Devil May Care U.S. cover art

zencatzencat Studio City, CAPosts: 224MI6 Agent
The US cover art for DEVIL MAY CARE has been revealed. I love it!

http://commanderbond.net/article/4917
www.thebookbond.com - New Look. New Book. Pure BOND.

Comments

  • bondaholic007bondaholic007 LondonPosts: 878MI6 Agent
    thats great, better than UK cover.
    When is it released in UK ?
  • HardyboyHardyboy Posts: 5,906Chief of Staff
    Actually, I prefer the UK cover art. The US one is fine, but a bit too similar to the retro-pulp style of the US Penguin editions.
    Vox clamantis in deserto
  • darenhatdarenhat The Old PuebloPosts: 2,029Quartermasters
    This one looks much more acceptable to me. I actually get the feel that this is a James Bond novel, while as the UK art seemed like it could be slapped on any modern day thriller novel.
  • emtiememtiem SurreyPosts: 5,948MI6 Agent
    I like both- I don't usually go for the retro covers (I really didn't like those Fahey ones because they were American pulp in style, which wasn't quite right), but as this is a retro book I don't mind the idea, and the concept of Bond shooting around the corner of the book is very smart, even if the typography doesn't make for a very exciting front.

    But then I also like the very cool and stylish UK cover. Perhaps it isn't a perfect fit for a book written in the style of a man who died 44 years ago, but Bond has so much baggage that it's hard to deny it. Even the typography has been inspired by the Casino Royale posters.
    I like both, and I can't think of a Bond book which has had a great cover in both US and UK markets before- a good sign hopefully! :)
  • NewsmanNewsman Erie, PA USAPosts: 92MI6 Agent
    I concur. They US cover is awesome! Usually, we get the crappy stuff and we are left drooling over the British version.
  • Sir MilesSir Miles The Wrong Side Of The WardrobePosts: 27,757Chief of Staff
    Both covers are fine but I do prefer the UK coverart as it's more 'classy'.
    YNWA 97
  • Golrush007Golrush007 South AfricaPosts: 3,421Quartermasters
    I think I may end up buying the US edition, as the cover lends it a nostalgic, period feel.

    The UK cover may be more classy, but to me the US cover feels right for a story set in the 60s.
  • jetsetwillyjetsetwilly Liverpool, UKPosts: 1,048MI6 Agent
    I really, really hate these pulp fiction Bond covers. Perhaps I'm an outrageous British snob, but in the UK, Bond wasn't about lurid exploitation covers - it was Richard Chopping art. Ok, the Americans had, "She Asked For It", but that was an early mistake - surely we've moved on? I think I may have been in a minority of one but I liked the Penguin "texture" covers of a few years ago - the ones that were replaced with the exploitation US ones. As a result, I like the understated elegance of the British design far more than the "James Bond = Man With GUN!!! DO YOU SEE!!!" American one.
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  • emtiememtiem SurreyPosts: 5,948MI6 Agent
    I really, really hate these pulp fiction Bond covers. Perhaps I'm an outrageous British snob, but in the UK, Bond wasn't about lurid exploitation covers - it was Richard Chopping art. Ok, the Americans had, "She Asked For It", but that was an early mistake - surely we've moved on? I think I may have been in a minority of one but I liked the Penguin "texture" covers of a few years ago - the ones that were replaced with the exploitation US ones. As a result, I like the understated elegance of the British design far more than the "James Bond = Man With GUN!!! DO YOU SEE!!!" American one.

    Yeah, that's fair enough- I agree. On reflection this US one looks a little too spoofy for my tastes (I think the concept of Bond shooting around the spine is superb and very strong; the 40s noir/50s comic book/American Splendor execution lets it down for me) but then it's being produced for an American market. The fact that you and I prefer the UK one just helps to show that these publishing houses know their respective markets! :)
  • Lazenby880Lazenby880 LondonPosts: 525MI6 Agent
    edited March 2008
    Perhaps I'm an outrageous British snob, but in the UK, Bond wasn't about lurid exploitation covers - it was Richard Chopping art.
    You are an outrageous British snob. But so am I. I very much look forward to the Faulks' book, however I think the US cover art could be somewhat better.
  • LoeffelholzLoeffelholz The United States, With LovePosts: 8,998Quartermasters
    Sir Miles wrote:
    Both covers are fine but I do prefer the UK coverart as it's more 'classy'.

    Agreed. The one with the naked woman in silhouette is my favourite; it should have been on the U.S. edition as well, as IMRO a 'period' novel doesn't necessarily need a 'period pulp' cover.

