Entertainment

Judging ‘A Wrinkle in Time’ By Its Cover

‘A Wrinkle In Time’ cover art on a 55-year-trip through space-time. See individual covers below.

Today, we’re talking about the many, many covers of A Wrinkle In Time.

But first, let me backtrack.

I had this grand plan to countdown to the theatrical release of Disney’s new adaptation of A Wrinkle in Time by posting an article a week expounding on one point or another out of my favorite book. Last week I covered the science of the book, and I promised that this week I would have a great post on the genre. Naturally, massive technical difficulties then ensued in la Casa de Wrinkle-in-Time-Fanatic, throwing my plans into a tesseract.

So I’ll get back to that post on genre next week when I can pull all its molecules back together. In the meantime, let’s look at some pretty pictures.

Or not. Because that beat up hardcover of A Wrinkle in Time I pulled off the school library shelf in fourth grade was the ugliest book I’d ever seen, and the paperback I ordered from the Scholastic Book Club a year later wasn’t much better. It became my go-to example of the importance of Not Judging a Book By Its Cover.

Original Cover by Raskin, 1962, Farrar Straus & Giroux

I feel a little bad about that because that hardcover design was the supposedly beloved original, created by eventually-Newbery-Award-winning-author-in-her-own-right Ellen Raskin. In my defense, my school library’s copy did not look nearly that good. It had no dust cover, the black lettering was flaking, the binding color had faded to a puke green. It looked more like this:

Original cover, edited by me to look like I originally saw it. The best I could do with what I have, but that’s okay because it really was this ugly.

But I was a voracious reader, and I knew I’d never get my fill if I stuck only to the shiny new books in the library. I probably still wouldn’t have given this a second glance, because the title made me think of one of those slow, thoughtful books about an old lady telling some ungrateful kids about her hard youth. But we’d watched a filmstrip on Newbery Medalists a few weeks before, and this title had been suggested as something scary and somewhat mindblowing. “Are you sure you’re ready for this?” the filmstrip had said.

Im ready for whatever you can throw at me, filmstrip. But that cover there certainly didn’t give me any clue of the depths and heights the insides were about to take me to.

Nowadays, as a public children’s librarian, I have a lot less patience for bad book covers. Sure, there are kids like me, who are willing to take a chance on a horrible-looking book, but the majority of kids wouldn’t think of it. When I see a book in that condition, I’ll only keep it on the library’s shelves if a) it still gets checked out, or at least still has something to say to today’s kids and b) I can’t buy a newer edition in hardcover or library binding.*

A Wrinkle in Time has gone through many editions over the decades, some more clearly dated than others. Let’s see what each one tells us about the adventure inside!

Other Early Wrinkle Hardcovers

Ellen Raskin’s cover was the go-to for twenty years until multi-Caldecott-winning husband-and-wife team Leo and Diane Dillon drew this cover for the 1983 edition:

Farrar Straus & Giroux, 1983

If my school librarian had only replaced that beat-up original when this one came out! The Dillon cover actually gives some idea of what might be inside: eerie landscapes, a fortune teller, three witchy ladies, and an ominous shadow. Granted, the three witchy ladies may not have eased my fear that this was about old people reminiscing, but there is enough else there to peak my interest. It leans more on the fantasy aspects than the science fiction ones—no way to figure out that a wrinkle in time is quantum physics related. And why doesn’t Meg have glasses? Personally, I don’t find this cover particularly appealing, either: it’s dark and the color choices are odd. But it wouldn’t turn me off from the book, and it would certainly do a better job of catching my attention than the original.

Meanwhile, this next edition pretty much petered out right away when they tried to release it in the UK after it kept winning awards in the US, which is odd because I would have been all over it:

Original UK hardback, Constable Young Books 1963

It’s magical and quirky-spooky, and the font reminds me vaguely of 1960s Disney movies. Meg still isn’t wearing glasses, but I wouldn’t have known that was a problem before I read it, so I would have seen nothing to complain about. I would have lunged for it even if I hadn’t heard the title before. For today’s kids, though, it should probably be updated if I wanted it to fly off the library shelves. I was the kid who wasn’t afraid to pick up an old-looking book, but I was weird. It’s awesome-looking but still old.

Now, there are also fancy-bound collectible editions that aren’t quite practical enough for a public or school library, but for a home library? Best yet:

Barnes & Noble Collectible Edition, Farrar Straus & Giroux, 2015

This Barnes & Noble Collectible first-three-Time-books-in-one made me go, “Ooooo!” It looks good, and it somehow manages to balance the fantasy and science fiction elements. Too big for the library, but I don’t think the cover art would turn off most young readers if it was on something smaller.

