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An Eminently Judge-able Cover

March 24, 2008 We just got a package from Ace containing ARCs of Charles Stross's Saturn's Children, due out in July. Ace has fairly nondescript ARCs, so they thoughtfully included cover flats.

This image of the front cover, courtesy of Amazon, doesn't really do justice to the honeycomb-stockinged legs that stretch across the back cover, with pointed toes extending just past the edge of the flap. The entity pictured is Freya, a "femmebot" left struggling to make ends meet after humankind's extinction. Perhaps the novel centers around her quest for non-human sources of the futuristic femme fatale's required quota of unzipped zippered jumpsuits. I am immediately reminded of the cover image on the Del Rey paperback of Heinlein's Friday, which may not be coincidental given that Stross dedicates this book to Heinlein and Asimov and the publicity letter calls it a "late-period Heinlein tribute."

The hot robot babe look is a change for Stross, whose high-tech hard SF novels tend to get abstract covers, though Golden Gryphon's edition of The Jennifer Morgue did feature a sultry woman embracing a handgun. It's also a bit of a shift for Ace, at least judging by the other titles currently on my desk; Phaedra Weldon's Spectre and Alastair Reynolds's The Prefect both have fairly understated covers in muted colors. Is this an effort to expand readership? If so, it may be a misplaced gamble, doing more to put off fans who read Stross for the techs instead of the sex and dismaying readers who are a little weary of Heinlein tributes. John Varley, John Scalzi, and Spider Robinson have been playing that tune for a while now, with varying success; Scalzi is still getting Hugo nods, but the others (much as I hate to say it, as a longtime fan of all three authors) are wearing thin. I can only hope that the novel inside this cover won't live up to its clumsily retro promises of same old, same old.

Posted by Rose Fox on March 24, 2008 | Comments (6)


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March 25, 2008
In response to: An Eminently Judge-able Cover
RICH RENNICKS commented:

Ugh! Hideous. I love Charlie Stross' books, and will cringe when I have to face this out (unless they change it...) -- it'll chase casual readers out of the SF/F section. And the words "Heinlein tribute" send chills down my spine.




March 25, 2008
In response to: An Eminently Judge-able Cover
WILLIAM SCHAFER commented:

I read Saturn's Children, and can recommend it without reservation. As I told Charlie after I finished it--and I meant this as a compliment--I found the book to be mildly distasteful, as I do much late period Heinlein. The book's damned funny, to boot.




March 26, 2008
In response to: An Eminently Judge-able Cover
Rose Fox commented:

Rich: Better to face it out than to see the crotch shot prominently displayed on the spine. I didn't even notice that until someone emailed me to point it out.

Bill: I hope he took that as the compliment you intended!




April 1, 2008
In response to: An Eminently Judge-able Cover
RICH RENNICKS commented:

Oh great. The prevs will stop sitting in the corner "reading" relationship books all day and start hanging out in the SF/F section. I'm always trying to get more people to read SF and shop the section, but this that isn't quite the strategy I had in mind;-)




August 31, 2008
In response to: An Eminently Judge-able Cover
Reynardine commented:

I kind of like the cover. In fact, I'd like to see if I can get a poster version. I think the model was created with computerized rendering software--at least the face has that disturbing, slightly off look that you get with this sort of software. I take this cover to be an homage to the ultimate futuristic plastic Barbie-erotic-doll trope. As such, I think it's of artistic interest. At least, that's what I'm telling my wife...

As for how this cover will affect geeks--Stross' primary audience--I think they'll love it. It's as close as most of them will ever get to a woman.




October 21, 2009
In response to: An Eminently Judge-able Cover
Steave commented:

Great article as for me. I'd like to read something more concerning that matter.





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