A few months ago I reviewed two books, one after the other, that were completely different save for the fact that each featured a butterfly on the cover. Then, when doing some re-shelving a little while ago, I came across another couple of books whose cover designs featured butterflies quite prominently in their designs.
I decided to go on a quick hunt to see just how many butterfly book covers there are flitting about in the world. Needless to say, my efforts turned up quite a few.
My little collection seems to contain four different types of butterfly designs: the eye-catching Blue Morpho (named for Aphrodite), the Red Emperor (named for Atalanta, and related to balance), stylised butterflies, and butterflies in jars (souls, trapped).
The popularity of the butterfly as a design element doesnt really surprise me. Butterflies have a few things going for them. First, theyre pretty. Everyone loves pretty things on book covers.
And second, theyre deep and meaningfultheir inclusion in a design results not only in some eye-popping colour, but in some oh-so-clever symbolism.
Butterflies represent change of all types, after all. Depending on the culture were talking about, they might indicate profound spiritual change, may be representative of the purgatorial soul, may be representative of long life (or, conversely of death), and may also represent love.
What better way of simply and eye-catchingly representing a postapocalyptic world than a pretty blue butterfly? Or using a butterfly in a jar to represent a trapped and fettered soul? Want to suggest death and doom and gloom without alienating your readers? Whack a butterfly on it. Self-discovery? Butterfly.
Theyre quite handy, arent they?
Have you come across any butterfly covers in your travels? If so, let me know in the comments and Ill pin them down and add them to my collection.
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Great idea for a post! You found so manyvery pretty!
Butterflies have a lot of positive meanings I think: hope, release, joy, transformation, freedom, reinvention, healing, and more!
Kelly Matsuura recently posted..Writing Prompt #15 ' A Crying Man
Thanks, Kelly, and thanks for sharing some additional meanings with us! :)
Great list! I love this trend. It always makes for a pretty and interesting cover even if the specific book isnt for me! A couple Ive seen: Possession by Elana Johnson, The Other Life by Susanne Winnacker, Splintered by A.G. Howard, The Adoration of Jenna Fox, Stolen by Lucy Christopher, Exiled by RaShelle Workman, People of the Book by Geraldine Brooks, The Butterfly Clues by Kate Ellison.
randimoulton recently posted..Review (Becky): Paper Towns
Wow, thanks for that wonderful list, Randi! Ill round them up and add them in. :)
(Isnt it curious how butterflies are more popular than, say, spiders? ;) )
I didnt notice this butterfly trend until now, I think its a great trend, the butterflies make all those covers look gorgeous and Im a sucker for pretty book covers :)
Me too, Zinoits certainly eye-catching, and theres a lot of scope for symbolism. :)
I just finished reading Special Topics in Calamity Physics (Marisha Pessl) which had a Cassius Blue on the cover (http://www.entertainment-scrapbook.com/2012/02/book-review-special-topics-in-calamity.html) its where the protagonist gets her name from.
Thanks, Lauren! How was the book, by the way? Ive heard a lot of good things about it.
I do love butterflies on covers, especially the blue ones. The book covers I read tend to have leather clad duos or tattooed females. Maybe I should look into this butterfly trend. :)
Jami Zehr recently posted..Nodds & Nends: Grover is the Doctor, Some Kids Mad The Hobbit, and Barbie Dolls Repainted
There was a post that went around a few years ago about the leather-clad, tramp-stamped cover models in paranormal romance/urban fantasy. I should dig it up!