I love her characterization, I love that she's never actually changed herself for the sake of the men in her life, I love that she will melt your brain out your ears if you annoy her, and I love that she is completely upfront about how much work it is to look the way she does. Plastic surgery, dieting, push-up bras, and hair dye: check. Painful shoes, fabric tape, and baby powder to avoid chafing: check. Emma is all about appearances, and she never pretends that it's easy.
I also love that she has flat-out said, several times, that she dresses the way she does for the effect it gets. This is a female comic book character who, possibly uniquely in the comic book world, is actually working the male gaze. She wants to be underestimated by opponents. She wants to be taken for a slutty slutty slut slut who can't possibly have earned a damn thing. And when people treat her badly because they don't like what she wears, she calls them on it.
Now, Emma is not always appropriate. Not going to pretend she is. But she's always Emma. Even on the occasions when she's fully clothed. She's a character who makes choices, and sometimes those choices require telekinesis to stay on.
Which brings me, in a roundabout way, to the cover for Midnight Blue-Light Special, and why I love it so much, and why it's not a better portrayal of Verity. It's just a different one.
Verity Price is a professional ballroom dancer specializing in Latin styles of dance. This means she spends a lot of time wearing outfits that are, as her grandmother puts it, "more rumor than reality." I spent a lot of time hanging out with real ballroom dancers, figuring out how many knives you could conceal under a costume made entirely of fringe (the answer: a surprising number). She can fight in high heels because she can samba in high heels, and once you've done the one, the other comes naturally. This is who she is, as a character and as a person. It's just that she also fights monsters sometimes.
Verity also works as a waitress at a strip club, because something's got to pay for all those bullets. She's wearing her work clothes on the cover to book #1, because it made more sense to put her on the roof in work clothes than in a ballroom costume, and because for Verity, that moment was totally in-character and reasonable. She was, in short, dressed on the cover like she was dressed in the book.
Some people didn't like the cover; that's okay. Nothing is universally liked, not even ice cream and kittens. But some people also got mad on my behalf, because Verity had been "sexualized." And really, she hadn't been. She was presented accurately, as she appeared in the book. It was an accurate portrayal.
Jump forward to the cover for Midnight Blue-Light Special, which I love. Verity is dressed for her other job: monster-hunting. Sensible shoes, sensible trousers, sports bra under the shirt, and look! She's brought a friend! Sarah Zellaby, telepathic mathematician, who is wearing about eight layers of clothing and looks profoundly uncomfortable being even that exposed! Sarah is as de-sexualized on this cover as Verity was sexual on the previous, and again, it's because I asked for it; it's because that's what Sarah is like. She doesn't want you looking at her. She doesn't want to "show a little skin." Bless DAW and my cover artist, Aly Fell, but when I said "Sarah can't be sexy," they didn't try to make her. She's beautiful. She's supposed to be. She's also modest and shy.
Now here's the thing: both Veritys are correct. Both of them look like her. The next time she shows up on a book cover (for volume five, Professional Gore-eography), I'm going to be lobbying for a ballroom dance costume, and she'll probably be accompanied by her heavily-tattooed, cut-off-wearing grandmother (add a giant snake and we'll be able to play urban fantasy cliche bingo with that cover alone). And it will be accurate to the text. And if Sarah ever appears on a cover in a bikini, it'll be because it's somehow accurate to the text (although I can't imagine how).
Making characters like Toby or Sarah dress like Verity is not cool. Making Alice dress like Verity wouldn't be cool, either; she often wears skimpy clothes, but it's for reasons other than "I want to be hot so you'll tip me better." At the same time, assuming that any character who does dress like Verity is somehow being inaccurately represented doesn't seem quite fair to me.
Sometimes a girl just wants to get her Emma Frost on.
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September 20 2012, 16:44:24 UTC 4 years ago
And future Giant Snake - yay!
(I decided against my userpic w/me and ball python in case your readers might be sensitive, but pretend I did?)
September 21 2012, 15:42:43 UTC 4 years ago
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September 20 2012, 16:51:55 UTC 4 years ago
Especially if she's posing ass-first, looking over her shoulder!
And if Sarah ever appears on a cover in a bikini, it'll be because it's somehow accurate to the text (although I can't imagine how).
Because Alona Tal is playing her on the TV show and reality is reshaping itself to accommodate my whims.
September 20 2012, 19:43:44 UTC 4 years ago
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September 20 2012, 16:52:40 UTC 4 years ago
Also. I like Emma Frost.
September 21 2012, 15:43:59 UTC 4 years ago
September 20 2012, 16:55:34 UTC 4 years ago
Oh, and yay on the cover. :)
September 20 2012, 17:09:24 UTC 4 years ago
Another point of change? Genosha. She's still got scars from that too.
And what scars has the Phoenix left her with?
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September 20 2012, 16:57:34 UTC 4 years ago
I wonder how many of the complaints you've heard stem from readers fearing that others will assume negative things about the book and, in extension, them, based on the cover. Or maybe they just can't move past the pinkness of it.
Pink is a highly controversial color.
