PEnguIn75 - Booktopia
Transcription
PEnguIn75 - Booktopia
Penguin 75 Designers | Authors | Commentary ( the good, the bad... ) Edited and Introduced by Foreword by Paul Buckley CHRIS WARE ADVANCE UNCORRECTED SAMPLE • ON SALE JUNE 29, 2010 Paul Buckley Paul Buckley labors under the title of Executive Vice President Creative Director at Penguin, where he and his talented team of Designers and Art Directors oversee the packaging for the following imprints: Penguin, Viking, Penguin Press, Riverhead, Pamela Dorman Books, Portfolio, Sentinel, and Current. His iconic design and singular art direction have graced countless bestsellers and garnered him hundreds of awards and frequent invitations to speak in the U.S. and abroad. His work, and that of his staff, can be seen in every major design annual, and of course, in every book store. Paul lives in Brooklyn with his wife, Ingsu Liu, who is a publishing Art Director for W.W. Norton. They can talk about publishing for hours, and often pretend to approve each others rejected covers. To see more of Paul’s work, please visit paulbuckleydesign.com. Chris Ware Chris Ware lives in Oak Park, Illinois, and is the author of Jimmy Corrigan—the Smartest Kid on Earth. He is currently serializing two new graphic novels in his ongoing periodical The ACME Novelty Library, the 20th issue of which will be released in 2010. He has guest-edited McSweeney’s Quarterly Concern and Houghton-Mifflin’s Best American Comics, and was the first cartoonist chosen to regularly serialize an ongoing story in The New York Times Magazine. A contributor to the New Yorker and The Virginia Quarterly Review, his work was included in the 2002 Whitney Biennial, was favored with an exhibit of its own at the Museum of Contemporary Art Chicago in 2006, and will be exhibited at the Gävle Konstcentrum in Gävle, Sweden, in 2010. Publishers and editors are used to hearing art directors and designers moan endlessly about their best work being passed over by the philistines that surround them on all sides. Conversely, they’re also hearing from the authors how there is no way the designers read the material and these lousy covers will surely bury their careers. Then these poor editors and publishers have to gently navigate us through, hopefully to a good conclusion for all. Beautiful designs flourish. And massive book sales soon follow. Hopefully. Not really. OK, sometimes. But never as often as we’d all like. This being the case, design blogs are constantly asking “Why does this cover look this way?” Often the designer appears online and diplomatically attempts to answer. But in all my years, I’ve only seen one author chime in. So with this book, I thought it would be fun to get both sides on one page talking about one cover. And what I’ve learned is that, when faced with putting their thoughts on the printed page, authors are far more polite than designers. But I’ve seen the e-mails. I’ve heard the responses. An author who dislikes a cover is often not very polite, and sometimes understandably so. After years of crafting something that is immensely important, we come along, and in a matter of weeks, an editor sends an e-mail that is usually along the lines of “We are so excited to be showing you this! We hope you love it as much as we do!!! XOXO.” (Really—I see the XOXO thing A LOT.) . . . And then author panic ensues. Who wouldn’t hate something attached to an e-mail with two sentences, thirty exclamation points, and XOXO? So why can’t I get more than a handful of authors to honestly say what they hate about their covers—in print? Maybe time heals all wounds? They get used to it? Are they just polite in print and designers are reactionary in and out of print? Probably. Designers are a passionate group, whip shy from years of constant rejection over work they truly try to impress us all with. We make terribly defensive husbands and wives, but we do have great taste. Seriously . . . you should see the shoes I wear. Who’s really telling the truth on these pages? You decide. Enjoy, and thanks for buying my book! XOXO, Paul Buckley _______________________________ _______________________________ ____________________________________________ i n t ro d u c t i o n 3 # 01 __________________________ The Angel Maker Designer | Illustrator: Jennifer Wang Art Director: Roseanne Serra Jennifer Wang Stefan Brijs Designer | Illustrator Author The theme of the town’s entwined relationships resonated strongly with me throughout my reading of Stefan Brijs’s book. The novel is permeated with dark, evocative imagery that connotes a writhing mass of inescapable interconnectivity, and this is the visceral experience that I wanted to relate. __________________________________ Hallelujah! Finally, a designer who actually read my book! That’s what I thought when I first saw this cover. At that moment, my book had already been published in many languages with as many different covers. The title, the theme of the novel—clones —and the gothic atmosphere caused designers worldwide to experiment with fluffy wings, endearing angels, disfigured faces and giant ova, some human and some not. Dracula-like castles and threatening clouds on the horizon were also recurring themes. This cover, however, was totally different. Original. And for the first time, the content, theme, and mood of my novel were summarized in a single image, as I myself had also done in one sentence, somewhere in the middle of the final chapter: “If you draw a line, see, from here, the doctor’s house, where the walnut tree used to stand, to the three borders, you can see how all the disasters seem to branch out from that spot, just like the roots of a tree.” __________________________________ Editor: Kathryn Court The ANGEL MAKER a no vel S T E FA N B R I J S Alternative cover. 4 01/75 # 02 __________________________ Paul Auster backlist Designer: Greg Mollica Art Director: Paul Buckley Editor: Paul Slovak 6 Paul Auster Greg Mollica Author Designer From the mid-eighties to the mid-nineties, I published ten books with Penguin. I had mixed feelings about the design of the covers: some successes, some failures, all in a hodgepodge. A few years ago, the estimable Paul Slovak decided to “repackage” the backlist with a uniform look for the covers. My only suggestion was to consider a purely typographical approach rather than use any images. The result far exceeded my expectations. Greg Mollica came up with an extraordinarily brilliant and elegant solution: a set of variations using a few fixed elements in different geometric and color combinations from book to book, making each volume distinct from all the others and yet unmistakably part of a series. In my opinion, it is a masterpiece of contemporary design. __________________________________ I noticed a large stack of old Paul Auster paperbacks on Paul Buckley’s desk one night. I was immediately curious about said stack, being a big Auster fan. When I asked Paul about it, he gave me the answer I was fishing for: “We’re redesigning our Auster back list, why?” Before Paul could finish, I asked/slightly begged to take the project on. Paul was a bit hesitant at first, but I think he said yes so I would stop whining. A nine-book redesign in total, Buckley suggested “letter forms as ART.” Ummm, ok, free typographic solution for nine Paul Auster covers?! God, I love my job, I remember thinking. Soon after their release, I was invited to Paul Auster’s book party. When I saw Mr. Auster, I didn’t want to say anything, but my sister approached his wife and insisted I introduce myself. Mrs. Auster, sensing my unease, took over and brought us outside, where her husband was speaking to another man in the shadows. She was so kind and introduced us and I said, “Sorry to interrupt,” and the man in shadow says, “Oh, it’s fine, I was just leaving.” He walks off and Paul Auster goes, “Good-bye, Don DeLillo.” And I thought to myself, well, that makes perfect sense. __________________________________ 01/75 ion of tAlent, scope, meless, theft is so rampant it is no a suicide or assassination—is the of her brother. in her struggle to surects from the past to sell for food and ven love—in this devastated world. that reaffirms paul Auster’s stature talents of his generation. Auster creates within these pages a ps, our very own city.” he Atlanta Journal-Constitution g Mollica ww.penguin.com paul auster in the country of last things with artistry . . . one of the better — The Washington Post paul auster New Republic in the country of last things available online at www.Penguin.com esign by greg MolliCa ooK | fiction | WWW.penguin.com In a Pennsylvania meadow, a young fireman and an angry