The worst cover art theme in recent memory
May. 7th, 2010 08:54 pm I'll have a book review for the actual book in a little bit, but I have a gripe about the cover art that I really want to get off my chest.
Take a look at this cover. It shows a man in powered armor holding a big gun. The name tag engraved on the breastplate reads "Geary," and that would serve to indicate that the illustration in meant to be Captain Jack Geary, the hero of the series. Every cover of the series shows Captain Geary armed and usually armored, and at least one shows him on a planet without a helmet on.
The premise of the series is that Jack Geary is rescued from a century-long cryogenic suspension just hours before the fleet that finds him has its entire admirality team killed. A quirk in circumstances makes Captain Geary fleet commander, and worse, he really is the best commander-- a century of warfare has reduced battle competency to near nil. It's his job to get them out of enemy space, and over the course of five books he does that job.
He's fleet commander. Never once does he leave his flagship. Never once does he don armor. Never once does he hold a pistol, much less an assault rifle! In fact, that's a major point of the sixth book-- Geary makes a big deal about how his meeting with the Alliance forces requires him to leave his ship for the first time. Author Jack "No really, it's not Mary Sueism" Campbell is ex-Navy himself and did a fine job of showing the stresses of command-- and the responsibilities, which include not leaving the ship and getting killed.
I mean, who greenlighted the idea that we should pump up the volume on the covers by making the hero a "man of action," dressed as a Marine?
Take a look at this cover. It shows a man in powered armor holding a big gun. The name tag engraved on the breastplate reads "Geary," and that would serve to indicate that the illustration in meant to be Captain Jack Geary, the hero of the series. Every cover of the series shows Captain Geary armed and usually armored, and at least one shows him on a planet without a helmet on.
The premise of the series is that Jack Geary is rescued from a century-long cryogenic suspension just hours before the fleet that finds him has its entire admirality team killed. A quirk in circumstances makes Captain Geary fleet commander, and worse, he really is the best commander-- a century of warfare has reduced battle competency to near nil. It's his job to get them out of enemy space, and over the course of five books he does that job.
He's fleet commander. Never once does he leave his flagship. Never once does he don armor. Never once does he hold a pistol, much less an assault rifle! In fact, that's a major point of the sixth book-- Geary makes a big deal about how his meeting with the Alliance forces requires him to leave his ship for the first time. Author Jack "No really, it's not Mary Sueism" Campbell is ex-Navy himself and did a fine job of showing the stresses of command-- and the responsibilities, which include not leaving the ship and getting killed.
I mean, who greenlighted the idea that we should pump up the volume on the covers by making the hero a "man of action," dressed as a Marine?

no subject
Date: 2010-05-08 05:17 am (UTC)Weber & Bujold novels don't show Honor or Miles in powered armor, and they wear it more often that Geary ever does!
no subject
Date: 2010-05-08 06:46 am (UTC)