Reddit Reddit reviews The Eye of the World: Book One of The Wheel of Time

We found 10 Reddit comments about The Eye of the World: Book One of The Wheel of Time. Here are the top ones, ranked by their Reddit score.

Science Fiction & Fantasy
Books
Fantasy
Epic Fantasy
The Eye of the World: Book One of The Wheel of Time
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10 Reddit comments about The Eye of the World: Book One of The Wheel of Time:

u/AugustaScarlett · 15 pointsr/selfpublish

...know what it takes to go through the design process of creating your own 'professional' looking book covers.

Speaking as a cover designer, here's a number of elements where I see a lot of amateurs messing up:

Failing to research their genre niche to see what the covers of the top-selling books look like. Book buyers use the covers to guess at what the book will contain, to narrow down their choices. There are far too many books available to expect that readers will read the description of every single result of their search on whatever platform they're searching on, so you need to signal genre, sub-genre, and mood loudly enough that it jumps out as someone's eye is scanning over a batch of 1.5" tall covers that are all competing for attention.

What signals those things, and what things readers are looking for, changes subtly over time, so you need to keep an eye out. I designed the house look for the Zoe Chant shifter romance books (I don't do all the covers; many of the authors do their own) and while we've kept the same overall look, when Zoe Chant first published the idea was to play up the cozy qualities in the books. As action romance has gotten more popular in the past few years, the challenge now is to play up the dramatic tension without signalling "alphahole" because the Zoe Chant niche is focused on ultimately kind heroes. This mostly involves a lot of dramatic lighting, and in recent months a lot more glowy elements to pull focus. The books are the same sort that have been published all along, we're just focusing on different aspects now.

Yes, there are always books that break the mold of current design and sell a ton, and thus set new fashions that everyone else chases. Your book will not be the one that does that.

Leaving large flat areas of color in the design. This also fits in with researching covers in your niche: large flat areas of color are common in non-fiction, but not so much in fiction. At the very least, fill in that empty blackness with a texture or with words. If you have a background in graphic design and understand how to use negative space properly, go for it, but if you don't, then I wouldn't attempt it.

Failing to give the focal point of the design a 'pop'. 'Pop' means to stand out. You can do this with color, composition, negative space, light glows, etc., and you should use more than one thing. It should be immediately apparent what the focal point is, because you have less than one second to grab the reader's eye and make them interested. The more experienced you are, the more subtle you can go--I love the cover for Leigh Bardugo's Ninth House, where the broken-up letterforms cause you to look twice and realize it's a snake doing that.

Failing to take lighting on the stock photos into account. If you grab two stock photos and montage them into a picture, they need to have complementary lighting. You can't have one high-key (bright, few shadows) and one low-key (dark, dramatic), and if you have the lighting in each photo coming from a different direction, you need to account for it in the rest of the picture because the two pictures will never blend properly if you don't. Yup, even in photomontages that aren't supposed to look like one photo: we are used to consistent lighting schemes in real life, and inconsistency draws the attention in a bad way because the brain goes "Something is wrong here."

Slapping the text on as an afterthought. The best cover designs involve the text from the very beginning, and make sure the composition includes the text. Ninth House above is a very obvious (and also very trendy right now) example.

(Also note that while Ninth House technically has large flat areas of black in the artwork, the title covers it up.)

Being afraid to put text on top of the artwork. Too many amateurs either make or buy a nice picture, and then go "I can't hide this picture!" and scrunch the title waaaaay down at the bottom and put their name waaaay up at the top. Ideally, you should have researched what your genre's conventions are--note that most trad publishers often put the text smack on top of the artwork, even interacting with it--and worked with the artist to develop a composition that takes the text into account. Barring that, put the full artwork on your website where your fans can see it (and maybe buy prints from your artist, or you if you licensed the copyright), and just slap that title on top.

Joe Abercrombie can get away with breaking this rule because he's Joe Abercrombie (and because the positive shape of the helmet POINTS AT THE TITLE, and because his name is BRIGHT RED and focus-pulling, and because the lighting on the helment is dark at the bottom and light at the top--three things that drive the eye to Abercrombie's name, which is the focal point).

