As ever, with the SPFBO, well, for the past two or three years, there is, at the start, a little cover competition. (And clearly a few overactive commas!)

This year, through a process of alchemy, magic, and bribery we, the judges, have decided on our top three covers from the 30 books which Mark issued to us. I have to say the quality of the covers is impressive. There really is no difference between self-published covers and those from the big publishing companies these days.

Every year the standard gets higher and higher – soon they’ll be platinum plated and worth more than the national earnings of a large European country!

Without further ado….

3rd Place: Blood-Stained Heir by T. Norman

Blood-Stained Heir (cover)

A lone axe and a discarded shield. The stump of a tree. A bird flying away, into the distance. This cover has a hint of death, of loss and loneliness. The weapons are not to be used again, the tree has been cut down and destroyed and the bird is departing – there is nothing left for whomever the axe belongs to.

2nd Place: Rise of the Fallen by Peter Fugazzotto

Rise of the Fallen (cover)

An elf with two swords running towards battle, or perhaps away from it. The typography gives me a very 1930s/40s pulp feel. Flash Gordon-esque (the Black and White serial), but updated, and the angles grant the whole composition a sense of movement and pace.

1st Place: Carnifex by D. P. Prior

Carnifex (cover)

It’s got a fierce dwarf with an axe! What is not to like about his cover? There is dynamic movement, the sense of rage and a hint of the destruction to come (we hope). More than that, what is his (her – with dwarves if can be tough to tell) name?

– – –

If you’re interested, and of course you are, the voting on the covers came out in this order and it was a close run thing!

1. Carnifex by D.P Prior
2. Rise of the Fallen by Peter Fugazzotto
3. Blood-Stained Heir by T. Norman
4. Phoenix Descending by Dorothy Dreyer
5. Rogue Arcanist by Alan Brenik
6. The Tenth Reaver by Sandell Wall
7. BattleCry by Emerald Dodge
8. Awakening by Ross Kingston
9. Child of the Daystar by Bryce O’Connor

We look forward to reading them all. Onwards, folks!

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By Geoff Matthews

G. R. Matthews began reading in the cot. His mother, at her wits end with the constant noise and unceasing activity, would plop him down on the soft mattress with an encyclopaedia full of pictures then quietly slip from the room. Growing up, he spent Sunday afternoons on the sofa watching westerns and Bond movies after suffering the dual horror of the sounds of ABBA and the hoover (Vacuum cleaner) drifting up the stairs to wake him in the morning. When not watching the six-gun heroes or spies being out-acted by their own eyebrows he devoured books like a hungry wolf in the dead of winter. Beginning with Patrick Moore and Arthur C Clarke he soon moved on to Isaac Asimov. However, one wet afternoon in a book shop in his hometown, not far from the standing stones of Avebury, he picked up the Pawn of Prophecy and started to read - and now he writes fantasy! Seven Deaths of an Empire coming from Solaris Books, June 2021. Agent: Jamie Cowen, Ampersand Agency. You can follow him on twitter @G_R_Matthews or visit his website at www.grmatthews.com.

2 thoughts on “Self-Published Fantasy Blog-Off #4: Cover Competition”
  1. Since all this is completely subjective, I say that my favourite of those 3 is the one in third place, actually 🙂
    And I really like the font used on the First place cover.

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