Young Adult Literature

YA Book Covers I Love to Love

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Yash Kesanakurthy

Staff Writer

Somewhere between starting her schooling in Saudi Arabia and finishing high school in Singapore, Yash Kesanakurthy realized that she disliked school. It was the fateful move to Vancouver, Canada for a BA in Economics (which, surprise, didn't pan out) that led her to the MA program in Children's Literature at UBC. She had fun immersing herself into the academia of children's literature but nothing beat the joy of writing for The Book Wars, being able to set aside classics and pay attention to the culture of contemporary YA. And now, everything is PB/MG/YA and nothing hurts. Well, some things hurt but nothing her bookshelf can't fix. Currently, she is working on her own YA fantasy novel and an all-ages picturebook. Her life goals include: getting a pet dog, getting published, and presenting you dear readers and Rioters with posts that engage and entertain. (Maybe not in that order?) Blog: The Book Wars Twitter: @SeeYashTweet

Specifically, I am talking about YA novels that feature a girl/woman of colour on the cover. My issue with how women and girls are portrayed on book covers goes back to the first time I read “Valentines” from Nancy Lee’s short story collection Dead Girls—still my favourite reading list for an undergraduate class—and it brings about this anger that I just can’t turn off.

Dead Girls by Nancy Lee

See, faces humanize. And yes, I understand that the model/illustration may not be exactly what every reader imagines the protagonist to look like, but that’s hardly a reason to crop the face out entirely, I feel. Especially when you’ve made the decision to include a character on the cover.

And when it comes to characters of colour, it isn’t simply a matter of objectification. It’s a matter of erasure. So, it isn’t just that the girls’ heads are partly or completely cropped out of the cover, it is also that they are hidden in shadows, or drawn as silhouettes, or the model they pick isn’t the correct race at all—we are not interchangeable and we are not a monolith—or she’s light-skinned when her character is dark-skinned, or her hair is “tame” when the character has curly natural hair, or the model is posed ridiculously, or the character is just partially hidden from view because they happen to share the cover (and story) with a white character. This isn’t to say that I don’t have books I love with covers I don’t like—and there are certainly covers that are exceptions, like the cover for Ibi Zoboi’s American Street pictured below—but if we’re talking representation matters in publishing, cover design ought to be a part of that discussion.

American Street

American Street

As always, it isn’t just that we are represented, it’s how we’re represented that matters. And on that note, here are some of my favourite YA covers that feature girls of colour:

 

 

 

 

Shadowshaper paperback

Look, it isn’t that I’m talking about Older’s Shadowshaper again—it’s that I never stopped talking about Sierra Santiago, okay? So, can we please talk about how awesome this cover is? It gets across Sierra’s love for art, the fact that she paints murals in an urban setting, does not mess with her skin-tone or awesome hair, and that haughty lift of the chin? It’s all kinds of perfect.

 

 

serpentineMy next pick is a similarly framed cover, but this one is illustrated. Cindy Pon’s Serpentine was, alongside Shadowshaper, amongst my top favourite reads of 2015.

I’ve already made my feelings on this cover pretty clear in my review:

I love that nothing obscures Skybright’s face … It draws attention to her mismatched eyes and you know she isn’t quite human, nor is she quite monstrous. Look closer at her eyes and you see her determination shine through the cover, up at you. – [X]

The Chaos by Nalo HopkinsonAlso, similar to the ones I mentioned above is Nalo Hopkinson’s The Chaos.

Scotch isn’t looking straight at you, but neither is she hiding nor is she hidden. And if you’re looking for a cover that features not just the face of the character, but the entire body, look no further than Nnedi Okorafor’s Akata Witch.

 

 

akata witch

Tangent: Actually, Okorafor is just blessed when it comes to covers, huh? I mean, look at the gorgeousness that is Binti:

 

 

 

 

 

 

Binti by Nnedi Okorafor

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Ms. Marvel (Vol. 5)- Super FamousMy last favourite (that is, the last one for this post) is the cover for the latest volume of Ms. Marvel.

I love the detail of the Avengers’ “A” that I missed the first time I saw the cover. I love that her pose is dynamic and gets you curious about what she is running towards. And I love that we get to see Kamala Khan in that incredibly iconic human-to-superhuman pose. (It’s also very telling about the internal conflict that Kamala has to face in this volume.) Even more significant than her—totally not sexualized—costume underneath, is that we get to see a brown girl in a salwar-kameez on the cover of a Marvel comic. This is a cover I want to put in a frame and tell all my guests about.

All this to say: more of these awesomely clever and conscientious covers for YA readers, please?