gambler are forced to build a wall of fifteenth-century stone. For Jim Nashe, it all started when he came into a small inheritance and left Boston in pursuit of “a life of freedom.” Careening back and forth across the United States, waiting for the money to run out, Nashe met Jack Pozzi, a young man with a temper and a plan. With Nashe’s last funds, they entered a poker game against two rich eccentrics, “risking everything on the single blind turn of a card.” In Paul Auster’s world of fiendish bargains and punitive whims, where chance is a shifting and powerful force, there is redemption, nonetheless, in Nashe’s resolute quest for justice and his capacity for love. “A rich, dazzling performance . . . a tour de force about freedom and imprisonment, motion and stasis, order and randomness . . . its story beautifully paced and shaped, its tone powerfully omninous.” —The Wall Street Journal “Witty, even jaunty . . . you won’t read much better writing anywhere about the lure of the open road—and it catches the reader in a surprisingly strong spell.” —The Washington Post “Here is an exceptional novel of freedom and chance which takes you on an engrossing tour of a man’s inner life.” —Los Angeles Times cover design by greg mollica A PeNgUIN Book | FICtIoN | WWW.PeNgUIN.Com the music of chance the music of chance —The Miami Mr. vertigo to end.” and pace of a bestselling thriller” mr. vertigo paul auster tion of a raucous age, an ambitious and enduringly h. ness . . . nobody—nobody—has produced a better he national consciousness at century’s end.” —The Boston Globe a novel praised by The New York Times for having “all the suspense paul auster e novel is the story of one Walter claireborne rawley, he Wonder Boy.” it is the late 1920s, the era of Babe capone, and Walt is a saint louis orphan rescued s hungarian master yehudi, who teaches Walt to walk sults from Walt’s marvelous new ability takes them , where they meet and fall prey to sinners, thieves, and x Klan to the chicago mob. Walt’s rise to fame and coming of age, and his resilience, like that of the gain. From one of America’s most original and startlingly imaginative writers, paul auster er pure And simple . . . n the story of AmericA itself.” yardley, The Washington Post paul auster “Enormously compElling . . . AustEr hAs A rArE combinA- ioNal BesTseller ter Aaron about his best friend, Benjamin sachs. envied, an intelligence he admired, a world he ter a near-fatal fall that might or might not have eared. now Aaron must piece together the life that aim is to tell the truth and preserve it, before those invent an account of their own. ook | fiction | www.penguin.com 8 paul auster “ Auster is a masterly storyteller. . . . Moon palace shimmers with mysteries.” —The washington post book world “A beautiful and haunting book.” chronicle Cover design —San Francisco by greg MolliCa A pEnguin book | fiction | www.pEnguin.com Moon palaCe esign by greg MolliCa beginning during the summer that men first walked on the moon, and moving backward and forward in time to span three generations, Moon palace is propelled by coincidence and memory, marked by tragedy and redemption, and illuminated by marvelous flights of lyricism and wit. here is the most entertaining and moving novel yet from an author well known for his breathtaking imagination. “this is a writer whose work shines with intelligence and originality. . . . he blends modern surfaces with nineteenth-century interiors. . . . yet he puts his storytelling techniques at the service of a very contemporary novel.” —don delillo leviathan brary Association Notable Book marco stanley fogg is an orphan, a child of the sixties, a quester tirelessly seeking the key to his past, the answers to the ultimate riddle of his fate. As marco journeys from the canyons of manhattan to the deserts of utah, he encounters a gallery of characters and a series of events as rich and surprising as any in modern fiction. paul auster leviathan eventh novel is about friendship and betrayal, ent, and the unpredictable intrusions of violence and immensely moving story by an author whom t has called “one of America’s most spectacularly h fully fleshed characters, a fast-paced plot, d narrative cunning.” —The Boston of tAlEnt, scopE, And AudAcity.” —The New Republic paul auster elf up by the side of a road in northern wisconsin. . . tion paul auster ho is perfecting A genre of his own.” Wall STreeT Journal moon palace xx/75 ery, City of Glass inaugurates the Washington Post Book World has . it’s as if kafka has gotten hooked ver-spiraling version.” As a result night, Quinn, a writer of detective zling than any he might have writf Glass combines dark humor with paul auster r metAphysiciAns, y And mAny-lAyered ll BAnks illiant installments in paul Auster’s edition. city ull of suspense and action. . . . er’s art.” —The New York Times Book Review g Mollica ww.penguin.cOm city of glass f the storyteller’s art, guided with just the facts.” —The Philadelphia Inquirer paul auster of glass Volume One of The New York Trilogy 01/75 9 # 03 __________________________ Bicycle Diaries Author | Artist David Byrne Designer | Art Director: Paul Buckley Editor: Paul Slovak David Byrne Author | Ar tist Book covers are collaborations based on contingencies and practicalities . . . that’s part of the fun—it’s a bit like puzzle solving. Having watched the still-recent evisceration of music packaging, it’s clear that for physical books to survive, they have to be lovely to hold and view. Plastic CD cases are ugly things that fall to pieces—it’s no wonder customers have abandoned them. Most books aren’t very lovely as physical objects, and won’t be missed either when they go. I realized that not having a dust jacket accentuated the book’s “objectness,” so I submitted some jacketless book samples and a drawing of myself on a bike to Paul. After a little research on the technical and pragmatic issues (Blurb on back or inside? Bar code on a sticker or bellyband?), Paul came back with some nice layouts and type options, and we were off and running. __________________________________ Proposed cover. Paul Buckley Designer David Byrne has done so much in quite a few art fields—we all know he’s a brilliant musician and showman, but he’s also a highly respected visual artist and consistently makes sure that everything that bears his name is designed spectacularly. So having David Byrne come into your office to discuss his cover is pretty cool, but also sort of daunting. 1 0 Viking, hardcover. David came well prepared with some bicycle sketches and a clear directive that he wanted something very simple. I was fine with the simple part, but I was a little leery of bicycle imagery. With the title Bicycle Diaries, using a bicycle on the cover seemed so darn redundant. . . . After we discussed David’s sketches, I did manage to politely bring up, “Hey, I did some all-type designs for your book that hint at movement indirectly—and they just happen to be right here on my desk. . . . ” While working on them that week, I had convinced myself that David might like them due to things I’d seen of his in the past. They were loud and energetic and (I thought) very David Byrne. I was very wrong. He looked at them and quietly said, “I see, hmmm . . . ” a few times too many. So to put us both out of our misery, I said “OK, so you’ll JPEG the finished bike drawing when you’re done?” and he said, “Yes, sure, sure . . . ” And that was that—comps meet recycling bin. In the end, I went only one round with the cleaner design, and we were both very pleased with the straightforward, bold simplicity of the final cover. And though I still believe it’s most interesting to depict a book’s content cover-wise, from a slightly crooked path, this one really works—David’s charming drawing really pulled it together. __________________________________ 01/75 B i cyc l e Diaries DaviD By r n e # 04 __________________________ Cartoon Classics, Series Philosophy in the Boudoir Author: Marquis de Sade Designer: Paul Buckley + Tomer Hanuka Illustrator: Tomer Hanuka Art Director: Paul Buckley Editor: Caroline White Paul Buckley Tomer Hanuka Designer Illustrator This edition of Philosophy in the Boudoir is now a few years old, but it’s still easily my favorite in this series—it’s just so rude, lewd, and gorgeous all at the same time. Even though every time I commission one of these covers I tell my artists to really go for it, Tomer made me the most proud in this regard. The one disappointment during this project was my associate publisher’s insistence that the horse’s appendage be removed. I remember the conversation: “Wow, this is fantastic, but Paul, yikes—castrate that horse.” “C’mon Stephen, the Marquis de Sade . . . . ” “I think you got away with enough here—be happy.” I am happy, but is the horse happy? A tad less so these days. _______________________________ The content here is hard core, with revolutionary aspirations. Visually, it begs for an aroused horse in a lavish living room. In the sketch for the back cover, the horse was juxtaposed with an image of de Sade choking a young woman. The front cover was relatively clean: one indecent gesture and half a nipple. Sketches were submitted and came back with mixed results. The horse would have to be castrated, but the nipple stayed. Despite believing the penis was at the heart of the concept, keeping half a nipple on the front gave me a sense of finishing the project with nuts intact. _______________________________ A big thank-you to Adrian Tomine for liaising with Mr. Tatsumi on our behalf. Also, a huge thanks to Eric Roberts of Fantagraphics for all his help and guidance with this series. Pre-castration. 