What Genres and Subgenres Should be Called, Based on Their Covers

Grace Lapointe’s fiction has been published in Kaleidoscope, Deaf Poets Society, Mobius: The Journal of Social Change, and is forthcoming in Corporeal Lit Mag. Her essays and poetry have been published in Wordgathering. Her stories and essays—including ones that she wrote as a college student—have been taught in college courses and cited in books and dissertations. More of her work is at https://gracelapointe.wordpress.com, Medium, and Ao3.

If you spend time in libraries or bookstores, you’ve probably noticed book cover trends. Maybe you’ve picked up a book because its cover was unique or resembled another book. Maybe you like embossed gold covers or deckle edges.

Or you may think a lot of recent book covers look similar. Many 2020s literary fiction covers have titles in thick, all caps on a bright background. The Vanishing Half by Brit Bennett and Remarkably Bright Creatures by Shelby Van Pelt are two prominent examples of this style. Some readers love this style; some find it overdone or generic.

This 2022 article explains that book designers have difficult and seemingly contradictory tasks: making covers unique but simultaneously attractive to algorithms. Covers often contain hidden details but must also be attention-grabbing, even in thumbnails online. Fitting into an existing trend isn’t necessarily cliché. It’s creative marketing that helps readers find books.

Publishing trends can become memes. Social media users have compared food packaging to the fonts on Colleen Hoover covers. Many online book lists collect or parody the fantasy title format “A Blank of Blank and Blank.” Some covers of classic books contain blatant spoilers because designers think most readers already know the endings. So, here are some silly genre and subgenre names I made up to fit these cover trends.

A Modest Proposal cover with a man kneeling in front of a woman

Classics: Random Word Association!

Cover of The Spanish Love Deception by Elena Armas

Romance: Illustrated People! Bonus Pastels!

Examples of this cover trend include The Spanish Love Deception, The Proposal, and The Kiss Quotient. Trends come and go. I remember more stock photos on romance novel covers years ago. Some readers hate the trend of illustrated, featureless characters on romance covers. Some love it. They may prefer to imagine characters’ appearances without photos of models or movie tie-in covers of actors.

Lilac Girls cover

Historical Fiction: Characters with Their Backs to the Reader

The Girls by Emma Cline cover

Fiction about the 1960s: Groovy!

Novels set in the 1960s often feature psychedelic fonts and cover designs. I love Peter Mendelsund’s cover for The Girls by Emma Cline (left). The bold colors remind me of Andy Warhol’s images of Marilyn Monroe. Covers in this style evoke the era instantly, and I’m giving them their own entry because they fascinate me. A drawback: psychedelic covers often feature distorted shapes and letters and low-contrast or clashing colors, which can be difficult to read.

the cover of Freakonomics

Nonfiction: Ordinary Objects But Symbolic!

A single object on a nonfiction book cover can be memorable. Consider the match on the cover of The Tipping Point or Freakonomics‘s fruit with the flesh of an orange and the peel of a Granny Smith apple. The images fit these popular economics and social sciences books, which try to change how readers think of everyday things. Back in 2011, Cory Bortnicker created a (now defunct) Malcolm Gladwell Book Generator.

On a Quiet Street cover

Thriller/Mystery: A House But Scary

This is not to be confused with haunted or Gothic houses in the horror genre. Yes, I could have picked many other trends, such as government buildings and symbols for legal and political thrillers. But for domestic and psychological thrillers, an eerily lit house or a person looking through a window evokes the threatening feeling that something is off. On a Quiet Street is pictured, but Amazon’s suggested titles contain many similar covers.

the cover of Eleanor Oliphant Is Completely Fine

Literary Fiction: “Headless” Protagonists?

Yes, I know I mentioned lit fic in my introduction, but it’s such a broad term. Many books I read fall under this umbrella term, and the covers have intriguing micro-trends. Covers with heads obscured or cut out of the frame include Eleanor Oliphant is Completely Fine and Everyone in This Room Will Someday Be Dead. Interestingly, as Lacey deShazo wrote on Book Riot in 2018, covers with headless characters or obscured faces are not necessarily objectifying. They can represent mystery, a character’s insecurities and traumas, or the theme of identity.

The Secret History by Donna Tartt cover

Dark Academia: Greek or Roman Statues

Dark academia can be an aesthetic and a subgenre. According to many people, dark academia originated with Donna Tartt’s 1992 novel The Secret History. Mystery, slipstream, horror, fantasy, and more fiction genres can have dark academia elements. These novels often contain cults, revelries, and charismatic, murderous professors. Many are set in English and Classics departments at old, prestigious boarding schools, colleges, and universities. So, fittingly, books like The Secret History and The Maidens have classical marble statues on their covers.

She is a Haunting cover

Horror: Surreal Faces!

I love the covers of She Is a Haunting by Trang Thanh Tran, illustrated by Elena Masci and designed by Thy Bui and Wilder Girls by Rory Power, designed by Regina Flath and illustrated by Aykut Aydogdu. Both are beautiful close-ups of faces that are somehow both surreal and hyperreal. I love that the artists use ribbons, geometry, flowers, and realistic details (and NOT racism, ableism, fatmisia, or sexism) to create body horror.

Do You Always Notice Book Covers Too?

Check out a hilarious take on creepy book covers, and don’t miss these terrible covers of classic books.

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