 Good morning Hank, it's Tuesday. Two major developments. First, the Anthropocene Reviewed book has a cover, and today I want to show it to you and also talk about how book covers happen, or at least how they've happened for my books. The Anthropocene Reviewed is my sixth book, but because of reprints and foreign editions and so on, I've had over a hundred covers for my books, some of which I didn't particularly care for, some of which I absolutely adore, and then there are some that are just wondrous in their strangeness, like the Swedish cover of Turtles All the Way Down. And cover design is often a fraught and complex experience for authors, not just because a cover is the first part of the book the reader will see, but also because the cover design is often the first time anyone has responded artistically to the book. Plus, the cover comes at a time in the publishing process when I feel exceptionally exposed and nervous. I mean, the cover designer is often the first person I don't know to read the book. Now, some authors have almost complete control over their covers, others have little to no say in the process. I've been lucky always to have a voice in the conversation, at least for my US covers, thanks to my editor, Julie Straus-Gabel, who has been my editor since my first book was published 16 years ago. And for the Anthropocene Reviewed, the cover began with Julie and I talking. We talked about the artwork of Hiroyuki Doi and my circle drawings and road trips and microorganisms and the Bonneville salt flats and sunsets. And we also discussed our favorite book designers. Like, these days, book covers have to work both as physical objects and as two-inch-high thumbnails, and I love the designs of Grace Hahn because they're bold and legible, but they also find a way to be really human, even vulnerable, which is what I want the book to be. So then Julie was like, I'll ask Grace if she's interested, and she was, and she read the book and then developed a few possible covers. And I was immediately drawn to one that showed interweaving bands of color. I was reminded of Joseph Albers' color studies where perception of color changes depending on proximity to other colors, like this brown and this brown appear different to me, but they are in fact the same brown. And Grace's paths of shifting color felt like a visual expression of what I have tried to write about in the Anthropocene Review, how perspective shapes so-called reality and how forces big and small shape the paths we end up sharing. You can read a short interview with Grace in the comments below, but one thing she told me was, I liked to brainstorm while thinking of someone who would most need the book I am working on. For the Anthropocene Review, I think I was that someone. I lost a close friend last year and recently found myself wound up in the stresses of pandemic life. Simply put, I was becoming cynical and losing my ability to be present. When I read the introduction, I was gripped by the idea of pathways and labyrinths, and it stayed with me throughout the rest of the book because each essay felt like a path. I personally love the essay on sunsets because I felt it best described what this book encourages me to do, take off my armor of cynicism and love the beauty that surrounds us. So I gravitated toward this idea of intertwining paths and journeys lit by the colors of the sunset. I hope the imperfect paths and hand lettering echoes the imperfect but bold paths we all travel. For me, that's exactly what Grace's cover achieves. It finds a way to be beautiful and sincere without being maudlin. It renders the sunset in the way I hope to render it in that essay, and it says so much about what I hope the book will be for its readers. I never really know what I want my covers to look like. The truth is, I'm incredibly lucky to be able to publish it all, let alone have brilliant designers respond to my work. But when I saw this cover, I immediately thought, oh, there it is, the cover of the Anthropocene Reviewed. And it became real to me. I hope you love it as much as I do, and thank you so, so much to Grace Hahn for bringing it to life. The Anthropocene Reviewed book comes out on May 18th and is available for pre-order now. Hank, I will see you on Friday. Here's the second major development.