Top Ten Tuesday: Book Covers Featuring Cool/Pretty/Unique/etc. Typography

Top Ten Tuesday is a weekly meme created by The Broke and the Bookish and now hosted by Jana at That Artsy Reader Girl.

Book Covers Featuring Cool/Pretty/Unique/etc. Typography (Typography is the art of arranging letters so they look visually appealing and more interesting than, for example, the body text of this blog post you’re reading now.

These are all covers that caught my attention one way or another.Tthey are all books I own some of which I’ve read and some waiting to be read.

The King in the North by Max Adams – I love everything about this cover. I love the combination of the colours and the letters filled with decorative patterns just like an illustrated manuscript – think of the Lindisfarne gospels and the Book of Kells.

Birnam Wood by Eleanor Catton – this cover conveys a sense of speed as Catton’s name looks like it’s running uphill over the top of the line of trees bent in the wind as the little drone approaches. It tells a story before you get to the words within the book.

The Mirror and the Light by Hilary Mantel – such a beautiful and colourful image, contrasting the dark and the light reflections.

The Vanishing of Margaret Small by Neil Alexander. This caught my eye because it makes me wonder how and why Margaret Small vanished. I like the background colour, contrasting with the author’s name and the use of the lower case in the title.

Daemon Voices by Philip Pullman – having the title written in a banner in the bird’s mouth amuses me.

West with Giraffes by Lynda Rutledge – another striking cover that immediately made me wonder what the book could be about. I like the tall letters dwarfing the figure of man in between the words, emphasising how tall giraffes are.

Fire from Heaven by Mary Renault – a bold title in upper case letters above the image. You just know this is about ancient warfare.

Aphorisms of Yoga by Bhagwan S. Patanjali – plain and simple with the title slanting diagonally upwards in colour against a white background. Sanskrit philosophy.

Agatha Christie’s Secret Notebooks edited by John Curran – I love the red background against the square black and white photograph and whiteness of the circle emphasising the inclusion of two unpublished Poirot stories and once more the contrasting size and upper and lower case letters in the title.

Sausage Hall by Christina James. What a whimsical title. I thought it sounded a bit gimmicky and it nearly put me off reading it, which would have been a shame – it’s such a good story. The blackness of the cover with its skull and crossbones indicates the darkness of the book. It’s a crime mystery with a sinister undercurrent exploring the murky world of illegal immigrants.

Ten Books with Small Boats on the Covers

Top Ten Tuesday is a weekly meme created by The Broke and the Bookish and now hosted by Jana at That Artsy Reader Girl. For the rules see her blog.

The topic this week is a cover freebie. Choose a particular item or design element and find 10 books with that thing on the cover! I’ve chosen books with small boats on the covers – a mix of books that I’ve read or are on my list of books to be read. Books marked with an asterisk are linked to my posts, the others are linked either to Amazon UK or Goodreads.

  1. *Secret River by Kate Grenville – historical fiction following William Thornhill from his childhood in the slums of London to Australia. He was a Thames waterman transported for stealing timber; his wife, Sal and child went with him and together they make a new life for themselves. It’s about struggle for survival as William is eventually pardoned and becomes a waterman on the Hawkesbury River and then a settler with his own land and servants.
  2. *The Poisonwood Bible by Barbara Kingsolver – narrated by the wife and four daughters of Nathan Price, a fierce evangelical Baptist who takes his family and mission to the Belgian Congo in 1959, it is the story of one family’s tragic undoing and remarkable reconstruction over the course of three decades in postcolonial Africa.
  3. The Island by Victoria Hislop – historical fiction inspired by a visit to Spinalonga, the abandoned Greek leprosy colony. A dramatic tale of four generations, illicit love, violence and leprosy, from the thirties, through the war, to the present day.
  4. Cartes Postales from Greece by Victoria Hislop – short stories – a mix of myths, legends and true stories, Greek history, culture, way of living, family relationships, traditions, customs … with photographs (black and white in my paperback copy) of the stunning Greek landscape.
  5. Recalled to Life by Reginald Hill – Dalziel and Pascoe crime fiction, a cold case investigation into a murder committed in 1963. The title and chapter headings are all from A Tale of Two Cities by Charles Dickens.
  6. The Floating Admiral by Members of the Detection Club – Agatha Christie, Dorothy L. Sayers, G.K. Chesterton and nine other writers from the legendary Detection Club collaborate in this crime novel about an old sailor who lands a rowing boat containing a fresh corpse with a stab wound to the chest.
  7. *The Birdwatcher by William Shaw – set in Dungeness on the Kent coast. Police Sergeant William South (not a detective) is a birdwatcher a methodical and quiet man. His friend, a fellow birdwatcher, Bob Rayner has been brutally beaten to death. DS Alexandra Cupidi, a new CID officer, is leading the investigation and Shaw is reluctantly assigned to her team. 
  8. *The Painted Veil by W Somerest Maugham – set in 1920s London and China this novel is about Kitty and Walter Fane, a bacteriologist. When her husband discovers her adulterous affair, he forces her to accompany him to the heart of a cholera epidemic. Kitty is at first very bitter, miserable and lonely but her life is changed when she volunteers to help at the orphanage run by a group of French nuns.
  9. *Portrait of an Unknown Woman by Vanora Bennett – historical fiction about Sir Thomas More’s fall from Henry VIII’s favour and that of his adopted daughter Meg Giggs and her love for two men – John Clements, the family’s former tutor, and the painter, Hans Holbein. Bennett puts forward a theory about John Clements’ true identity drawn from an analysis and an interpretation of two paintings by Hans Holbein of the More family and also his painting, The Ambassadors
  10. Lindisfarne: the Cradle Island by Magnus Magnusson – nonfiction, telling the story of the island, also called Holy Island, its people and nature from the beginning to the present day, exploring the natural history and archaeology of the region. There are chapters on Roman Britain, the vikings, st Cuthbert, the Lindisfarne Gospels, the castle, the priory, the nature reserve and managing the wild.

Top Ten Tuesday: First Edition Agatha Christie Book Covers

Top Ten Tuesday is a weekly meme created by The Broke and the Bookish and now hosted by Jana at That Artsy Reader Girl. For the rules see her blog. The topic this week is a Book Cover Freebie.

How it works:

There’s a new topic every Tuesday. You create your own top ten (or 2, 5, 20, etc.) list on that topic or one of your own if you wish and then link back to That Artsy Reader Girl so that others know where to find more information. If a weekly topic is listed as a “freebie”, you are invited to come up with your own topic. Sometimes she will give the freebie topic a theme, such as “love”, a season, or an upcoming holiday. That just means that you can come up with any topic you want that fits under that umbrella.

So today my top ten are twelve –

Twelve First Edition Agatha Christie book covers.

I’ve read all of Agatha Christie’s crime fiction novels and the links are to my posts – although the books I read were not first editions!