Latest News:

【Philippines Archives】

Cover Art

By Sadie Stein

Out of Print

image

Looking at this pretty slideshow of circa-1900 book covers, one is struck by a couple of things. First, the beauty and elegance of the design. And, second, the fact that the titles are all unfamiliar. Of course, beautiful, striking covers are produced every day: talented art departments work hard to accommodate an ever-changing market and far more cooks (so to speak) than designers of old ever had to please. One imagines in the old days, the author would take his Art-Nouveau swags and like it; agents rarely figured in the picture, and if you’d envisioned, say, a pine rather than a stylized laurel tree on your novel—well, forget it.

It’s also a change in tastes, or of standards; like so many old buildings, whose standard-issue marble work and penny tiling now seem like models of beauty and lost workmanship, these ornate covers were the rule, not the exception. If comedy equals tragedy plus time, well, that sort of works for beauty, too. Maybe not the tragedy part. As to the titles’ relative obscurity? That’s also modern hindsight. And who knows what hopes the publishers had for The Story of Ab: A Tale of the Time of the Cave Man? One thing’s for sure: these were not disposable objects.

Related Articles

  • Echoes of 1968
    2025-06-25 23:39
  • Best streaming deals: Get free Peacock Premium and save on Starz and Paramount+
    2025-06-25 23:34
  • iPhone's Tapbacks are annoying and lazy, actually
    2025-06-25 23:29
  • Apple Watch Series 10: Where to pre
    2025-06-25 23:23
  • The Commons are Rumbling
    2025-06-25 23:12
  • NYT Strands hints, answers for September 8
    2025-06-25 23:03
  • Best streaming deals: Get free Peacock Premium and save on Starz and Paramount+
    2025-06-25 22:49
  • Apple Watch is getting a new sleep apnea monitor
    2025-06-25 22:34
  • Remembering Philip Levine’s Poetics of Labor
    2025-06-25 21:25
  • The sun bubbles. Astronomers just saw a distant star do it, too.
    2025-06-25 21:10