MrPixel
Just a Regular Guy
- Joined
- May 12, 2020
- Posts
- 5,048
I've been fooling around with simple cover art for my Barstow series and it piqued my interest in seeing what other authors have done. In poking around, it appeared to me that the only place a cover appears is on the front (web) page of the series as a thumbnail to the side. An afterthought, basically.
In my view of the literary world, a cover serves a purpose - to draw attention in a display in a bookstore, facing forward along with its kin, for the prospective readers to browse and maybe pick up to leaf through. The online equivalent would be a gallery, a page full of thumbnails large enough to do some justice to the art, which you then click on to get to the series start or index. An online shopping equivalent in my mind is Etsy, a grid of pretty images begging for your click, "Pick me, pick ME!"
Do we have such a thing and I've not found it? If there is not, should there be something like it?
In my view of the literary world, a cover serves a purpose - to draw attention in a display in a bookstore, facing forward along with its kin, for the prospective readers to browse and maybe pick up to leaf through. The online equivalent would be a gallery, a page full of thumbnails large enough to do some justice to the art, which you then click on to get to the series start or index. An online shopping equivalent in my mind is Etsy, a grid of pretty images begging for your click, "Pick me, pick ME!"
Do we have such a thing and I've not found it? If there is not, should there be something like it?