12 01/75 xx/75 13 Cartoon Classics, Series Chris Ware Designer | Illustrator Candide, or Optimism Designer | Illustrator: Chris Ware Art Director: Helen Yentus Editor: Michael Millman 14 The history of cartooning is a troubled and embarrassing one. When the Swiss educator Rodolphe Töpffer noticed that a way of grabbing his students’ attention was to draw little caricatures and picture stories relating to his subjects (not unlike, one supposes, the ones with which they were decorating their own textbooks during his lectures), he realized he’d hit on something, and from there produced the first genuine comic book in 1831. He then spent the rest of his short life trying to live the thing down, insisting he wasn’t a cartoonist, but a serious literary man. The damage was done, however. 173 years later, when Helen Yentus asked me to do a new cover for the Penguin edition of Candide, I at first declined, recalling the annoyance and exasperation with which I’d plodded through the text in seventh grade while my English teacher kept assuring us students that it was actually a “funny book.” I realized, however, that Helen was offering me a rare opportunity to speak directly to those seventh graders who now found themselves in the same dreary position I had experienced. Candide is, after all, a fairly dispiriting and hateful story—how many other books were we asked to read in high school where characters get their asses cut off? So I took all of these conditions under advisement, as well as Helen’s mention of my McSweeney’s #13 cover as a model (which had only recently been released), and was off to the races. I can’t say it was lots of fun to do, rereading the book in a couple of different translations to be sure I “had it down,” but in the process I realized that a likely part of its appeal when originally published was the ridiculous speed at which events unfurl and tragedy repeatedly strikes (aside from all the philosophical pecking at determinism, Leibniz, etc.). A few weeks after the cover was finished, Helen called to let me know that since the cover had found favorable enough truck among the people at Penguin (Paul Buckley in particular), it was decided to begin a brand-new line of classics predicated upon it, each decorated by a different irreverent cartoonist—who, presumably, also hadn’t paid attention in school. Imagine how proud old Töpffer would be now, his little teaching tool snowballing into a line of successful, respected literary classics. Determinism, indeed! _______________________________ 01/75 xx/75 15 # 05 __________________________ Couture Classics, Series Designer | Illustrator: Ruben Toledo Art Director: Roseanne Serra Editor: Elda Rotor 16 Elda Rotor Roseanne Serra Editor Ar t Director When I heard from art director Roseanne Serra that fashion illustrator Ruben Toledo had agreed to design all three covers of our Couture Classics (Wuthering Heights, Pride and Prejudice, and The Scarlet Letter), I was beside myself. As a student, I used to cut out his illustrations from earlier incarnations of Paper and Details magazines, and had admired his murals in Barneys and his striking Nordstrom’s national print ad campaign. Although all three covers of these Penguin Classics Deluxe Editions are incredible, my personal favorite is The Scarlet Letter. Here we have a redheaded Hester Prynne in what I imagine as a cashmere knit dress with an oversized embroidered letter A, the threads of which she’s entangled in. Ruben’s depiction of the iconic wild child Pearl captures her in Issey Miyake–like pleats and a forbidding Anna Wintour–y stare. How can any fashionista resist? But what I love most is that Ruben’s cover bridges between twentyfirst century fashion-forward insight and nineteenth-century symbolism. I’ve seen early-edition illustrations of The Scarlet Letter and was pleased to see the same imagery inspire Ruben Toledo, specifically the mob of gossiping women, here spreading gossip across our deluxe French flaps, and the thorny red rose bush creeping across the back cover. Finally, all font-crazed fans will enjoy Ruben’s take on the letter A—the mark of adultery—in various serif and sansserif designs. Holy Toledo, indeed. __________________________________ Penguin Classics Deluxe had the graphic novel series which does so well, and they wanted another series to keep the momentum going. What could I do? I tend to think toward the feminine side, so what else but fashion, of course—it was that or food. What a way to get young women inspired to read the classics! I tried actual fashion designers thinking they would so get into doing this, but that became a horror. They envision 3-D, not print; they promise, they don’t return. They just didn’t get the process—it was not pleasant. I had to put the idea on hold. No one thought it would ever happen. I really wanted this, I had to prove this could happen. I kept thinking of how, and then it hit me—get fashion illustrators to do the series. Illustrators will get the idea. What a pleasure it was to work with the ever-famous Ruben Toledo and get his fun and crazed e-mails! This became one of my most favorite projects to work on after all was said and done. __________________________________ 01/75 0-14-310543-5 3 105435 5 1 6 0 0 Penguin EAN Classics Deluxe Edition Penguin Classics Deluxe Edition Ruben Toledo Illustrator On Pride and Prejudice: I wanted to capture the revolving social diary aspect of the tone here. It’s like The Dating Game where everyone is supposed to be matched up in order to win the game. The writing style is superb—a great balance between the frivolous-flippant social whirl and some very heavy underlying commentary about how some members of society especially women, have to marry their way into freedom . . . or how some women are put into cages. The black-and-white period silhouettes help illustrate the anonymity that can be facilitated by following fashion—by adhering to a certain style, you can disguise yourself and become the type suitable for marriage and participation in society at large. On Wuthering Heights: My personal favorite. It’s such a big story that spans across so many people over so much time, but all attached to this one particular place. I felt I had to draw the place, the geography itself, in order to be true to the story. The actual twisted landscape reflects the twisted story and people that live there—in fact, I believe that places shape us as much as our DNA . The gloom and doom of the atmosphere is like an impossible romantic ghost story . On The Scarlett Letter: What can I say? I’m a sucker for seamstresses as I’m married to one. I wanted to capture the Zen- 18 like focus and intensity that I see in my wife Isabel’s eyes when she is embroidering or mending. The idea that women can weave their own story, sew up their destiny, and try and mend their lives is a captivating image to me. The idea that children are forced to wear the hand-me-down ideas of their parents, and at some point can shed those ideas like an old coat and be happy in their own skin; this idea of renewal, rejuvenation and rebirth is particularly American to me. __________________________________ 01/75 COVER DESIGN AND ILLUSTRATION: RUBEN TOLEDO Visit www.vpbookclub.com • www.penguinclassics.com ISBN 978-0-14-310543-5 A Penguin Book L iterAture 5 1 6 0 0 Penguin Penguin Classics U.S. $16.00 CAN. $20.00 U.K. £12.99 Deluxe Edition EAN 9 Classics Deluxe 780143 105435 Penguin Classics Deluxe Edition Edition Penguin Classics D e l u xe Ed i t i o n COVER DESIGN AND ILLUSTRATION: RUBEN TOLEDO Visit www.vpbookclub.com • www.penguinclassics.com ISBN 978-0-14-310544-2 A Penguin Book L iterAture 5 1 6 0 0 Penguin Penguin Classics U.S. $16.00 U.S. $20.00 $15.00 CAN. CAN. $16.50 U.K. £12.99 Deluxe Edition EAN Classics Deluxe 9 780143 105442 Edition TITLE: 9780143105428_PrideandPrejudice_CoutureClassic_CVR.indd ISBN 978-0-14-310542-8 A Penguin Book L iterAture COVER DESIGN AND ILLUSTRATION: RUBEN TOLEDO Visit www.vpbookclub.com • www.penguinclassics.com Penguin Classics Deluxe Edition U.S. $16.00 CAN. $20.00 U.K. £12.99 5.625 x 8.4375 SPINE: 0.875 5 1 6 0 0 EAN 9 780143 105428 Penguin Classics D eluxe Penguin Classics Deluxe Edition Edition xx/75 19 # 06 __________________________ Eat, Pray, Love Designer: Helen Yentus Art Director: Paul Buckley Editor: Paul Slovak Often the visually simplest of things are the most difficult. Helen’s styling of those three little words was nothing short of heroic. Suffice it to say, a ton of work went into this cover. 