September 20 2012, 18:48:24 UTC 4 years ago
As for pink in history? Very funny that, since it was a young male color until recently. -Guys- got to wear red, which was an expensive, usually non-color-fast dye that would fade. So the hand-me-down would be pink and go to -sons-, not to daughters. Ah, how the times, how they have changed. ^_^
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September 20 2012, 17:01:49 UTC 4 years ago
And I love the cover of Midnight Blue-Light Special because it portrays Verity (and Sarah) in a very different outfit that is -still- straight out of the narrative (not that I've read MBLS, but I do know the characters from the previous novel).
A cover doesn't -have- to represent a scene from the book. Instead, it can be a montage that attempts to describe the book (or whatnot). But it still should be accurate to the book rather than trying to sell something that isn't actually what's between the covers -- that helps nobody.
Also? You can be sexy -- as Verity is, as Emma is, as Black Widow is (hell, as Movie Tony Stark is) -- without being a stereotype or pandering. It's all in how you do it.
September 21 2012, 15:46:28 UTC 4 years ago
September 20 2012, 17:11:44 UTC 4 years ago
So bloody easy.
September 21 2012, 15:46:49 UTC 4 years ago
September 20 2012, 17:23:54 UTC 4 years ago
(Also, it's funny to hear my costumer friends swear at costumes that require TK to stay on and/or were drawn by people who didn't really think about the aspects of constructing, putting on and removing the costume.)
September 20 2012, 18:11:15 UTC 4 years ago
Back when I was younger and skinnier, I did a bunch of comic book character costumes, and while I never had to resort to double-stick-tape, I did have to build a strapless bra into one and thus had to hold my boobs in place when I ran. I have also run panels on the subject, and usually begin with "First of all, you need to accept the fact that people don't look like that and fabric doesn't do that. Once you get past that, you can probably come up with a feasible and wearable compromise...."
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September 20 2012, 17:31:28 UTC 4 years ago
Have you disliked any of your covers?
Please tell me more about these IceCream and Kittens. I enjoy both.
September 21 2012, 15:47:36 UTC 4 years ago
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September 20 2012, 18:11:20 UTC 4 years ago Edited: September 20 2012, 18:12:52 UTC
September 20 2012, 20:28:01 UTC 4 years ago
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September 20 2012, 19:39:54 UTC 4 years ago
Sometimes a girl wants to get her Emma Frost on (or her sexy Starfleet corset on) and sometimes she wants to be Emma Frost, who happens to be sexy.
September 21 2012, 15:48:52 UTC 4 years ago
And I hope that when it does happen, you start swearing at them in accurate Na'vi.
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September 20 2012, 20:00:00 UTC 4 years ago
But somedays, I just wear a short skirt because I want to. And that's for me, the same way as not wearing things like that is for me.
I'm really happy to SEE characters getting to wear more than one style of outfit as well as reading it!
(Off topic - I've wanted to ask since I devoured book one and been too shy to - do Verity's dance dresses have built-in underwear the same as uk dance dresses do, or are USA ones different?)
(multi-duty comment - many congratulations on the NYT list! I LOVED ashes of honour to pieces, now I have to persuade myself to part with my copy long enough to let my mother read it, and I'm failing.)
September 21 2012, 16:50:17 UTC 4 years ago
September 20 2012, 20:07:16 UTC 4 years ago
Also, at least she's not wearing leather pants ALL THE TIME. Do you know how HOT (hot as in temperature, not hot as in hawt) leather pants are? I've read UF where the female protagonist is in like, Atlanta or Austin and she's running around in leather pants and a tank top, "to protect her skin if she gets knocked around". First, she'd sweat to death first. Second, that's about as much protection as wearing a helmet and short shorts while racing down the interstate on a Harley in the rain. Verity's clothing and poses on the cover make sense to both her personality and her environment. I'm sort of shocked that you needed to point that out.
September 21 2012, 16:50:32 UTC 4 years ago
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September 21 2012, 16:50:45 UTC 4 years ago
September 20 2012, 20:45:44 UTC 4 years ago
I thought both Veritys and Sarah were dressed appropriate for their characters. Whether she's dressed for work or wearing streetclothes, Verity is going to be wearing something she can fight in.
September 21 2012, 16:50:53 UTC 4 years ago
September 20 2012, 21:01:19 UTC 4 years ago
Also love to hear the level of influence you have in your covers (and by that I do mean influence, I realize you don't have full control). Have heard some authours say they just wait to see what they're given, & don't have much say.
Bought Ashes yesterday, btw .... so excited to dive in!!!
September 21 2012, 16:51:29 UTC 4 years ago
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September 21 2012, 00:06:58 UTC 4 years ago
Verity dresses in different ways depending on where she's headed and what she's going to be doing in DA, so seeing her dressed down on the MBS cover didn't strike me as odd or out-of-character. I prefer seeing her dressed for monster hunting rather than work, but that's just me. Neither cover is better or worse than the other because of what the character(s) is wearing, because both covers are accurate portrayals.
September 21 2012, 16:51:52 UTC 4 years ago
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