The clinch cover is the name for a style of romance book cover art. It generally features two people touching or in close proximity, and the art style has its roots in pulp art.[1]

Origin and development

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The 1949 creation of Harlequin Enterprises is partially credited with the rise of the clinch cover in the 1970s for directly marketing to women through the use of the cover and for placing the books in areas they specifically saw women interacting with.[2] The rise of the modern romance genre itself is attributed to Avon through the publication of the mass-produced and initially paperback 1972 bodice ripper The Flame and the Flower.[1][3]

The clinch cover style became popular through the 1970s and 1980s, and originally usually was done by taking a photograph and then painting a scene, but in the modern day it is sometimes done with just photography.[2][4]

The posing, state of dress, and appearance of the people on the clinch cover is informed by the politics of the era, such as the women's liberation movement.[2][5][6] Though the clinch cover usually features a white, heterosexual couple, the style has been used for other book pairings as well. Author Ann Allen Shockley utilized a clinch cover for her 1974 interracial lesbian romance novel Loving Her, and author Beverly Jenkins frequently uses clinch covers for her black romance novels.[4]

Since the 1990s, romance book covers have shifted slowly away from clinch covers, with less focus on or a lack of people on the cover (such as the trend towards landscapes observed in 2001),[7] to cartoon covers in the 21st century.[1][8][9]

Prominent clinch cover artists

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References

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  1. ^ a b c d Lessard, Victoria. "A Brief History of the Clinch | Hazlitt". hazlitt.net. Penguin Random House.
  2. ^ a b c d Garcia, Karla. "Evolution of Romance Novel Book Covers". Inside Fullerton. Hornet Media.
  3. ^ Bulger, Adam. "It's nothing but love at the Romance Writers of America convention". www.nypress.com. Straus News.
  4. ^ a b Mingle, Katie (2 June 2021). "The Clinch". 99% Invisible.
  5. ^ Headlee, Celeste; Saxena, Kalyani (8 December 2023). "From chiseled abs to discrete illustrations: How romance covers have changed over time". www.wbur.org. Boston University. WBUR.
  6. ^ Diehm, Jan. "What does a happily ever after look like?". The Pudding.
  7. ^ "What's in a Name?". PublishersWeekly.com. 248 (27). 2 July 2001.
  8. ^ Donaldson, Kayleigh (1 February 2024). "Why Does Every Romance Novel Have the Same Cartoon Cover Right Now?". Paste Magazine. Wolfgang's. Paste Media Group.
  9. ^ Wallentine, Anne (25 February 2022). "Can We Still Judge a Romance Novel by Its Cover?". Electric Literature. Electric Literature.
  10. ^ "Lynn Munroe Books". lynn-munroe-books.com. Lynn Munroe Books.
  11. ^ Kaler, Anne K.; Rosemary E. Johnson-Kurek (1999). Romantic conventions. Popular Press. p. 35. ISBN 978-0-87972-778-9.