20 Helen Yentus Designer Of course no one had any idea what would become of this book. There was talk of what a great writer Elizabeth was and what potential this book had, but really, who could have guessed? I could also say, had anyone known, I’m not sure I could have gotten away with this cover. I wasn’t sure how I’d feel about this book when it was assigned to me, but as soon as I started reading it, I think I felt what so many millions felt. Here was a completely sincere, lovely, smart, and honest voice. I did not expect to love this book, but I did. So when the time came to design it, I really wanted to do something special. There was a lot of research done on the various places that Elizabeth visits in the story, but I could not figure out a good way to put it together. If I have to be honest, I cannot actually remember exactly how the idea for this came about. I had previously done a cover with some lettering made out of three-dimensional material, and I think my art director, Paul Buckley, suggested I try something along those lines. All I know is that this was, in the end, one of the most difficult covers I have ever pulled off. The pasta and the prayer beads were difficult, but more or less ok. But the flowers were a nightmare. Each petal had to be arranged with tweezers. And really, did it have to be script? To make matters worse, this cover had to be shot twice— the first round of photos did not come out well. Needless to say, the flowers had wilted, so I had to do it all again. In the end, however, the time and obsessive efforts were worth it—I think it’s the right cover for the book. _______________________________ Elizabeth Gilbert Author When people first started asking me why I thought Eat, Pray, Love became such a phenomenon, I used to respond honestly: “Because of the cover.” I have since stopped saying this, because it sounds like I’m being dismissive or cheeky, but I still believe it. And I have evidence! Some readers have confessed to me that they not only bought Eat, Pray, Love because they liked the cover, but that they kept the book displayed openly in their homes for many months, for the same reason: they loved looking at it. I do, too. I cannot imagine this book with any other cover. __________________________________ 01/75 forms—love of d most meaning- bert’s wry, unfet- ourney lets even eam of someday aps, over a tran- ANGELES TIMES modern Ameri- ome, successful elt consumed by story of how she ELI Z A BE TH GI LBERT BOOK #1 NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLER ELIZABETH GILBERT Author of Committed what she found pression, Gilbert n worldly enjoy- x of Susan Orlean INMENT WEEKLY , I haven’t found lligence, wit, and ES BOOK REVIEW 0 0 Adapted from the Viking hardcover. EAN One Woman’s Search for Everything Across Italy, India and Indonesia OKCLUB.COM E R T. C O M EAT, PRAY, LOVE , set against the devotion in India, “A wonderful book, brilliant and personal, rich in spiritual insight.” —ANNE LAMOTT One Woman’s Search for Everything Across Italy, India and Indonesia # 07 __________________________ Graham Greene backlist Designer: Paul Buckley Illustrator: Brian Cronin Art Director: Paul Buckley Editor: Kathryn Court 22 Paul Buckley Brian Cronin Designer Illustrator I follow illustrators the way some people follow musicians. I grew up on illustration, my father coming home from work when I was a kid, passing on every illustration annual, book, or mailer that landed into his in-box to me. He was an art director in advertising and a talented artist that cultivated my very early love for the art form. Illustration is what I have my degree in, and why my staff is populated with designers who are also excellent illustrators. So people like Brian Cronin are rock stars to me, and I love the days I can call up someone like him and ask if they’d work with me on something. . . . And if I get a “yeah, sure” on a series of six books, it’s a beautiful day. Brian’s work is deceptively naïve, but that’s because he needs to make very few marks to convey what’s needed—so much emotion is packed into the odd distortion here and there. Everything is extremely controlled, though it looks otherwise. __________________________________ I remember thinking a lot about the clothes I was going to have the characters wear in my paintings more than anything else. In Brighton Rock, I had the protagonist dressed as a teddy boy (a big trend in 1950s Britain). I myself wanted to be a teddy boy, but was a tad young at that time for that trend. When I came of age in the 70s, I was a punk—which had the same kind of anger attached. Teddy boys always had big ears. In The End of the Affair, I didn’t want to show a naked hand. It seemed too revealing. So I put a glove on the love interest to suggest that someone was leaving. In The Quiet American, I have the title character wearing a seersucker suit. A very light, cool fabric suit that I would imagine an American bureaucrat wearing in Vietnam in the 1960s. I can’t remember what I was wearing when I made these images, though. __________________________________ 01/75 ----------- “No serious writer of [the has more thoroughly inva public imagination as did —Time --- In this classic novel of m Graham Greene lays bare of seventeen who stalks Brighton Rock --- Graham Greene --- boardwalk with apathy on in his heart. Pinkie, the bo fingertips, is not just bad, temple of evil, just as his in the house of God. Crim is a release so deep and sa e hours, no need for drink or wo his fellows. He is an as sinister and fascinating—“ of the Adolf Hitler type,” ------ ---------------------- ---------------Bri g h t o n R o c k ------ ---------------------G r a h a m G r e e n e ----- 0 4 –2 0 0 4 g r a H a m g r e e n e C e n t e n n i a l 1 9 0 4– 2 0 0 4 M. Coetzee. Penguin ClassiCs D e l u x e e D i t i o n Originally published in is a novel of profound ps and chilling suspense. Th Penguin ClassiCs D e l u x e e D i t i o n introduction by J. m. Coetzee Graham Greene “No serious writer of [the twe has more thoroughly invaded public imagination as did Gr —Time “This is a record of hate far mor The end of The AffAir writes Maurice Bendrix in th ooses sages of The End of the Affair. An hate indeed that compels him retrospective account of his a with Sarah Miles—a hate bred o ultimately lost out to God. Now, a year after Sarah’s death to exorcise the persistence of retracing its course from ob love-hate. At the start he be Sarah and her husband, Hen 4 –2 0 0 4 g r a h a M g r e e n e C e n t e n n i a l of the book, Bendrix’s hatred 1 9 0 4 –2 0 0 4 the God he feels has broken hi Penguin ClassiCs D e l u x e e D i t i o n existence he has at last come to The end of T he Aff Air Penguin ClassiCs D e l u x e Originally published in 1951, Affair was acclaimed by Wi e D i t i o n as “for me one of the best, Graham Greene moving novels language.” This Graham Gre introduction by Michael gorra 24 of my time xx/75 Christopher Hitchens. it kind of a mental battlefield, inducing a sense remarkable piece of work, splendidly writ- GGGGGGGGGGGGGGG moments of unexpected power and reality.” public imagination as did Graham Greene.” —Time Described by Graham Greene as “the only book As the Orient Express hurtles across Europe I have written for the fun of it,” Travels with My on its three-day journey from Ostend to Constantinople, the driven lives of several GGGGGGGGGGGGGGG and complacent bank manager, who meets of its passengers become bound together in a his septuagenarian Aunt Augusta for the first fateful interlock. The menagerie of characters time at what he supposes to be his mother’s include Coral Musker, a beautiful chorus girl; funeral. She soon persuades Henry to abandon Carleton Myatt, a rich Jewish businessman; his dull suburban existence to travel her