Posts Categorized: Cover Art

And Another Thing... by Eoin Colfer

The release of And Another Thing… by Eoin Colfer, the sixth volume in Douglas Adam’s famous Hitchhiker’s Trilogy, is sure to raise some eyebrows. Still, whether you’re in support of the novel being written or against it, it’s hard to lay a knock against the cover art.

After a bit of Facebook-fueled begging from myself and Blake Charlton, Daniel Abraham, author of The Long Price Quartet, revealed the cover art for his upcoming short fiction collection Leviathan Wept, coming next year from Subterranean Press.

Leviathan Wept by Daniel Abraham

Stories included in the collection:

The Cambist and Lord Iron
Flat Diane
The Best Monkey
The Support Technician Tango
A Hunter in Arin-Qin
Leviathan Wept
Exclusion
As Sweet
The Curandero and the Swede

Knowing Subterranean Press and Daniel Abraham, I’m sure book will be just as beautiful as the words between the covers!

Mark Charan Newton, author of Nights of Villjamur (REVIEW), has revealed the title, synopsis and cover art for the second volume in his Legend of the Red Sun sequence.

City of Ruin by Mark Charan Newton

Viliren: a city of sin that is being torn apart from the inside. Its underworld is violent and surreal. Hybrid creatures shamble through shadows and there is a trade in bizarre goods. The city’s inquisition is rife with corruption. Barely human gangs fight turf wars and interfere in political upheavals. The most influential of the gang leaders, Malum, has nefarious networks spreading to the city’s rulers, and as his personal life falls down around him, he begins to embrace the darkness within.

Amidst all this, Commander Brynd Adaol, commander of the Night Guard, must plan the defence of Viliren. A race that has broken through from some other realm and already slaughtered hundreds of thousands of the Empire’s people. As the enemy gather on the next island, Brynd must muster the populace – including the gangs. Importing soldiers and displacing civilians, this is a colossal military operation, and the stress begins to take its toll.

After a Night Guard soldier is reported missing, it is discovered that many citizens have also been vanishing from the streets of Viliren. They’re not fleeing the city, they’re not hiding from the terrors in the north – they’re being murdered. A serial killer of the most horrific kind is on the loose, taking hundreds of people from their own homes. A killer that cannot possibly be human.

It is whispered that the city of Viliren is about to fall – but how can anyone save a city that is already a ruin?

Alright, let’s get the good out of the way. The book sounds awesome. Nights of Villjamur was great (if uneven) and City of Ruin promises to further build on what Newton’s created. I’m bloody excited to get my hands on it, needless to say.

Then… there’s the cover. More specifically there’s the foxy anime lad, ripped from some obscure Japanese manga (complete with silver hair, natch) that ‘graces’ the cover. Now, Newton’s a friend of mine so I’ve had a bit of an inside track on City of Ruin, including a mention a little while ago that City of Ruin would be eschewing the style set by Nights of Villjamur (moody, dark city-scape) by including a character.

What hurts most is that (and I would bet a bucketload of whatever strange currency they use in Newton’s home country) that the artwork of the city exists without the character super-imposed on top of it. Had Tor UK had a bit of courage (as they did with the first volume) and not fallen back on the standard character-based cover, we could have ended up with another cover that would have stood nicely beside Nights of Villjamur. Instead, we have a cover that utterly fails to capture the rich, eerie tone of Newton’s world.

Bah.

Hot on the heels of the recently released UK cover art for Robin Hobb’s Dragon Haven, we have a look at the US cover (as well as a looked at a tweaked version of the Dragon Keeper, where they tooled around with the typopgraphy, because, you know… that’s where the problem was) and, well… it’s not so pretty.

Dragon Keeper by Robin Hobb Dragon Haven by Robin Hobb

Since first unveiling the cover for Dragon Keeper, I’ve learned that EOS comissioned Hobb’s sister’s neighbour’s landlord’s highschool-aged son’s teacher’s grade 10 Computer Animation class to do the artwork. In recompense, they were allowed to skip two periods to watch Reign of Fire and Dragonheart. Lucky kids!