I think the point is that the cover is never guaranteed to accurately represent the book.
Quality of cover =/= quality of book
A "Showerthought" is a simple term used to describe the thoughts that pop into your head while you're doing everyday things like taking a shower, driving, or just daydreaming. The most popular seem to be lighthearted clever little truths, hidden in daily life.
Here are some examples to inspire your own showerthoughts:
If you made it this far, showerthoughts is accepting new mods. This community is generally tame so its not a lot of work, but having a few more mods would help reports get addressed a little sooner.
Whats it like to be a mod? Reports just show up as messages in your Lemmy inbox, and if a different mod has already addressed the report, the message goes away and you never worry about it.
I think the point is that the cover is never guaranteed to accurately represent the book.
Quality of cover =/= quality of book
Although, I'll never buy a book where the author's name is in bigger, bolder font than the title of the book.
I hate that trend in cover design and I refuse to support it.
DEAN KOONTZ
Newbury Award Winner
New York Time Best-Seller
The Lake Boat
First time in paperback!
With a Foreward by David Baldacci
Is this still a thing? I thought this was mostly popular in the 90s and dropped out of popularity in the last couple decades.
Definitely still see it for Stephen King at least, but frankly I'd be creeped out if I saw his name small at this point...
Yeah, the point of a book cover is to sell the book...
The point of a book cover is to cover the book.
That's the point of a dust jacket.
I thought the point of the dust jacket is to make books look shabby when they get crinkled and torn, so you can take it off and find a perfectly serviceable cover underneath.
That’s one of the purposes of a cover, you could achieve it without any design effort.
But that’s not the point, not the main purpose of a book cover. Your previous poster is right, the cover is advertising the book.
The "cover art***" sells it, then. They were trying to be funny I think lol
Maybe, the point still stands. I've read awesome books with boring covers and vice versa. Its really a good saying that does apply to most areas in life.
Yes, but you still don't know if the content is good or bad.
My go-to phrase now is , “don’t judge a book by its movie.”
What they did to Foundation should be a crime.
The made interesting and visually engaging? Oh and soandso is a black woman now.
Yes, clearly racism is the biggest reason to hate the Apple TV version. Not that the writers didn't understand the point of the books and turned Asimov's original thoughts on society into magic and mysticism.
It wasn't when the idiom was coined. Have you seen hard-bound books from the 19th century in libraries?
didn't most books look the same back then?
Maybe book covers should be auto-generated from the entire text fed to an AI artist
I run Stable Diffusion on my computer, can you think of a relatively short novella to try this with? I have no idea what the limit for tokens is. To really "tech bro" it up we could feed it to an AI summarizer first.
Unless they’re “as seen in the hit TV show!” in which case it’s okay to tear those covers off.
It was very true for movies in the 80s. The cover would sometimes not have anything to do with the movie at all. Horror and sci-fi movies would show monsters that never appeared in the movie.
It’s not though. Books can, but don’t always, misrepresent themselves on the cover. Just like people.
It’s not saying that book covers always lie, it’s saying that you shouldn’t take everything at face value and you should think for yourself.
I recently bought a book which spoke to me by its cover and it was one of the best books I've read in ages. And I still love the cover almost as I love the book.
But then there are books where I really disliked the cover but they are still great to have and full of useful information. (Most of these are non-fiction..)
I think the idiom misses the mark: judging is just one part of it. Being aware that lot of your judgments are going to be wrong, especially if you use only one source of information -- that is much more useful thing to keep in mind.
However, adages are (like) memes---the best ones don't always win.
I don't know aye, I have read some books that were amazing. Although the cover was really, really bad.
I was told that the rest of the saying is “but it’s a good place to start.”
Lolita would like a word with you.
In real life, regardless of what people like to say there is more often than not a correlation.
Only, you shouldn’t take those for facts and shouldn’t make assumptions.