Some Books I Read as a Kid and Their Evolving Styles
Since the book cover I am designing is primarily aimed at kids, I thought I should look at some of the books I read as a child. I have to admit, I have never been a big reader, most of the books I read were influenced by what my sister read as a kid too. However every now and then I will be engrossed by a novel, it just is quite rare.
One big one was The Sweet Valley books, a long running series of books that followed the lives of identical twin sisters Jessica and Elizabeth, spanning from their young life to university age. I always loved the illustrated covers and pastel tones of the 80′s versions. The covers were painted by James Mathewuse, a book cover artist known for his work on the Nancy Drew and Hardy Boys series.
The covers themselves went through many changes from the 80′s - 2000′s, reflecting the changing times. Below shows the evolution of one of the novels.
There was also the infamous Judy Blume books. I recall reading ‘Are you there God, it’s me Margaret’ (which recently turned 50 years old!) as a kid. Below is a variety of variations of its book cover. What I find interesting looking at both the Sweet Valley books and Judy Blume, is the noticeable move from illustrative designs to real life model photography use in the 2000′s, and a more prominent use of the authors name.
A book I have always had a love for is the classic, Alice in Wonderland. I have several versions of it as I adore collecting the variations of book covers and flicking through to look at the illustrations. There have been 100′s of cover designs created for Alice since its first publishing. In fact, you can learn a lot about the evolution of book cover design purely from just looking at one book throughout the years. Alice goes through many changes, from her fashion and appearance to being omitted altogether and replaced by floral patterns. The typography used goes from elaborate gold foil script use to bold 70′s serif use. We even see other popular children’s author, Tove Jansson (author of the Moomin books) create a very recognisable cover design in her iconic style.
Above: the original 1898 Alice in Wonderland Book Cover, which featured a beautiful and illustrative font.
References
sites.utexas.edu. (n.d.). Thoroughly Modern Alice: Incarnations of Lewis Carroll’s heroine through the years. [online] Available at: https://sites.utexas.edu/ransomcentermagazine/2015/03/17/carrolls-heroine-through-the-years/ [Accessed 16 Feb. 2021].















