Aaaand now you're thinking: this gal is completely unqualified to talk about awesome cover designers. You are, as usual, completely correct.
At my level of power in the biz (i.e., none), I don't talk to artists, designers, or art directors. I don't offer feedback on final designs. I don't get a yes or no. If there's something truly wrong about a final cover, I can point out that detail and it may or may not change. I think the reasoning here is that I don't know markets or reader expectations nearly as well as the people who are in charge of bringing my story to the public. So I bow to their experience and expertise.
However! What I can show you is a peek at the one thing I do get to contribute to the cover-design process: an information packet that describes the characters and setting. I send these in at product launch time, right at the beginning, and they are supposed to function as a cheat sheet so the designers and artists don't have to slog through reading the whole book.
I love filling out these things and sharing my inspirations and wishes; it's one of my favorite parts of book production. Here's what I sent Sourcebooks for Perfect Gravity (note that the images I included are all copyrighted, so I can't post them here, but I've included a short description of each in [brackets] and I'm sure your imagination or Google-fu can illuminate the rest):
Hero (Kellen Hockley)
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Race: Texan
(okay, not a race, but definitely a type)
Complexion: Tan from spending a lot of time outside
Age: 30
Body (height/build):
He gets a lot of exercise. Um, I used this image for inspiration:
[pic of Scott Eastwood shirtless]
Hair color/length: dark blond
Eye color (one word):
blue
Facial hair? Nothing
really in the story, though he does go a few days without a shave there in
the middle and could definitely be scruffy.
Clothing: He wears jeans and boots a lot. Stetson
sometimes (outdoors only, because down-home manners!). A belt buckle. At the
very end of the book, at a fancy-dress shindig, he wears a tux. Thusly:
[pic of Scott Eastwood in a tux]
Signature Accessory: A cat. He rarely goes anywhere without Yoink, a cloned,
bionic kitty. She’s cinnamon-and-white striped and has metal horns protruding
from her wee skull, near her ears. The details aren’t hugely important. If y’all
decide to put a cat on the cover, I don’t think it matters too much what kitty
looks like.
[pic of shirtless cowboy holding a cat]
My dream cover for this book would feature a
shirtless cowboy holding a bionic cat. But probably that stock photo would be
really, really hard to find.
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Heroine (Angela Neko)
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Race: Bengali/Japanese
Complexion: more South-Indian than Japanese, so kind of
latte
Age: early 30s
Body (height/build):
short, slight, in command (of everything). Bit Napoleonish.
Hair color/length: Black. Can be in any style: she goes
from having a super fancy updo to being bald to having a short pixie cut at
the end.
Eye color: dark brown
[pic of Priyanka Yoshikawa]
Clothing: Conservative high-fashion futuristic chic.
Tailored to within an inch of her life, but with flights of couture weird. In
terms of style and deportment, I think of her as a mashup of Huma Abedin,
Padme Amidala, and Alexander McQueen.
[pic of Huma Abedin in her wedding dress]
[pic of vaguely steampunk long-sleeved Alexander McQueen dress with buckles and frogging on the bodice]
[pic of Padme Amidala in her heavy velvet addressing-the-Galactic-Senate costume]
Key Accessory: Elbow-length biodeterrent smartgloves. (That, uh, just look
like regular gloves, those heavy-duty long things the Victorians wore to keep
the whole world off their skin.)
|
Setting/description
(similar to first book in series) |
The year 2059, so near future. Look should be futuristic
but gritty.
Western U.S. desert (so, lots of scrub-brush flora and
bumpy horizons) with an unexpected giant megastructure (an arcology, like
those mongo buildings in BladeRunner) jutting out of a vast, dark nothing.
Also
scenes in post-apocalyptic underwater Galveston and a futuristic Guadalajara.
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Design ideas/inspiration
|
This movie poster sums up the mood nicely:
[pic of Cowboys vs Aliens movie poster featuring Daniel Craig's backside]
|
Cover descriptive words
|
Techno, sexy, old-west, bleak, futuristic
|
And this is the cover they came up with:
I think the cover is gorgeous. Does it match my vision? Not really. But it fits smoothly into that urban-fantasy kickass-heroine market, which is where I suspect the publisher was trying to place it.
So, yeah, it's probably best I don't have a lot of control over covers. There are people who are much better at this than I am.
But, just the tiniest bit, I do mourn the shirtless-cowboy-with-a-robot-cat cover that never was.