I like the drawing too. Has a lot of personality. Don’t know if its appropriate for cover art. That might depend on the genre, but I can’t tell what it is from this cover.
Robbie
10 years ago
I’m guessing it’s a British work. “Miss” is the title given to a female schoolteacher, and “Miss?” is how a student would ask for attention from the teacher.
So the lined school paper is probably very appropriate. But it would have been better if the whole cover was done as a sheet of lined paper with an obvious student’s doodling on it — that could have worked well with the story theme.
Yes. Miss. No “?” needed. Utterly, completely, thoroughly, entirely, miss. That is where “miss” = FAIL!
The author’s last name sounds like she’s choking. McHargue-bargle-gagg-retch.
LOL Let’s continue playing with the title! (Sometimes they make it really too easy for us…)
“Did you miss those lines. missy?”
“Miss?” ? As in, “Miss? Check out this drawing of my penis.”?
So when will the real illustrator work up the final art from this sketch?
What’s that you say, this IS he final art?
Miss!
Yes, it’s a miss as a cover.
Nice drawing, better than anything I could come up with. (Like to see my stick figures? They are stellar, lol!)
Not for a cover, though.
Try again.
I like the drawing too. Has a lot of personality. Don’t know if its appropriate for cover art. That might depend on the genre, but I can’t tell what it is from this cover.
I’m guessing it’s a British work. “Miss” is the title given to a female schoolteacher, and “Miss?” is how a student would ask for attention from the teacher.
So the lined school paper is probably very appropriate. But it would have been better if the whole cover was done as a sheet of lined paper with an obvious student’s doodling on it — that could have worked well with the story theme.