Paperbacks Through the Decades

This was the cover staring at me when my book order came in during fifth grade:

Why, hello there, Man With the Red Eyes. Dell Laurel Leaf, 1976

Gah. I already knew I loved the book, but I didn’t even want to look at this cover. I read it with the cover curled up in my hand, and I put it away so I could only see the back cover. I survived. I still have this paperback, even, now thoroughly annotated as you can see. But I would have dearly desired a different cover if there had been one to buy. But this was before Amazon, and I lived nowhere near a real bookstore. This was all the school book orders offered in 1989.

Dell handled the paperback editions of A Wrinkle in Time for many years, putting it out through two different imprints: Laurel Leaf Fantasy, which published mass market paperbacks directed at people buying their own copies with their pocket change (or through their Scholastic Book Club orders), the covers appealing more to older readers, and Yearling, which published heavier-duty trade paperbacks for classroom use, directed at younger ones (or appealing to the adults who would make it available for them). Here’s the Yearling edition from the same time period:

Dell Yearling, 1978

Much less scary. Of course, a little too less scary. Rainbows and a flying horse-creature! It must be a gentle and happy adventure through a magical land! I’m sure that would call out to a lot of potential readers who spot it on the shelf, but it’s giving them a false promise. Plus, nowadays? Yeah. Dated. It was even dated in 1989, had the book order offered it then.

If I had waited a couple more years to buy my own copy, I could have gotten this one instead:

Dell Yearling, 1991

This one absolutely appeals to upper-elementary-school me. It outright illustrates the story, and it’s showing me something I’ll like—fantasy and mystery and kids that look active in their plot. Meg is even wearing her glasses for once. But whether it’s still a good cover, I’m not sure I can objectively say. I grew up with this hyper-realistic book cover illustration style, so it gives me happy vibes. But it undeniably screams out “1991.” Ask anybody in their late-30s/early-40s. We recognize that style anywhere.

Related Post

Laurel Leaf stuck with the realism for their next edition a few years later:

Dell Laurel Leaf. 1995

If I didn’t know better, I’d say this one was high fantasy, and the time wrinkling was to the ancient past. Nice, but not very indicative of the content. It’s funny how many of these covers go with the Mrs.-Whatsit-as-flying-centaur theme, when it’s such a small and not particularly plot-vital part of the book. She even looks slightly aquatic in the movie trailers, which will render all these marble-statue-like covers obsolete.

In college I spotted this one in the store:

Dell Yearling, 1998

OH MAN. That was the first Wrinkle cover I’d ever seen that I loved. I’m not sure what the egg imagery has to do with the story, but it’s so pretty I don’t care. I didn’t realize until writing this that this edition was drawn by Peter Sis, award-winning illustrator of grand books like The Wall: Growing Up Behind the Iron Curtain and Tibet: Through the Red Box, but also Fire Truck. Peter Sis’s Fire Truck is always a hit with three-year-olds. I’m not surprised this cover came from someone who’s made a name for themselves in illustration.

Anyway, in 2007, paperback rights for this reverted to Square Fish, an imprint under the same company as Wrinkle’s hardback home, Farrar Straus & Giroux. They immediately released two new editions:

Square Fish, 2007, Trade on left, Mass Market on right

It’s funny, with a term like “mass market,” you’d think the version on the right would be more common, but I’ve never seen it in the wild. Maybe because it’s eh. It’s nice, but I just have questions. Why does a tesseract look like a rocket launch? Why does Charles Wallace have a scepter? Why does Calvin look so much like a Chamber of Secrets-era Rupert Grint? Why can I tell that much about him, but I can’t tell if Meg is wearing glasses? I like the shadow creeping into the upper right, but on the whole, eh.

On the other hand, the trade cover—which I do see frequently in both bookstores and libraries—has the opposite effect on me. At first glance I barely see it: it’s brown, it’s got indistinct little illuminations around the sides. But the more I look at it, the more I see—and appreciate—the details. Look at the expressions on the Mrs. Ws’ faces! Look at how each corner is a new scene! It’s not a design that jumps out from the shelves, but it rewards closer study.

Around the World

A Wrinkle in Time never took off in other countries to the extent it did in the United States, but the publishers did try. Less than a decade after the UK hardcover failed to take off, Puffin released this paperback version for the UK and Commonwealth:

Puffin, 1971

I can’t find any information on the illustrator, but the style is similar to the UK hardback, and I love it. Why didn’t UK audiences take to it? Puffin tried again a couple decades later, with this cover that seems to appeal to adult science fiction readers, instead:

Puffin, 1995

Kind of generic. Probably false advertising for those hardcore SF fans who’d be annoyed at the focus on kids and their social problems. But not entirely inaccurate.

Never mind, this is the cover Puffin is using nowadays, and I like it:

Puffin, 2014

And people in the rest of the English-speaking world are finally discovering it, but that’s more likely because of word of mouth from people being friends across the internet (I am pretty sure that I am the librarian-friend Sophie refers to in this old Between-the-Bookends post about when she first discovered it) than a simple cover change.

