A long time ago now I happened across a statement - a proclamation really - by the artist and printer El Lissitsky who stated that "The book must be the unified work of the author and the designer. As long as this is not the case, splendid exteriors will constantly be produced for unimportant contents, and visa-versa.
He wrote this in 1931. I have been writing this chapbook blog for over a decade and I seldom mention the cover art nor whether the cover the poetry and the presentation work together as a unified effort.
I will strive to do better in the future. Many of the books I have mentioned have had covered that did not convey anything about the poetry, nor have any connection with the title of the book at all. Beyond my "save a tree" pronouncements throughout the blog over the years, I ought to have pointed out the often glaring contradiction that some publishers have offered for books that they deemed worthy of publishing.
Other books have been master classes in detail.
I will be adding commentary about the entirety of the "package" for now on.
beginning with the next one : A Bag of Hands by Mather Schneider.