enough to pick it up — and perhaps buy it. ... It's like a billboard or an advertisem*nt or a movie trailer or a teaser. ...

I think of a book jacket as being sort of like a visual reminder of the book, but ... it's also a souvenir of the reading experience. Reading takes place in this nebulous kind of realm, and in a way, the jacket is part of the thing that you bring back from that experience. It's the thing that you hold on to.

On why "dead authors get the best book jackets"

The Jacket Designer's Challenge: To Capture A Book By Its Cover (1)

George Baier / Courtesy of

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Courtesy of

It is true, in fact, that it's always fun to work on the great historical, canonical literary classics, because there's one less person who has to approve what I do — that is the author, who doesn't get a say because they are dead. ... There's a certain kind of freedom that comes from that, that engenders designs that are unencumbered and fun and exciting in a way that working for a living author — those designs tend to be a little more complex.

I really feel the onus of that living author. They've worked possibly for years on this book, mostly in solitude. And then they come to me with this manuscript and it's a very tender moment. And writers are sensitive people in general, so I take that responsibility very seriously.

But that relationship between you and the author and the guilt that one feels if one possibly gets it wrong — you tense up sometimes with that responsibility.

On his cover-designing process

There's a lot of trial and error in it ... but while I'm designing, I'm then looking at the things that I've made to see if they feel consonant with the way that I felt when I was reading. That's really the moment that you know if you've made a book jacket that works.

I mark up the manuscript as I'm going — anytime there's something I think could be potentially that symbol, that thing that could represent the text as a whole — and then I look back over those notes and I start sketching from them. ...

When I have a sketch that seems like it could be compelling in some way, I render it more fully. I make a collage or I'll take a photo or I'll work on the computer or I'll set the typography. There's a lot of trial and error in it ... but while I'm designing, I'm then looking at the things that I've made to see if they feel consonant with the way that I felt when I was reading. That's really the moment that you know if you've made a book jacket that works. ...

I make the design. I print it out. I wrap it around a book. I leave it on my bookshelf face out, and then I willfully try to forget about it. One of the things about making anything is in order to discern whether what you've made is working or not, you need some objectivity. You need some distance from it.

On "what we see when we read"

I'm not a neuroscientist; I'm not a professional philosopher; I'm not that qualified to talk about mental content and what it is and why it comes to be. How I am qualified is that I read books all the time and try to visualize their contents. I have this working knowledge of the imagination in that sense. ...

When I was thinking of Anna Karenina, I wasn't quite imagining a person. Or if I was, I was imagining a very specific person that I knew — say, a relative. Often it would be a combination of two people that I knew. Sometimes I wouldn't be imagining anything for her — I would have a placeholder in my mind that said "Anna Karenina."

When we describe the reading experience, we describe this metaphor of watching a film — that we see the author's works projected in our minds and we watch that image passively. The more I thought about it, the more I thought that metaphor was misleading. Not only are we not picturing the author's world, the author gives us very few prompts when it comes to describing characters ... we were making these [images] ourselves out of our memories. And the process was much more weird than I had previously thought.

On the rise of electronic books and the future of physical books and their jackets

I'm very heartened these days to find, in fact, people still really want physical books.

I spoke recently at Sarah Lawrence College, and after I was done with my talk, I canvassed the crowd of young people just to find out, "Hey, what formats are you guys reading on?"

The fascinating thing was that everybody was reading on multiple formats, and the more fascinating thing was that all of these kids knew what the benefits and limitations of each of those formats were.

Someone would say, "When I want to travel, I take things on my Kindle." ...

"When I'm working on a complicated text that I need to cross-reference a lot, or that needs to be open to the Internet or Wikipedia in some way, I'll read electronically."

"If there's a book I want to keep around for any period of time, that I want to annotate, that I want to give as a gift, I'll read a physical book."

It seems like now we're really coming to a place where we're not expecting the digital medium to replace the physical medium — and that makes me incredibly happy.

Copyright 2023 Fresh Air. To see more, visit Fresh Air.

