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| Hearsay: |
Someone I read, sorry, forgot who already, linked to this piece on how typography affects the experience of reading a book. Does good design make for a better novel? Poem? Story of a metal band snorting coke off groupies’ pelvic bones? The answer is: Comic Sans rulz!
A typographer’s first obligation is to the reader.
This holds true for all printed media from newspapers to billboards, but nowhere is it as crucial as in a book. How many times have you picked one up, only to find yourself putting it back on the shelf and wondering why? Perhaps it was by your favourite author or had glowing reviews; maybe it was a bestseller with a gorgeous cover and a tantalising blurb on the back. But when you opened the book and began to read, you changed your mind.
Why?
More than likely it was the text design. Something about it got in the way of readability. It could’ve been an inappropriate font, not enough leading (space between the lines), or a visual distraction such as a page number halfway down each outside margin. There are numerous ways for the appearance of a book’s page to turn off a potential reader.
A book’s design (I’m talking interior page design here, not covers) has one major purpose and that is to make the words on the page end up in the reader’s mind as effortlessly and as seamlessly as possible. Doesn’t matter if the book is a novel, a textbook, a dictionary, or even a car repair manual, the principle is the same. If the reader is motivated to absorb the information but finds himself unable to do so, the design is not doing its job.
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May 28th, 2009 at 9:00 am
Thank you for linking to my blog, and to Maggie’s very useful article. I’d like to make clear that she was discussing book design, and not the quality of writing; which does so while I’d agree with what you seem to be implying that good design can’t savea truly awful book, it can make a good one better. Oh, and you’ve got the whole font thing completely wrong: DINGBATS. It’s the only option.
(For some reason this text box disappears off the right hand side of my monitor, so I can’t read what I’m typing half the time. So please forgive me my typos, as I can’t check for them.)