The Communist's Daughter
Designer credit to come
An obscured face is an overused design trope, but this works beautifully for this partly true, partly fictive story of Dr. Norman Bethune, a Canadian physician who, depending on whom you ask, was either a great humanitarian or a Communist (let some other blog take up the question of the extent to which one can be both).
Bethune's work in China is fact; what's invented here is a daughter he had but never knew and letters he wrote to her but were never sent. Combine this with Publishers Weekly's description of the Bethune character as "a war-weary idealist whose dreams of a better world were battered by ugly reality" and you've got a tragic lack of seeing.
3 comments:
Compare this with the original hardcover in Canada, where it was first published:
http://www.amazon.ca/Communists-Daughter-Dennis-Bock/dp/000200528X/ref=pd_bbs_sr_2?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1206560222&sr=8-2
I was on a book panel where this cover got torn to shreds, and lo and behold, the designer took his or her name off it. Nice to see a better interpretation in the US.
I think this is nice. I would be interested in reading it.
The concept is great, and I really want to like this...but doesn't it look like she's hiding beneath a skirt?
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