In February, George Mason University students in a publication design course had the opportunity to design book covers for a novel that is being published by the university’s Stillhouse Press, an independent small publisher affiliated with the English Department.
Stillhouse Press has previously worked with School of Art professors to design covers, but this type of collaboration is new. Professor Michael McDermott has previously worked on book covers for the press and suggested turning cover creation into a class project for his AVT 313 Publication Design course. The project can potentially serve as a way to identify students who could work on a cover for this book or a different one in the future.

“We’re very happy to be here and see what these students have done,” said Scott W. Berg, English professor and publisher and editorial advisor for Stillhouse Press. “It’s rare that we get to see so many designs for one cover.”
Students had about a month to create covers for an upcoming Stillhouse title, Ryan Habermeyer's Necronauts. After discussing the book’s motifs and themes, students were given the actual dimensions of the book to work with. For the assignment, they were expected to create five designs and then narrow it down to just one or two. The goal was to make the project as realistic as possible.
“The exercise demonstrates cross-discipline collaboration on a real-world book project, design and marketing, and experiential learning,” said Gregg Wilhelm, director of George Mason’s Creative Writing Program and cofounder of Watershed Lit: Center for Literary Engagement and Publishing Practice. “It’s so much more than aesthetics. You have to think about design costs and selling the book as well.”
Art and visual technology major Henry Phan said he’s enjoyed working on the project. “It’s taught me a lot about cover design and made me consider things I haven’t before,” he said.
Students who enjoyed working on the covers can add a minor in dynamic publishing, which involves coursework in both the English Department in the College of Humanities and Social Sciences and the School of Art. The six-course minor, which offers art and design or editorial and publishing tracks, prepares students for work in the publishing industry.
Grace Wood, a creative writing major minoring in dynamic publishing and a reader for Stillhouse Press, attended the event. “As a writer, it’s really cool to be a part of this. Seeing people work on these covers inspires me to write a book that would be worthy of a good cover,” she said.
“Stillhouse Press, like all of Watershed Lit, is deeply committed to this kind of hands-on, cross-curricular learning as a crucial component of our students' professional preparation, said Berg.
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