way— Richard John, a mysterious and kind doctor to Brighton, Paris, Istanbul, Paraguay. Through returning to his native Belgrade; the spiteful Aunt Augusta, one of Greene’s greatest comic journalist Mabel Warren; and Josef Grunlich, creations, Henry joins a shiftless, twilight soci- a cunning, murderous burglar. “the purser took the last landing-card in his hand and watched the passengers cross the wet quay, over a wilderness of rails and points, round the corners of abandoned trucks.” through and through with the consciousness ety; mixes with hippies, war criminals, and • • • • • • • • • • • • •• •• •• •• •• •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •••••••••••••••••• of the onrushing train, with that curious sense e e n e C e n t e n n i a l D e l u x e e D i t i o n www.PenguinClassiCs.Com Travels with My Aunt Penguin ClassiCs nguin ClassiCs perplexing human dilemmas. ThisP eGraham e D i t i o n Graham Greene GGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGG www.PenguinClassiCs.Com = = qwertyuiop’;lkjhgfdsazxcc e D i t i o n Graham Greene GGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGG “A continuously intriguing piece of storytelling Matter tells the story of a good man enmeshed The Heart of the Matter The Quiet American Graham Greene’s masterpiece The Heart of the universal human problem—the fearful price of in love, intrigue, and evil in a West African cence there lurk unconscious arrogance and a coastal town. Scobie is bound by strict integrity self-righteous streak of moral blindness.” to his role as assistant police commissioner and = = innocence—and has shown that behind inno- = bines] the psychological novel with the novel n sat on the balcony of the Bedford Hotel with his of violence and suspense, a rare accomink knees thrust against the ironwork.” plishment for any writer.” —Saturday 1 9 0 4 –2 0 0 4 and when midnight struck i couldn’t stay quiet any longer widow Helen, he finds vital passion again and went down into the street.” yielding g R a h a m g R e e n e C e n t e n n i –a l 1 9 0 4 –2 0 0 4 g r e e n e C e n t e n n i a l 1 9 0 4 2 0 0 4 Penguin ClassiCs D e l u x e e D i t i o n op’;lkjhgfdsazxcvbnm,./qwertyuiop’;lkjhgfdsazxcvbnm,./ The Heart of the Matter tyuiop’;lkjhgfdsazxcvbnm,./qwertyuiop’;lkjhgqwert ’;lkjhgfdsazxcvbfzqwertyuiop’;lkjhgfdsazxcvbnm,./ op’;lkjhgfdsazxcvbnm,./qwertyuiop’;lkjhgfdsazxcvbnm,./ Graham Greene tyuiop’;lkjhgqwertyuiop’;lkjhgfdsazxcvbfzqwertyui introduction by James Wood kjhgfdsazxcvbnm,./qwertyuiop’;lkjhgfdsazxcvbnm,./ which rises to a magnificent climax.” —New Leader “The best novel written about the war in Cover design by Paul BuCkley Indo-China.” Cover illustration by BRian CRonin Back cover photograph by Times P e n g u i n a Penguin Book | literature Penguin ClassiCs D e l u x e e D i t i o n —Chicago Sun- y o u s u f k a R s h / Camera Press/Retna ltd. C l a s s i C s D e l u x e e D i t i o n WWW.PenguinClassiCs.Com “Unless I am very much mistaken, The Quiet American is as near a masterpiece as anything a Penguin Book | liteRatuRe www.PenguinClassiCs.Com == narrator Fowler remarks of Alden Pyle, the eponymous “Quiet American” of what is perhaps the most controversial novel of his career. Pyle is the brash young idealist sent out by Washington on a mysterious mission against the Vietminh guerillas. As young Pyle’s well-intentioned policies blun- to pity, integrity giving way to der into bloodshed, Fowler, a seasoned and dishonor—a vortex leading cynical British reporter, finds it impossible to bles, his personal crisis makes for g Raanovel h a mthatg R e e n e C e n t e n n i a l 1 9 0 4–2 0 0 4 is suspenseful, fascinating, and, finally, tragic. Penguin ClassiCs D e l u x e e D i t i o n clearly revealed in the structure of the novel, g r a H a m success. This Graham Greene Centennial to Saigon, where the French Army struggles When Scobie falls in love with the young deceit and “Greene at his best. The hand of the master is C e n t e n n i a l in 1933, Orient Express was Greene’s first major all the trouble he caused,” Graham Greene’s directly to murder. As Scobie’s world crumg r e e n e and suspenseful stories. Originally published “I never knew a man who had better motives for whom he cares with a fatal pity. rue Catinat; he had said, ‘i’ll be with you at latest by ten,’ Review Syndicate for one of Graham Greene’s most exciting —Time by severe responsibility to his wife, Louise, for “after dinner i sat and waited for Pyle in my room over the “veracious air” of the onrushing train, makes public imagination as did Graham Greene.” sasz . . . Greene has brought into vivid relief a = ing, and reaching out to one another in the has more thoroughly invaded and shaped the has more thoroughly invaded and shaped the —Time passion, all the while confessing, prevaricat- “No serious writer of [the twentieth century] “No serious writer of [the twentieth century] public imagination as did Graham Greene.” —The New York —The Atlantic D e l u x e on and take off their masks of identity and introduction by Christopher Hitchens Graham Greene Times = = Graham Greene “Written with Greene’s great technical skill and rtyuiop’;lkjhgfdsazxcc “A superb accomplishment . . . [Greene com- m D e l u x e GGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGG GGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGG Edition includes a new introductory essay by rtyuiop’;lkjhgfdsazxcc imagination.” 1 9 0 4–2 0 0 4 yet some of the most GGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGG G also G confronts G G us Gwith GG GGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGG introduction by gloria emerson Robert Stone. C e n t e n n i a l Originally published in 1970, Travels with My a Penguin Book | literature guin Book | literature Penguin ClassiCs D e l u x e e D i t i o n Penguin ClassiCs D e l u x e e D i t i o n —Saturday Review of Literature C l a s s i C s g r e e n e GGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGG Ggives G usGanGintoxicating G G Gentertainment G G GOrient G G G G Express GGGGGGGGGGGG Aunt Cover design by Paul BuCkley Cover illustration by Brian Cronin B a c k c o v e r p h o t o g r a p h b y y o u s u f k a r s H / Camera Press/retna ltd. P e n g u i n g r a H a m GGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGG GGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGG “One of THE most exciting and successful novels of its type that I have read.” regulations. g r a H a m g r e e n e C e n t e n n i a l 1 9 0 4 –2 0 0 4 g r a h a m g r e e n e C e n t e n n i a l 1 9 0 4–2 0 0 4 —The New York Times What happens to these strangers as they put CIA men; smokes pot; and breaks all currency of the temporary suspension of one’s ordinary 1 9 0 4 –2which 0 0 4comes to many on ship or existence train.” GGG Aunt is the story of Henry Pulling, a retired GGGGG “Orient Express has movement, variety, interest: aunt augusta for the first time at my taken on the surface, it is an interesting and funeral.” entertaining story of adventure, penetrated •• GGGGGGGGGGGGGGG GGGGGGGGGGGGGGG —The New has more thoroughly invaded and shaped the —Time Orient Express Travels with My Aunt vides, in addition to excellent entertainment, “No serious writer of [the twentieth century] public imagination as did Graham Greene.” GGGGGGGGGGGGGGG —L. “Mr. Greene’s gift for spirited storytelling pro- Republic has more thoroughly invaded and shaped the GGGGGGGGGGGGGGG of breathlessness and urgency. It is a very ten, exciting, disturbing.” “No serious writer of [the twentieth century] GGGGGGGGGGGGGGG GGGGGGGGGGGGGGG struggle with each other in this book, making P. Hartley GGGGGGGGGGGGGGG Graham Greene Graham Greene Edition features a new introductory essay by “A tour de force . . . The realist and romantic stand safely aside as an observer. But Fowler’s motives for intervening are suspect, both to the police and himself, for Pyle has stolen The Quiet American ============== Originally published in 1948, The Heart of the Fowler’s beautiful Vietnamese mistress. Matter is the unforgettable portrait of one man, Penguin flawed yet heroic, destroyed and redeemed by ClassiCs D e l u x e e D i t i o n a terrible conflict of passion and faith. This Graham Greene Graham Greene Centennial Edition includes a introduction by Robert stone Originally published in 1956 and twice adapted to film, The Quiet American remains a terrifying and prescient portrait of innocence at large. This Graham Greene Centennial # 08 __________________________ I Love Dollars Designer: Matt Dorfman Art Director: Paul Buckley Editor: John Siciliano Julia Lovell Matt Dorfman Translator Designer I’m a great fan of