Tuesday, June 19, 2007

The Beautiful Things That Heaven Bears


by Dinaw Mengetsu
Art Director: Charles Bjorklund // Riverhead Books // Penguin

Alternate design:

Friday, June 15, 2007

The Blind Side


by Michael Lewis

Art Director: Ingsu Liu // W. W. Norton & Co.

• The New York Book Show 2008 Award winner

Rejected ideas:




Here's a New York Times Magazine article about the left tackle phenom Michael Oher.



Authors@Google Presents Michael Lewis // September 11, 2007

Monday, June 11, 2007

The World Is Flat 3.0: final


by Thomas L. Friedman // Picador

Cover illustration by Christoph Niemann

Not an easy project. With over 8 million copies sold of the very familiar hardcover, originally designed by Dean Nicastro, the author wanted a complete redesign for the paperback. His thoughts was that every business man already owned this book. He wanted to reach out to the NASCAR dads and soccer moms whose lives are also being effected by a flattening world through their jobs being outsourced. We tried different approaches, but this was the one that he approved with one word, "Bingo."

Detail of art:

The World Is Flat Final? Not so much.



Single line drawings by Phil Pascuzzo:



The Book Is Flat: a wraparound design that makes sense when the book is opened. The act of reading the book becomes the manifestation of the text.




The World Is Flat 3.0: round 1


Rejected concept

Friday, June 08, 2007

The Paris Review Interviews: vol. 2 // reject


Hand-lettering by Joel Holland

The idea for this 3-4 volume series was to keep the large quotation mark layout but visualize them in different ways. Some ideas I had floating around for the next volumes were helium balloons made into the shape of quotations marks with the type written on them with magic marker and shot floating against a blue sky. Another was to take some actual paperback books and cut them with a band saw into the quote shapes and use a black neutral gray palette.
But the Paris Review loved the first volume which was done purely typographic with bright fluorescent yellow and black. They just want me to switch it out with other bright colors. Which will still look great. Now I need to find some bright yet unusual color combos.
And I need to tell the awesome Mr. Holland that this idea was killed. But he's on vacation now. I think. Maybe he'll read this. Hey Joel, send me a kill fee.

The Paris Review Interviews: vol. 1


introduction by Philip Gourevitch // The Paris Review / Picador

• A PRINT's Regional Design Annual Selection

• The New York Book Show 2008 Award winner // Paperback Series

A selection of interviews with writers from The Paris Review that answers the question, "How do great writers do it?" One of my favorite is Joan Didion's account of how she composes a book—"I constantly retype my own sentences. Every day I go back to page one and just retype what I have. It gets me into a rhythm." That's exactly how I work.

A Taxonomy of Barnacles


by Galt Niederhoffer // St. Martin's Press / Picador

• An AIGA's 50 Books // 50 Covers Best Cover Selection
• The New York Book Show 2008 Award winner

Illustration of finch bird by Pete Garceau
Illustration of sisters by Pierre Mornet // Marlena Agency

A Taxonomy of Barnacles is a modern Victorian comedy of manners—a wealthy, eccentric patriarch declares that his six daughters must compete for his fortune—and a study in social Darwinism—whoever can best carry on the Barnacle name gets the Barnacle fortune. Much of the book is devoted to the amorous to­ings and fro­ings of the two eldest Barnacle sisters and the cute Finch twins next door. It’s Balthus girls meets Charles Darwin meets The Royal Tenenbaums.

A New York Times interview with the author and her family that was the inspiration for the book.


The Man Who Wanted Everything: Michael Ovitz and the Dark Dreams of Hollywood


by Nikki Finke

• A Type Directors Club Award Winner

Art Director: Anne Twomey // Warner Books Twelve

Art Director Anne Twomey hired me to design this cover for her new imprint TWELVE, for Time Warner, which has since then been renamed Grand Central Publishers. Her only direction to me for this biography of super talent agent to the stars Michael Ovitz was, "Make this say Hollywood and make it look like a Type Directors' Club award winner."
So I came up with the idea that his bigger than life persona is like a movie up on the screen and we are just spectators, but sitting in the worst seat in the theater. Front row and far left. I chose to depict it as end credits since this book was a retrospective and printed on silverish pearlized stock. I had more extreme angles and the back of a person's head blocking some of the type, but legibilty suffered.
Unfortunately the book was cancelled and so far, no plans to be published anytime soon. But that didn't stop Anne from entering the sales proof to the Type Directors' Club competition.
I received an email; "Your entry in TDC53 has been selected by the judges to receive the "Certificate of Typographic Excellence". To be included in the Annual of the Type Directors Club, Typography 28, and to be shown at the 53rd Awards Exhibition in New York."
Nice. It’s been a long while since I designed something type specific that I thought was good enough for TDC.
It's too bad the book won’t have a shelf life out in the public, but at least it's here.