The only foreign language edition I found in my perusing was this cute Chinese edition that seems to be inspired in part by Peter Sis’s cover, at least in the design of Mrs. Whatsit’s angelic form:

Ji Lin Wen Shi,2007: https://www.alibris.com/search/books/isbn/9787807025276?qwork=7319475

That and maybe The Little Prince. And I wonder why the moon is smiling? All the celestial bodies in this book seem angry if any emotion. But it’s super-cute, at any rate.

The Current State of A Wrinkle in Time Covers

The 50th Anniversary brought A Wrinkle in Time covers full circle, by updating Ellen Raskin’s original design for both hardcover and paperback editions:

Left, Farrar Straus & Giroux 2012; right, Square Fish 2012

I don’t think I realized the silhouettes are standing in different positions until I saw the hardback and paperback editions side by side. Oddly enough, for someone whose favorite color is blue, I like the orange of the hardback better (and yes, I made sure my public library had this edition). What you can’t see from the picture is that the paperback (my copy of which I actually won from a giveaway here on GeekMom) is actually a shiny foil print. It may have the same design as that ugly first edition I read, but this one nonetheless is pretty.

That same year, the publisher put out the graphic novel by Hope Larson, which we can’t not include:

Graphic novel adaptation by Hope Larson, Farrar Straus & Giroux, 2012

As I’ve mentioned before, my brain doesn’t work well with the graphic format. But because I know this book so well, for once I didn’t have to strain my brain trying to sort out new input when I read this one. It’s kind of like watching a movie adaptation of it, I thought to myself at the time.

And now there is a new movie adaptation. And a movie adaptation needs a movie tie-in cover.

Movie tie-In editions, l-r: Square Fish, 2017; Feiwel & Friends (Barnes & Noble exclusive), 2017; Puffin, 2018

I’m not sure about Disney sticking its name at the top left of the title, making it look like a novelization of their creation instead of a great novel in its own right. But otherwise, I like all of these, especially the first one, even if the palm trees seem wrong for a book actually set in Connecticut (what. I’m fine with the race bending and gender bending and centaur-like-angel-creatures-looking-aquatic-bending, but whyyyyyy does Hollywood feel the need to reset everything in California? They don’t even have seasons!). The sense of warping, the colors, Meg smack in the beam of light shining from the supposed time wrinkle in the logo? It’s gorgeous. I’m not sure why Barnes and Noble needed an exclusive cover that takes out most of those details. I’m surprised only the international edition actually looks like the movie poster, with the actors-in-character right up front—surprised, but not disappointed. That might sell more books (“Oh look! It’s Oprah!”), but it relegates Meg to one of many. Sure, you can’t clearly see her on the US edition, yet it makes her starring role much more pronounced.

My verdict? The 50th Anniversary hardback is the one I would purchase for the public library, with the Leo and Diane Dillon cover in second. But I think my personal favorite is the original UK cover. With all of these covers to choose from, which would catch your eye, and which best hints at what’s inside?


*And then I’ll put it on display and post a challenge, like, “Read this great book and then design a new cover for it that isn’t so abysmal!”

Liked it? Take a second to support GeekMom and GeekDad on Patreon!

This post was last modified on January 21, 2018 8:50 pm

Amy Weir

Amy M. Weir is a public youth services librarian in SW Pennsylvania, and there’s nothing she geeks out about more. Outside of work she obsesses over music (especially rock especially psychedelic pop especially The Beatles), sews clothes, gardens when the weather’s nice, avoids housework, and generally is the poster-child for Enneatype 9, which she attempts to counteract with yoga when she remembers. Her entire family has ADHD. This includes an RPG-and-firearms-geek husband who asked her out by playing a Paladin-in-Shining-Armor devoted to serving her character in D&D; a vehicles-and-video-game-geek 14yo named after a hobbit; an art-and-animation-geek 12yo named after a SFF writer; and an Imaginary Husband named Martin Freeman, who isn’t actually aware of this relationship.

Share
Published by
Tags: Middle Grade

Recent Posts

Bias on a Budget: Creating a TxT-Inspired Frankensweater

It doesn't have to cost a ton to look like you've had a sweater for…

May 5, 2024

GeekDad: Mother’s Day Gift Guide 2024

Welcome to this year’s Mother’s Day Gift Guide where we celebrate all things mothers. This…

May 1, 2024

GeekDad: ‘Louder Than Hunger’ by John Schu: A Book Review

Louder than Huner by John Schu is an internal dialogue of a teenage boy as…

May 1, 2024

GeekDad: ‘What on Earth!’ Magazine – May 2024

In recent years, I have enjoyed reviewing several books from Britannica publisher, What on Earth…

April 30, 2024

Celebrating Guitar Month With These Great Performances

April is International Guitar Month! Let's send off the month with some amazing feats (and…

April 26, 2024

Can You Really Learn to Crochet with Woobles?

GeekMom Elizabeth explores if Woobles kits really can teach you to crochet.

April 25, 2024