How real books have trumped ebooks
The digital revolution was expected to kill traditional
publishing. But print books are ever more beautifully designed and
lovingly cherished
Alex Preston
Books have always had a fetishistic quality to them, with their
dusty secretiveness. Now, though, it feels like we’re living through
a special moment in the history of book design and beautiful books
are everywhere.
Take George Saunders’s Lincoln in the Bardo with its marmoreal
endpapers or Peter Frankopan’s The Silk Roads, with its cover
inspired by mosaic from the Imam mosque at Isfahan; Sarah Perry’s
The Essex Serpent, its sumptuous jacket inspired by the tiles of
William Morris; 4th Estate’s gorgeous repackaging of Chimamanda
Ngozi Adichie’s backlist, based on vibrant African headwrap
patterns; the glimmering Penguin Hardcover Classics reissue of the
works of F Scott Fitzgerald, or its clothbound editions of Austen,
Brontë and Dickens. It’s hard to know whether to read these books or
caress them.
[…]
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https://www.theguardian.com/books/2017/may/14/how-real-books-trumped-ebooks-publishing-revival