Wednesday, May 09, 2007

The Interpretation of Murder


by Jed Rubenfeld // Picador

Cover photograph by Edward Steichen

The author has a great companion website created for the book.

Tuesday, March 27, 2007

The Messiah of Morris Avenue


by Tony Hendra // Picador

Cover imaging by Phil Pascuzzo

• A readerville.com Most Coveted Cover Selection

This cover was just selected by readerville.com as their Most Coveted Covers. Nice. Thank to Keith H. for bringing this to my attention and thank you Karen Templer for choosing Picador.

Inspired by the spray painted wall murals seen around the East Village / Loisaida of NYC by Antonio "Chico" Garcia.
And the METABIOTICS painting/photographs of Alexander Órion.

Wednesday, March 21, 2007

The Heartless Stone


by Tom Zoellner // Picador

• The New York Book Show 2008 Award winner

Tuesday, March 13, 2007

Flesh and Blood


by Michael Cunningham // Picador

• The New York Book Show 2008 Award winner

Cover photograph by Robin M. White

Wednesday, February 28, 2007

iWoz


by Steve Wozniak with Gina Smith

Rejected by Steve Wozniak himself.
Art Director: Ingsu Liu // W. W. Norton & Co.

The cover display font is typeset in CHICAGO, the first font to be developed for the Macintosh. Designed by Susan Kare for Apple Computer.


The original Apple logo featuring Isaac Newton under the fabled apple tree:

Wednesday, February 14, 2007

Fever: The Life and Music of Miss Peggy Lee


by Peter Richmond // Picador

Cover design by LeeAnn Falciani + Henry Sene Yee
Cover photograph by Bob Willoughby

Miss Peggy Lee never achieved the same recognition as her pals Frank Sinatra and Bing Crosby. This compelling portrait of the artist tries to rectify this. Loud and clear. And in hot pink. Check out this live performance of "Fever" from 1958. It's shot off of a TV monitor so the sound and video is bad. But that just gives it a cool quality that enhances her hot performance.

Tuesday, December 12, 2006

Brookland


by Emily Barton // Picador

Cover photograph by Gayle Harper
Cover illustration by Steven Noble

Alternate:


I love the much larger original hand colored and tinted lithograph from 1858. It's such an unusual bird's eye view that simulates a wide angle lens of Brooklyn / City of New York / Williamsburg. Before any bridges spanned the East River.

Bird's eye view of the city of New York, Brooklyn, and Williamsburg. 1858. Hand colored and tinted lithograph, 59.6 x 90.1 cm. I.N. Phelps Stokes Collection, Miriam and Ira D. Wallach Division of Art, Prints and Photographs. © The New York Public Library / Art Resource


New-York and environs, from Williamsburgh, 1848. Tinted lithograph with hand coloring ; 51.6 x 82.4 cm. Printer: Sarony & Major. Publisher: Williams & Stevens. © The New York Public Library / Art Resource


New York, from Brooklyn Heights. 1837. Aquatints--Hand-colored. 49.7 x 80.7 cm. © The New York Public Library / Art Resource

Monday, December 11, 2006

Dishonest Dollars


by Terry L. Leap

Art director: Scott Levine // Cornell University Press

Tuesday, December 05, 2006

Funny Accent


by Barbara Shulgasser-Parker // Picador

Jacket photograph "Intellectual Couple" 1962 by Inge Morath/Magnum // Mask Drawings by Saul Steinberg

Monday, December 04, 2006

Sunday, December 03, 2006

Saturday, December 02, 2006

Paul Auster: Collected Prose


by Paul Auster // Picador

The young Paul Auster, Columbia University, 1968.