tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3138728502354978457.post6854011641620147376..comments2013-04-28T14:44:48.079+02:00Comments on JEREMY DUNS: Shooting galleryUnknownnoreply@blogger.comBlogger4125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3138728502354978457.post-79906593675542275452010-04-22T09:30:58.509+02:002010-04-22T09:30:58.509+02:00Thanks for the comment, David - and by all means d...Thanks for the comment, David - and by all means do buy my book again! <br /><br />In that first discussion I had with Simon & Schuster, I mentioned the Len Deighton 'skewered fruit' designs as something I thought were classics. Some people around the table knew them and some didn't. When I got back home, I emailed them over some examples of what I thought were great spy thriller covers, including those Deighton covers and the earlier ones, the Richard Chopping Ian Fleming jackets, a few of the early Quillers, and so on. A couple of months later, I was sent the art department's first attempt at my jacket - and was stunned. I thought they got it spot on, and had done something that looked both retro and fresh, and that harked back to those classic designs but was original in its own right. And, most importantly of all, I felt it was a design that fitted my novel, and would tell people what sort of book it was. <br /><br />I don't think there's any particular moral to the tale - just wanted to share that! Or perhaps the moral is simply that sometimes a gun on a jacket works.Jeremy Dunshttps://www.blogger.com/profile/14442728222534667107noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3138728502354978457.post-48194850396924256622010-04-22T00:50:39.093+02:002010-04-22T00:50:39.093+02:00I agree with Midnight Plus One - I like how the pi...I agree with Midnight Plus One - I like how the pistol is reduced to a tonal dropout design element.<br /><br />I remember reading a short bit Paul Bishop wrote about a bookclub he was in - and they put an embargo on books with swastikas or skewered fruit on the cover. Funnily enough, that week I had just bought a swag of Len Deighton paperbacks with skewered fruit on the cover.<br /><br />In the spy genre, it's funny what has become a cover cliché. If I was to have a bookcover I'd want a gun, a swastika and skewered fruit on it - so people knew exactly where I was coming from.<br /><br />Love the new cover, by the way. Makes me want to buy the book all over again.<br /><br />Cheers<br />D.Davidhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/07948368009550868974noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3138728502354978457.post-20429617843059507032010-04-21T15:30:12.182+02:002010-04-21T15:30:12.182+02:00Hi Jason, thanks for commenting. I also like the M...Hi Jason, thanks for commenting. I also like the Midnight Plus One cover, and it's a great thriller, too. Ashenden has a wonderfully striking design, but very inappropriate for the contents of the book (and I have no idea what the New York Times critic was thinking there!). I dislike the Quiller one purely because I think it's such a shame: it was the last novel in a series of 19 superb spy thrillers, published posthumously, and they put a gun in Quiller's hand. Quiller doesn't carry a gun!Jeremy Dunshttps://www.blogger.com/profile/14442728222534667107noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3138728502354978457.post-7679323013214857622010-04-21T03:13:56.894+02:002010-04-21T03:13:56.894+02:00Midnight Plus One is the coolest design of this bu...Midnight Plus One is the coolest design of this bunch (not including your covers of course!). The duotone look w/ target and watches is a strong graphic. Ashenden is the next fave, then they get pretty dated from there. Last Supper is really bizarre!<br />-Jason (Spy Vibe)Jason Whitonhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/05242656442153322623noreply@blogger.com