Using default Photoshop text effects. Do not use anything more than a subtle drop shadow if you're new to this. Most text effects just look muddy at Amazon search results size, and are terrible anyway. If you find yourself looking at your title on the cover in a flat color and thinking, "This looks boring. I should jazz it up," then it means you are using the wrong font. It's still going to look wrong once you put a pillow emboss and outer glow on it. Go look at creativemarket.com, filter by price range, and invest in a (READABLE) font that is more interesting than Arial or Times New Roman or whatever you were using that came default with your computer.

Not making their author name big enough. You shouldn't go as big as Robert Jordan's name if you're not as big as Robert Jordan, but when your name is tiny, it looks like you're apologizing for having dared write the book.

Speaking of Jordan, I love these current covers. This is what you do if you can't bear to cover the artwork: you frame it, and you pull colors for the frame and the text from the artwork, and you incorporate interesting shapes into the frame. As a not-well-known author, you'd put the title into text the size of Jordan's name and put your name into the smaller text, and in the case of these covers, the frame would draw attention to your name, so the text could be smaller. (Although for an unknown author who wanted a similar cover, I'd put the series name into the frame, make the title large, and put the author name across the top.)

u/Straightouttaangmar · 5 pointsr/harrypotter

i mean, i say give the books another shot because i can't imagine enjoying the movies but not the books. but to each their own. if you don't want to go down that road, what do you mean things that might interest you? do you mean in the harry potter universe? if so, the other stuff is fun but the original seven are her magnum opus IMO and to get my fix, i had to go outside the Harry Potter universe.

some books that I just inhaled and read in one sitting will sound super corny, but...

  • The Sookie Stackhouse novels. Wow. I am embarrassed at how fast I read these books. Edward Cullen can screw off. Eric is way hotter.
  • the Da Vinci Code. Not the best writing. not the most factual history. don't care I blasted through that book.
  • Ready Player One

    If you just want some good fantasy that isn't just Lord of the Rings rip offs, these are the ones I like.

  • Gormenghast
  • King Killer Chronicles
  • Wheel of Time
  • Game of Thrones
  • The Blade Itself
  • The Crystal Cave
u/KimberlyInOhio · 4 pointsr/suggestmeabook

have you tried The Wheel of Time series by Robert Jordan? Here's a link to the first one.

u/awkwardlittleturtle · 3 pointsr/Random_Acts_Of_Amazon

<3 Your generosity never ceases to amaze me!

I'd absolutely love to have something like that. I don't have a smartphone or laptop, which makes managing my business quite tricky when I'm away from home. If I had something that could connect to WiFi, I'd be able to reply to customer emails, update my shop, keep track of finances, etc. Certainly would make things quite a bit easier, especially as I've been helping take care of my mom a lot lately (in hospice, over an hour away).

And business-aside, I'm a huge bookwork, and I'd be all "read ALL the books!!". And so would my Tiny Turtles, as they becoming quite the mini-bibliophiles as well. <3

I think my first e-book would be The Eye of the World... might as well start off with an epic series. :)

u/Gumby621 · 2 pointsr/Random_Acts_Of_Amazon

Wheel of Time series (first book is The Eye of the World).

Fantastic fantasy series.

I also noticed you had a few books about the Appalachian Trail - I would recommend A Walk in the Woods by Bill Bryson.

u/TogetherWithMe · 1 pointr/Random_Acts_Of_Amazon

I love reading!

I am interested in starting the Wheel of Time series. This is the first book.

u/piratesgoyarr · 1 pointr/Random_Acts_Of_Amazon

Frank and beans!

Wheel of Time book one would be awesome!

u/the_skyis_falling · 1 pointr/Random_Acts_Of_Amazon

First book in the "Wheel of Time" series, if she likes it there are like 13 or so books in the series. I LOVE her book selections. I'm a huge fantasy reader.

Bingo game!

Free cell game too. My grandmother LOVES this card game

Lauren Bacall's autobioghraphy, your mother-in-law would have grown up watching her, and the book is a great read.

Happy shopping.

u/PotatoAssassin · 1 pointr/Random_Acts_Of_Amazon

The thing about glitter is, if you get it on you, be prepared to have it on you forever 'cause glitter is the herpes of craft supplies.

=D

I think this book looks pretty good :3