    Still, I'm with Em...the Bond on the spine of the book, peering around the corner, is rather cool.

    I'll probably end up with both of them... :v
    Check out my Amazon author page! Mark Loeffelholz
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  • Golrush007Golrush007 South AfricaPosts: 3,421Quartermasters
    I really, really hate these pulp fiction Bond covers. Perhaps I'm an outrageous British snob, but in the UK, Bond wasn't about lurid exploitation covers - it was Richard Chopping art.

    Perhaps being neither American nor British, I don't have any prejudices against either style, but I would say that if given the choice I would have had them produce a chopping-esque cover, rather like the early Gardner 1st editions. (Is Chopping still alive, out of curiosity?) My previous comment still stands though, I will be more inclined to order the American edition, due to the nostalgic feel of the artwork.
  • emtiememtiem SurreyPosts: 5,948MI6 Agent
    Golrush007 wrote:
    [I would say that if given the choice I would have had them produce a chopping-esque cover, rather like the early Gardner 1st editions.

    Yeah; this would have been the one time where I could have understood them doing that as it is supposed to be a book to fit in with a series released forty-odd years ago. But I'm happy they didn't because I just don't like those Chopping covers! Just not to my taste; I don't think there's anything wrong with them.
  • Sir MilesSir Miles The Wrong Side Of The WardrobePosts: 27,757Chief of Staff
    Now available for pre-order from play.com for £9.49 and free p+p !
    YNWA 97
  • MoniqueMonique USAPosts: 696MI6 Agent
    Saw this online in the Wall Street Journal today:

    http://online.wsj.com/article/SB121020673072975501.html?mod=hpp_us_inside_today


    Doubleday, Penguin Try to Revive
    Bond Series With New Author
    By JEFFREY A. TRACHTENBERG and AARON O. PATRICK
    May 8, 2008; Page B1

    In the 44 years since the death of writer Ian Fleming, his character James Bond has flourished as a movie star. As a literary figure, however, Bond has looked more like Inspector Clouseau.


    Ian Fleming's first James Bond book, 'Casino Royale,' was published in 1953; the latest, Sebastian Faulks's 'Devil May Care,' comes out this month.
    In the decades following Mr. Fleming's fatal heart attack, his family trust has commissioned 22 new books about the debonair British spy. Sales have dwindled: The last Bond novel, "The Man With the Red Tattoo," published six years ago, sold only about 5,000 copies in Bond's British homeland and a disappointing 13,000 hardcopies in the U.S., according to Nielsen BookScan.

    But never say never again: Doubleday on May 28 will release a new Bond novel, one of the most ambitious of the post-Fleming works. "Devil May Care" will be written by a well-known and well-respected literary author, Sebastian Faulks, with a large, initial U.S. print run of 250,000 and a lavish marketing campaign. Penguin, a unit of Pearson PLC, plans a print run of 100,000 in the United Kingdom.

    The novel coincides with the 100th anniversary of Mr. Fleming's birth, which should generate free publicity for the book. Even so, it is a gamble for Doubleday and Penguin. Aside from the desultory history of previous nouveau-Bond books, the latest version will hit U.S. book stores about the same time as new novels from an array of best-selling authors, including Patricia Cornwell ("The Front"), Dean Koontz ("Odd Hours") and James Rollins ("Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull").

    But Doubleday and Penguin believe they can rekindle interest in the Bond brand by returning the story line to the Cold War. The Bond books of the 1980s and 1990s tried to make their stories contemporary, which critics said was jarring to fans. "The Man With the Red Tattoo" had Bond fighting terrorists who disrupted a Group of Eight meeting in Japan. "Devil May Care" is set in the classic Bond era. Its plot revolves around the heroin trade and a female character called Poppy, people familiar with the book say. The U.K. cover seems to corroborate this: It features a photo of a nude woman in silhouette, her body forming the stem of a blood-splattered poppy flower. Doubleday and Penguin decline to comment on the book's plot and didn't share a copy.

    The publishers also are cheered by how new Bond actor Daniel Craig helped the franchise's latest film, "Casino Royale" succeed at the box office in 2006, grossing $594 million world-wide, according to Box Office Mojo LLC, which tracks ticket sales.