this cover, too. With beautiful economy, it seems to catch a couple of the fundamentals of Zhu Wen’s fiction: his surprising, sometimes scandalous humor; his pleasure in debunking China’s traditionally pious father-son relationship. The British edition used another striking image—a busily psychedelic Chinese street scene—but I still think I prefer the simple outrageousness of the American version. __________________________________ My first round of comps for this cover featured multiple attempts at repurposing Chairman Mao’s head. Given that this route was already well trodden by other designers through the years, Paul Buckley wisely dismissed all of them and suggested that I start again. Fifteen comps later, the final treatment that won out is as much a result of the art director and editor’s patience and trust as it is of my design work. Whatever Zhu Wen’s opinions may be regarding the cover for his book, I sincerely hope that he values the absence of Mao— because the comps that featured Mao were, in retrospect, truly terrible. __________________________________ Matt clearly enjoyed working on this book and I was happy with quite a few of his proposed designs. My wife, her family, and many of our friends are from Taiwan or mainland China and I’ve witnessed firsthand how hungry they can be for good Chinese fiction—it’s not easy to find. So I narrowed the cover choices to three or four and sent them via e-mail to roughly ten Chinese Americans, and hands down everyone picked “the cover with that old guy.” Field research! A N D OT H E R STO R I E S O F C H I N A ZHU WEN “Brilliant… Fresh and very funny.” AND OT H E R STO R I E S OF CHINA —The Seattle Times ZHU WEN “Brilliant… Fresh and very funny.” —The Seattle Times I Love Dollars. Penguin UK, 2008. “BRIllIANT… FRESH AND v E Ry F u N N y. ” — T h e S e aT T l e T i m e S I LOVE DOLLARS AND OTHER STORIES OF CHINA H “BRIllIANT… F R E S H A N D v E Ry F u N N y. ” — T h e S e aT T l e T i m e S H ZHU WEn H Proposed covers. 26 01/75 # 09 __________________________ Love Me Designer | Illustrator: Jamie Keenan Art Director: Roseanne Serra Editor: Molly Stern 28 Garrison Keillor Jamie Keenan Author Designer | Illustrator This cover gives me a bad case of the yips. Love Me is a comic novel in which the protagonist Larry comes to New York and realizes his great dream of working at The New Yorker and, in a moment of great courage, he shoots the publisher in the Oak Room of the Algonquin Hotel and returns to his beloved wife, Iris, in St. Paul, Minnesota. The cover doesn’t suggest any of that. At first glance, it looks like oak beams drying at the lumberyard, or a bad dream about coffins, or a child’s rendering of an aerial view of Dupont Circle, or an explosion at LEGOLAND. It doesn’t suggest anything that is in the book. Maybe it was designed for the Penguin edition of The Trial by Franz Kafka and Kafka didn’t like it, so they stuck me with it. Anyway, it could’ve been worse, as we say. It could’ve been fruit bats hanging from bare, knobby limbs, or a color photo of suppurating bedsores. So I bear no ill will, even though Love Me only reached 234,851 on Amazon’s fiction list and the book was quickly remaindered—and sold almost a thousand copies at fifty-nine cents —and the rest were baled up and hauled to a recycling plant. I still have a copy and I enjoy reading it very much. It’s a funny book, though you’d never know it from this. __________________________________ I spent ages trying to put this idea together using different photographs of New York skyscrapers. They all had slightly different perspectives and trying to get them to work together was a nightmare—it looked terrible. Then I noticed my original scribble—the original scribble is always best. __________________________________ 01/75 on books purport to tell the wn, Love Me tells wonderfully n . . . deliciously clever.” —The Wall Street Journal an zingers, Love Me is surpris—The New York Times Book Review n a sweet love story . . . as wise —USA Today l o v e Me ds a quiet, decent life in St. Paul, While his wife, Iris, an earnest , works with the less fortunate, reat American novel. When his is wildest dreams, he departs for The New Yorker, and—best of all— reat editor William Shawn. bs, Wyler discovers that success— ne–is a fickle mistress, indeed. A ues. Nearly destitute, and longriting “Ask Mr. Blue,” a column . It may not be glamorous work, hat’s really important. He consher Tony Crossandotti and sets t behind. Garrison Keillor s N otA ble book t h e N e w Y o r k T i m e s b e s t s e l l e r G a r r i s o n K eillor “Keillor’s funniest and most ambitious novel to date.” —The Washington Post Book World love Me a novel Cover design and www.penguin.com illustration by KEENAN xx/75 29 # 10 __________________________ Penguin Ink Series Series Editor: Tom Roberge Waiting for the Barbarians Author: J.M. Coetzee Illustrator: C.C. Askew Art Director: Paul Buckley 30 Paul Buckley Ar t Director The Penguin Ink series came to me during the course of researching tattoo artists for personal reasons. For over a decade I’d wanted a tattoo, but as a picky art director, this decision was very difficult for me. . . . What image was so perfect that I’d want to look at it for the next fifty years? And, for the very same reason, which artist was talented enough? I made my first appointment only to call two hours before the appointed time and shyly back out, having convinced myself that the artist’s gradations were all wrong. . . . How could I have missed that? It took me another five years to choose another artist who I thought flawless, and then another two years to land the appointment. I had plenty of time to research a lot of tattoo artists, and the talent in this field is staggering. And while I can’t say it’s untapped, I do think it fair to say that they are underutilized as far as commercial assignments are concerned. Before officially pitching this series, I discussed the idea with one of our editors, Tom Roberge (who is fairly well covered in ink), and he thought it was a good idea. Later, I made my pitch to our Penguin publishing team, and they got far more excited than I expected. Soon after, they chose Tom as the editor on the series. Using Duke Riley for The Broom of the System was Tom’s idea. It’s a beautiful cover. Through art directing this project, I’ve learned the hard way that some tattoo artists thrive on the immediacy of someone like you walking through the door, telling them what you want, and doing it. You pay them, you leave—on to the next person. Unfortunately in book publishing, cover art projects can plod along for weeks as we wait for agents and authors and estates to weigh in. Then minor changes are requested, and everyone weighs in again. For some tattoo artists, this can seem a very alien way to work. Some became unreliable in the revision stage—one artist was so enraged with the slow pace that during our last conversation, he just kept barking into the phone, "Do you have any idea JUST WHO I AM??!" (Yes, that’s why I hired you, Angry Fellow. And why I won’t do so ever again.) It’s been great fun trying to match these artists to authors, but it has also been a steep learning curve. This is not an art form in which I can claim much expertise, and I’m still learning the ropes— and occasionally getting thrown against them. _______________________________ xx/75 Money Author: Martin Amis Illustrator: Bert Krak Art Director: Paul Buckley Bridget Jones’s Diary Author: Helen Fielding Illustrator: Tara McPherson Art Director: Paul Buckley Bert Krak Paul Buckley Illustrator Ar t Director When I first accepted the task of illustrating the cover of Money, I had no idea what to do. After a little back-and-forth with Paul, we decided to go with what I know: classic tattoo patterns. The gritty world of the book meshes perfectly with the rough, bold designs of traditional tattoo flash. The first rough sketch was too much like a painting—we ended up going with something that was more like a sheet you would find in any worldclass tattooing establishment. _______________________________ Tara McPherson is not a tattoo artist, though she is certainly covered in them and is wellknown in tattoo culture. I needed something a bit out of the norm for Bridget Jones, and I had been mulling over whether to ask her to try her hand at doing flash art for a while. But I first had to justify how I could truly state this series was done all by tattoo artists if she wasn’t one herself. During this time my wife and I decided to take a quick vacation in Miami, where we went to the infamous Joe’s Stone Crab for dinner . . . and eating dinner right across from