Hans Schmoller Essay: "The Paperback Revolution"
Schmoller outlines the history of the paperback, tracing the tradition leading to the first paperback publications in 1935 as well as the innovations and changes up through the 1970s. A discussion explicitly about book cover design does not arise until the last two pages of the essay, but Schmoller puts forth an interesting introduction to the topic. He discusses the role of the cover designer, whose "problem is this: a cover design should reflect, or be relevant to, the contents and character of the book; it should appeal to, or intrigue, the potential buyer; it should be recognisable as a member of a family (a group of volumes by the same author, for instance, or a series of books on related subjects); it should be easily identified as coming from a publisher proud of his imprint..."(317) The list of requirements continues extensively. Although Schmoller does not present an exhaustive discourse on the necessities of cover design, he does introduce a number of elements to consider, providing a firm framework.
Essay: "Book Covers"
This essay provides a brief description of Edward Gorey's career, with the emphasis on his extensive book cover designs. In 1953, he accepted a position at Anchor/Doubleday, doing pasteups and lettering. Before he left the company in 1960, he had designed approximately fifty book covers. Author Steve Heller describes the importance of these works. "These illustrated covers comprise a small but significant chapter in the history of paperback cover design and in the legacy of the white-bearded, fur-coated man who made them. All but forgotten today, these covers established a visual personality for a company that was founded to reprint many of the world's classic texts, some of which were previously published in paperback versions during the late 1930s and 1940s, when virtually all mass-market books were adorned with prurient covers designed to pander to the voyeuristic reader" (71-2) Gorey's covers were essential to the success of Anchor's paperbacks, as they established a distinct identity for the company; the artist's style was more mature and refined that that featured on pulp fictions, and it was idiosyncratic, and therefore remained in the viewer's consciousness.
Jason Epstein, a powerhouse in the literary industry, looks at the crisis facing the book industry and anticaptes the tremendous changes that will arise. "Many valuable books - most, in fact - are not meant to be best-sellers, and these tend to be slighted in the triage of contemporary publishing and bookselling" (13). In other words, with the increasing attention to blockbuster publishing, even though a wide variety of books continues to be published, only those with great selling potential receive much specialized attention from the publishing house. There has been a critical shift from the days in which publishing a best seller was a rare event (Epstein likens it to winning the lottery) to today's market, in which major publishing houses are bestseller factories.
Epstein recounts his role in the transformation of paperbacks, from cheaply made drugstore pulp fiction, to the higher quality editions of old favorites that we are familiar with today. A key moment in the changing nature of book covers occurred in 1944, when Kathleen Windsor's best-selling Forever Amber was promoted by adorning the book with a glamorous portrait of the author.
Technology, of course, is the impetus for change in almost any industry, and the publishing world is no different. Epstein describes the shifts in business practices as a result of technology - specifically, the internet. It was a big step when stores' inventories could be linked to computers; but now the computers are the only interface for many stores, such as Amazon.com. Epstein and his peers in publishing try to anticipate the next step.