    "The whole thing was moribund," says Stephen Rubin, president of Bertelsmann AG's Doubleday Broadway Publishing Group. "The Robert Ludlum franchise is completely re-energized because of what Matt Damon did in the Bourne movies. We think this is a greater opportunity." Excerpts of "Devil May Care" are planned for the July edition of Vanity Fair. A new Bond movie with Mr. Craig, "Quantum of Solace," is scheduled to be released later this year.

    Some diehard fans are irate. "I find it terribly cheap and insulting to think that someone else has the right to continue writing on this storyline," says Russell Steer, who manages The Old Book Company of McLean, a used bookstore in McLean, Va., and owns complete sets of the Ian Fleming novels in hardcover and paperback. "Keep a work and its creator together. This is all about the money."

    Barnes & Noble Inc., the biggest book chain in the U.S., says it is ordering a large quantity of books and expects "Devil May Care" to become a blockbuster. "We're buying this as a definite best seller," says Bob Wietrak, vice president of merchandising at Barnes & Noble, which declines to state the size of the order. "The downturn in the economy has prompted a demand for escapist fare," he adds.

    These are difficult times for the book industry. Net adult hardcover sales for the first two months of the year fell 13% industrywide from a year earlier, according to the Association of American Publishers, a trade group. Meanwhile, sales of inexpensive, rack-sized paperbacks increased 8.6%.

    Mr. Faulks's handlers declined to make the author available to comment for this article. But in an interview with Publishers Weekly, Mr. Faulks said that when the Fleming estate asked him to write "Devil May Care," he replied, "I'd never written a thriller, I didn't even really read thrillers, and I told them I wouldn't know where to begin."

    Mr. Faulks is best known as a writer of historical fiction: His 1993 novel "Birdsong" has sold three million copies world-wide, according to Doubleday. His most recent title, "Engleby," a 2007 novel narrated by a man who may have murdered a classmate, has sold only 4,000 hardcovers in the U.S., however, according to Nielsen BookScan. Mr. Faulks won't be the most famous Bond writer-for-hire ever: The first book after Mr. Fleming's death, "Colonel Sun," was written by Kingsley Amis under a pseudonym.

    In a sign of the importance Penguin places on the book, it hired an agency to design the "Devil May Care" cover instead of creating it in house, the typical practice. Partners, a unit of WPP Group PLC that specializes in corporate branding, took two months to come up with a cover that satisfied Penguin, according to Jack Renwick, the agency's creative director. One challenge: portraying sex and violence without being too graphic for teenagers, a target audience. "We're trying to appeal to older Bond readers and bring along a new audience," Ms. Renwick says.

    The title will be backed by the largest marketing budget of any Penguin fiction title published in the U.K. this year, according to Joanna Prior, Penguin U.K.'s marketing and publicity director. The hype includes a Bond-themed party at Fifty, a casino in London's Mayfair district, the night before publication.

    This year, Britain's postal service issued a line of stamps commemorating Mr. Fleming's birth, which Penguin hopes will help create buzz for the novel. And London's Imperial War Museum is holding an exhibition marking his birth that runs through March. It includes the typed manuscript of "Casino Royale" and athletic trophies he won at Eton College.

    Bond books haven't made much money for the Fleming family in recent years. Ian Fleming Publications Ltd., which is controlled by Fleming heirs and owns the books' rights, lost £118,000 ($233,000) on revenue of £370,000 in 2006, according to the most recent accounts available. Matthew Fleming, the author's great-nephew, referred questions to a public-relations agency, which didn't return calls.
  • D_SomersetD_Somerset The Direct Orient-ExpressPosts: 20MI6 Agent
    ...I like the understated elegance of the British design far more than the "James Bond = Man With GUN!!! DO YOU SEE!!!" American one.

    I quite agree- when I went to order DMC on amazon.com, I hated the cover so much that I switched over to amazon.co.uk, checked out the Uk edition cover, and promptly paid out the extra charge to ship one over the pond. The silhouette and color scheme (foreshadowing the villain's office) are very classy.-{
  • sharpshootersharpshooter Posts: 164MI6 Agent
    I like both covers, but I favour the US edition on this occasion. The UK cover is a relatively iconic image, but the US cover has that old school, retro charm.
  • youknowmynameyouknowmyname Gainesville, FL, USAPosts: 703MI6 Agent
    I dont mind the US cover, I will probably pick up a copy when I get back, but I definitely prefer the UK cover. A lot more classy and the foreshadowing with the red is great IMO. I also like it because the cover gives me a visual for Ms. Larissa Rossi. That is what I always appreciated about the previous novel covers with the ladies on the front. Gave me a visual.
    "We have all the time in the world..."
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