us was Tara. I didn’t know her personally, nor am I the sort to interrupt people at dinner, so rather than introducing myself and running the idea by her, I let her eat in peace. But I’m a bit of a believer in serendipity, so I did contact her as soon as I got back to NYC, and she liked the idea. I’m glad I followed through on this slight departure in the series as Tara did such an outstanding job. _______________________________ Tara McPherson Illustrator The cover for Bridget Jones was interesting because, being part of the tattoo cover series, I had to shift my style a bit to translate to the flash sensibility. It was fun to work in a different style, though. Also, I did it while traveling through the U.S. and Australia— not an easy thing to work on in hotel rooms, but it came together beautifully. _______________________________ 32 xx/75 PENGUIN INK PENGUIN INK Cover by Bert Krak Art direction by Paul Buckley 8-0-14-311695-0 5 1 5 0 0 EAN 43 116950 xx/75 33 # 11 __________________________ The Royal Family Designer: Paul Buckley Author | Photographer: William T. Vollmann Art Director: Paul Buckley Editor: Paul Slovak 34 William T. Vollmann Paul Buckley Author | Photographer Designer It was a pleasure to be given Viking money for the cover of The Royal Family. I set out with my 8 x 10 camera, some film holders, and a plug-in shop lamp. Wandering into a fine crack hotel of my acquaintance, I booked a room for an hour and knocked on the nearest door. The lady within had two friends available. I asked one woman to pose as the Queen of the Prostitutes, and the others as her courtiers. In twenty minutes, we were all happy. A day later, my sheet film was developed and I was happily sun-printing the best negative with silver chloride—printing out the paper and toning it in gold, as befitted royalty. My only regret was seeing the fig leaves on the published version. _______________________________ I was pretty thrilled and more than a little curious when Vollmann told me he’d like to try his hand at taking the cover photo for this. These ladies are the real deal—what folks tend to refer to as “crack whores.” That said, how can you not be impressed? When it comes to authors wanting to work on their own covers, I am no wilting flower, and am the first to say this or that just does not work—but this image was just so perfect. Was it reportage? Posed? Who are they, and how did the shoot get from point A to B? So many questions, but I’m not sure I want the answers. When Vollmann sent me his bill, I had to say, “You know, I’m just not sure accounts payable is going to understand . . . do you think you could leave out some of the details?” Due to not having fullname model releases, I had to cover their faces. In closing, I have to say I’m pretty impressed with the amount of nudity on this cover —you try getting that past your publisher and sales. _______________________________ 01/75 WILLIAM T. VoLLMAnn a novel WILLIAM T. Adapted from the Viking hardcover. VoLLMAnn “Vollmann’s funky, salivary, spermatic, bloody, tearful novel successfully illustrates his total artistic commitment to embracing raunchy, sacred life in all its holy infamy.”—The Washington Post Book World # 12 __________________________ The Short Novels of John Steinbeck Designer: Jennifer Wang Illustrators: Various Art Director: Paul Buckley Editor: Elda Rotor 38 Susan Shillinglaw Jennifer Wang Steinbeck scholar Designer Typeface concerns a designer and perhaps an editor; the buying public often pays scant attention. This stack of first-edition covers, however, insists that type matters. Lettering suggests content. On the 1935 dust jacket, the squat Tortilla Flat—Monterey Bay peeking from behind the type—is very like the paisanos’ tiny houses seen lining the Bay. Of Mice and Men is stick-like, vulnerable. The Pearl (in small and large type) is suspended in scallop waves circa the 1947 dust jacket. Other titles are stamped on cloth covers, letters stark. The assemblage of titles thus resists consistency, just as Steinbeck insisted that each book was an “experiment,” each different from the one before. In the stack of titles, letters are squeezed, slightly discomforting to a would-be reader—“move that book down a bit, give titles more space.” But crowding Cannery Row up against Of Mice and Men, with slight shading behind each book, conveys the amplitude of Steinbeck’s performance—so many short novels resulting in the accolade “Winner of the Nobel Prize in Literature.” Nor are titles placed chronologically, also dislodging reader expectations. An impressive and eclectic stack— John Steinbeck, I suspect, would be pleased. _______________________________ From the beginning of this project I had a notion of referencing the original designs of the selected novels, but was not sure just how to do it. Some of my original ideas played off my ideas of Steinbeck as being a celebration of masculinity, but after they were rejected, I went back to the idea of the designs from the original covers. I suppose it had a lot of time to mature in my brain, as the final design seemed much more effortless than its original conception. _______________________________ P E TH E RE TH N G U DP IN C L A S S IC S THE ON R TO TIL Y S H O RT N O V E L S E O MO N AT FL LA IS DO NN CA WN OF O I FM CE ER AN YR DM JOHN STEINBECK TH EP EA RL D E L U X OW EN E D I T I O N E WINNER of the NOBEL PRIZE i n L I T E R AT U R E 01/75 T h e S h o r t N ovels of “Steinbeck shap of conscience.” JOHN STEINBECK W inner of the Nobe Steinbeck was one of Am influential authors. Now, first time in a single pap John Steinbeck’s most w novels——Tortilla Flat, The Men, The Moon Is Dow Pearl. From Steinbeck’s t ness, and hope in Of Mi yet charming portrait of society in Cannery Row tion of the fallacy of the beck created stories tha PENGUIN CLASSICS D E L U X E E D I T I O N The Short Novels of JOHN STEINBECK Winner of the Nobel Prize in Literature PE NG U I N xx/75 and imbued with energy C LASSIC S DE LUXE E DIT IO N 39 # 13 __________________________ Twitterature Designer: Amelia Cai Art Director: Paul Buckley Editor: John Siciliano TK TK TK Paul Buckley Ar t Director One Friday I received a frantic call from editorial saying this book had just become a crash project, and we needed to get the cover done immediately. I sent the commission to Jamie Keenan, who turned the cover around for me the following Monday. And he just knocked it out of the park. It was absolutely perfect. Surely everyone could see that—just not the book’s editor. I oversee hundreds of covers a year and have designs rejected all the time, but this stunned me. “Huh? Wait—you are actually saying that you don’t like this?” “Yes. It’s ALL wrong.” Then my associate publisher agreed. Then the authors blasted it. 40 Art directors working in corporate art departments absorb a lot of rejection from Closet Art Directors (or CADs, for short). If you lack diplomacy skills and the ability to let go and move on, you can quickly become miserable. I know this. But I also know which designs are worth fighting for, and this was going to be my 2009 cover design poster child. I dug in. “Aren’t these authors seventeen or something? And we’re listening to them?” Silence. Stony stares. Fidgety fingers. “Yes. Because they’re right.” It seemed they all wanted it to look like some old classic, the very thing we strive not to do here at Penguin. Twitter isn’t an old, dusty topic from the nineteenth century. Jamie’s design brilliantly married the idea of classic literature to this Name technology. Why would anyone Title choose old over new-brilliantlymixed-with-old? Quote. Thus began a month-long _______________________________ process where we went through cover after cover. (“I thought you said this was a huge rush?” I enjoyed reminding them.) After weeks of this, I contacted Jamie to apologize for torturing him over this faux rush job and released him from the unending situation. Afterward, I walked out of my office and asked my art manager, “Judy, how old is your new intern? What does she do for us?” “Amelia’s sixteen. Mostly data input. Why do you ask?” I turned to Amelia. “Hey, do you want to do a cover for me?” I discussed with this amazingly bright high school student what I thought everyone was looking for. “Take this info in,” I told her, “and let’s see what you have in a few days.” About two minutes later, reason kicked in, and I e-mailed her to say, “Please don’t take this personally, but I’ll be working on this, too—because I can’t just hand it over to some sixteen-year-old without backup.” I then banged out some cookie cutter designs that I was sure would look brilliant next to whatever a