The Jacket Designer's Challenge: To Capture A Book By Its Cover (2024)

FAQs

What is the jacket design of a book? ›

The book cover design printed on your book jacket tells the reader all about the book itself. The jacket is more than just a front cover, spine, and back cover. It of course includes the book title, author name, and publisher, if applicable.

What does a book jacket give about the book it gives? ›

The back panel or flaps of the dust cover are printed with biographical information about the author, a summary of the book from the publisher (known as a blurb) or critical praise from celebrities or authorities in the book's subject area.

What is the cover design of a book? ›

Book cover design layout is the perfect blend of typography and imagery, the most important parts of a book cover design. It communicates the single message you want to give your readers when they buy your book. For this, it is crucial that you have a perfect understanding of your target audience.

What do you call someone who designs book covers? ›

A book cover designer creates art, graphics and text designs for covers of books. Before starting a project, many book designers read the books they design in order to understand the theme and images their art should convey. Once they identify the concept, the designer visualizes ideas and creates a draft of the cover.

What is the meaning of book jacket cover? ›

noun. a removable paper cover, usually illustrated, for protecting the binding of a book and usually giving information about the book and the author.

What is the book jacket called? ›

the paper, often with illustrations and information about the book, used as a protective covering over the book; sometimes called a book jacket (dj) or a dust wrapper (dw). Collectors of literary first editions usually insist on having a fine copy of the original dust jacket with the book.

What is the summary on the book jacket called? ›

A blurb is a short promotional piece accompanying a piece of creative work. It may be written by the author or publisher or quote praise from others. Blurbs were originally printed on the back or rear dust jacket of a book.

What is a book jacket summary? ›

A book blurb is a teasing and engaging outline of the story (fiction) or content (non-fiction) of 150 words on average.

Why is a book jacket important? ›

A good dust jacket helps sell a book. Dust jackets provide the vast majority of books published today with their only color and art. Without their jackets, most books are visually dull. Dust jackets are so important that sometimes an essentially worthless book can be valuable because of its dust jacket.

What goes on the back of a book jacket? ›

Book Blurb

This is a description that tells the reader what the book is about without summarizing the plot or giving away any spoilers. It lets the reader know what to expect. Your book blurb is kind of like the text version of a book trailer. Just like a trailer, it will highlight the compelling parts of your story.

Do book cover designers read the book? ›

Marianne Issa El-Khoury, designer at Transworld says, “This truly depends on the designer and how they prefer to work: some need to read the entire manuscript before starting, others need to sketch hundreds of ideas before developing them more on their computers and some jump right into it from the information on the ...

What makes a bad book cover design? ›

Too Much Text or Too Many Visual Elements

Too many things on the cover become too hard to understand. It is easy to lose structure and hierarchy. Never cram too many visual symbols from the story. Don't include every important person, gun, cityscape, religious symbol, etc.

How much does it cost to hire a book designer? ›

On different freelance platforms, you can find designers who take $30 per book cover, but this price usually includes only basic services, such as one concept for an ebook. The average cost for a book cover starts at $150. The most experienced designer can take $500 and more.

How much do book cover designers make? ›

Book Cover Artist Salary
Annual SalaryHourly Wage
Top Earners$98,500$47
75th Percentile$77,000$37
Average$62,907$30
25th Percentile$45,000$22

How much does a cover designer cost? ›

How much does a book cover designer cost? A professional book cover designer typically costs about $500-$800 for a single project.

What is the concept of jacket? ›

A jacket is a garment for the upper body, usually extending below the hips. A jacket typically has sleeves and fastens in the front or slightly on the side. A jacket is generally lighter, tighter-fitting, and less insulating than a coat, which is outerwear.

What are the three parts of a book jacket? ›

The constituent parts of a book cover include the front, spine and back layouts. A book cover layout can stretch across the front, spine and back of the book. Each of these parts contain specific design elements.

How do you make a book jacket? ›

Cut out triangles in each corner of the contact paper.

Cut at an angle so that your scissors go up to the corners of your book. You need to cut the corners so that you can easily cut away a layer of plastic inside the book covers. And fold down the extra plastic on the top and bottom of the book.

References

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