sixteen-year-old might produce. These people don’t know what they want anyway, I told myself. Half an hour later I thought, Hey these don’t look so bad after all. I patted myself on the back. Well, twenty years experience has to add up to something, right? Good job, (continued on next page) 40 01/75 s so emo. Who cries about his girlfriend while OL? ISBN 978-0-14-311732-2 5 1 2 0 0 EAN 9 e e man big tournament at my school this year!! his year, and every year as if by clockwork. twitterature \’twi-t ů -r -‚chur\n: amalgamation of “twitter” and “literature”;humorous reworkings of literary classics for the twenty-first-century intellect, in digestible portions of 20 tweets or fewer twitterature S DOING BEHIND THE CURTAIN??? AlexAnder AcimAn And emmett rensin H atched in a dorm room by two freshmen at the University of Chicago, Twitterature is a ious and irreverent reimagining of classics as a series of 140-character ts from the protagonist. Providing a h course in more than eighty of the d’s best-known books, from Homer arry Potter, Virgil to Voltaire, Tolstoy wilight, and Dante to The Da Vinci , it’s the ultimate Cliffs Notes. use as great as the classics are, has time to read those big, long ks anymore? “Do you hear that? It’s the sound of Shakespeare, rolling over in his grave.” —The Wall Street Journal 780143 117322 xx/75 41 Paul. Why thanks, Paul. Hey man, seriously, you’re very welcome. A few days later, Amelia gave me her cover proposals and I said, “This isn’t the book’s subtitle . . . and where are the authors’ names?” “Well, I rewrote the subtitle ’cause theirs was stupid, and I figured we’d just put their names on the spine.” “You know, Amelia, you can’t just do that.” “Why not?” “Never mind, I gotta get these into my meeting. Thanks . . . ” I walked up to my packaging meeting. After we all sheepishly batted around some mildly tense banter about whether these cover proposals will cause further sparks today, I put both sets of comps on the table. Immediately everyone reached out, pushing my designs aside to get a better look at Amelia’s. “OOOOOhh, these are great . . . ABSOLUTELY great! Who did these?” “Intern downstairs.” “Much better than these,” they said, pointing to my designs. “Let’s get these things off the table.” “Hey! Hey, did you notice that there are no author names, and the subtitle is different?” “Yes, it’s perfect. So smart! This really reads much better now.” “But . . . ” I say. “No, Paul, this is what we’ve been needing the whole time!” Actually, it was a pretty beautiful thing. That Amelia is going places. _______________________________ 42 01/75 Twitter ature Proposed sketch. Designer: Jamie Keenan Alexander Aciman and Emmett L. Rensin xx/75 43 # __________________________ Wolf Totem Designer | Illustrator: Elsa Chiao Art Director: Darren Haggar Editor: Janie Fleming PRAISE FOR JIANG RONG’S WOLF TOTEM “Jiang [Rong’s] first novel, Wolf Totem, [is] a stirring allegorical critique —T H E N E W YO R K T I M E S of Chinese civilization.” “The Call of the Wild meets Dersu Uzala in the wilds of Inner Mongolia in this sweeping debut novel by retired Chinese academician Jiang. In China, it has emerged as a zeitgeist novel, outselling any other in Chinese history short of Mao’s little red book. . . . A treasure.” WO L F T O T E M Designer | Illustrator Where to start in designing this cover couldn’t have been a tough call: a wolf. I loved the hardcover—three faces (phases) of a single wolf that had a Jack London feel, yet was slightly ambiguous. At first the ambiguity seemed lost in the paperback, which I saw in black-and-white only, and didn’t much like. It needed color and definition, which is what it got: the arresting blue and a spiky, angry wolf at the foot of a (Mongolian) mountain. Adding the translator’s name would have been nice, but this tops the other covers I’ve seen. _______________________________ I knew from the beginning that I wanted Mongolian/Chinese paper-cutting on the cover. However, it was very hard to find a Mongolian paper-cutting artist who could turn it around in three days. So I had to channel my inner Mongolian grasslander to produce the art myself. I also managed to work my own Chinese calligraphy into the design, which I am quite proud of. You don’t really notice it—at that miniscule size—next to the title, but it’s there, and it says “wolf totem.” My grade school calligraphy teacher in Taiwan would be proud. _______________________________ An epic Chinese tale that depicts the dying culture of the Mongols—the ancestors of the Mongol hordes who at one time terrorized the world—and the parallel extinction of the animal they believe to be sacred: the fierce and otherworldly Mongolian wolf WO L F T O T E M —KIRKUS REVIEWS (starred review) “This masterly work is also a passionate argument about the complex interrelationship between nomads and settlers, animals and human beings, nature and culture.” —ADRIENNE CLARKSON, Man Asian Literary Panel judge “[Jiang Rong], the former book burner, book thief and book savior, is on the way to becoming one of the most celebrated and controversial Chinese novelists in the world: Jiang’s first book, Wolf Totem, has not only escaped a ban since its publication three years ago, but has picked up almost a dozen major literary awards in China—and has now gained international recognition by winning the first Man Asian literary prize, created to highlight authors from the region who have yet to be published —T H E G U A R D I A N in English.” (U.K.) Elsdale/Getty Images Darren Haggar JIANG RONG n in Jiangsu in . His move to Beijing in , tral Academy of Fine Art short by events in China, ang volunteered to work Ujimqin Banner in , d with the native nomads his life. He took with him se translations of Western ears immersed in personal y, culture, and tradition. A mythologies surrounding s inspired him to learn all he adopted and raised an he returned to Beijing, at the Chinese Academy later. Jiang worked as an ment in . Wolf Totem e in the s that draws ence of the grasslands of Elsa Chiao Translator . nt from the cities to bring olia. The age-old balance e grasslands will never be ble for modern days, Wolf mmentary on the dangers economic growth, and a heart of Chinese and Mon- 14 Howard Goldblatt j i a ng rong ISBN 978-1-59420-156-1 Translated by uin Group (USA) Inc. , New York, N.Y. 10014 | Printed in U.S.A. Wolf Totem was released in China in . Written under the pen name Jiang Rong, the quasi autobiographical novel describing a young Han Chinese student’s experience living in Inner Mongolia became an overnight sensation, breaking all sales records and selling millions of copies. Now, beautifully translated by Howard Goldblatt, the foremost translator of Chinese fiction, this fascinating book is available in English. Wolf Totem opens in s China during the Cultural Revolution. Searching for spirituality, Beijing intellectual Chen Zhen travels to the pristine grasslands of Inner Mongolia to live among the nomadic Mongols—a proud, brave, and ancient race of people who coexist in perfect harmony with their beautiful but exacting natural environment. At the core of their belief is the notion of a triangular balance between the earth, the wolf, and man, whose fates are all intricately linked. There is prosperity and abundance when the three work together; when they are at cross purposes with each other, there is blight and suffering. The fierce wolves that haunt the steppes of the unforgiving grassland searching for food are locked with the nomads in a profoundly spiritual battle for survival—a life-and-death dance that has gone on between them for thousands of years. The Mongols believe that the wolf is a great and worthy foe that they are divinely instructed to contend with, but also to worship and to learn from. By adopting a wolf cub of his own, Chen’s fascination with them blossoms into obsession, and ultimately reverence. But then the peace is shattered with the arrival of Chen’s H O WA R D G O L D B L AT T (continued on back flap) Penguin Press hard cover. 44 01/75 Title: Wolf Totem nomads in a own, Chen’s hen the peace srupted, and art fable for ngers of overt of Chinese he Month) controversial (London) errelationship d culture.” neL Judge ookclub.com 0 0 EAN wol f t o t e m att’s excellent triumph, but n and undersubjugating Ron g Revolution, ner Mongolia l hordes who eir beautiful otion of a triy Mongolian gols are both Jian g ization.” Trim: 5 1/2 x 8 7/16 Spine: 1 3/32” wol f totem A Novel Jian g Ro n g “An intellectual adventure story . . . Five hundred bloody and instructive pages later, you just want to stand up and howl!” —Alan Cheuse, San Francisco Chronicle