#1
Pride And Prejudice By Jane Austen

Yes, Pride and Prejudice has many covers and plenty of editions, but this cover art, which once upon a time covered the first fully illustrated edition published by George Allen, is still the most popular and the most well-loved.
#2
Brave New World By Aldous Huxley

There are several types of Brave New World covers, including those with pills, machine parts, clones, and Earth. Many of these visually reference Leslie Holland’s original, which is still the most well-known and recognizable, even though Holland is infamous for having never even read the book.
#3
The Great Gatsby By F. Scott Fitzgerald

This book cover has a unique history and may be the most recognizable in American literature. For starters, Cugat, a Spanish artist, only ever created this cover. Another reason is that he performed the job before the material was complete (for $100), and it seems the book was genuinely affected by the cover.
#4
Fahrenheit 451 By Ray Bradbury

Although now this cover might seem a bit outdated, it was, at its own time, very striking and novel. And now, it is perhaps one of the most iconic!
#5
The Catcher In The Rye By J.D. Salinger

You may remember that Salinger was very picky about how his books were displayed and that this is the only one with any sort of image at all. While he was writing his most well-known book in Connecticut, his close buddy E. Michael Mitchell lived next door. According to rumors, Salinger read aloud passages of the book to his friend as he worked on it before asking him to create the cover.
#6
A Streetcar Named Desire By Tennessee Williams

Yhis lithograph, which is a part of the permanent collection at the Cooper Hewitt Museum, was first used as a cover for Williams’ play back in 1947. The artwork was created by Alvin Lustig, and the edition was published by New Directions.
#7
To Kill A Mockingbird By Harper Lee

This first edition cover is still what you’d get if you, say, went online to buy Lee’s Pulitzer Prize–winning classic right now, even though it has been translated into more than 40 languages and has sold over 40 million copies.
#8
Invisible Man By Ralph Ellison

As far as literary classics go, Invisible Man is a little unusual because it has had a ton of fantastic covers and very few offensively awful ones. However, the first edition cover remains the most recognizable—possibly due to McKnight Kauffer’s previous work as a poster artist.
#9
Psycho By Robert Bloch

Bloch’s novel’s typography was so well received that Alfred Hitchcock bought the rights to it to promote the movie; it also impacted Saul Bass’ opening credit sequence. A truly iconic artwork!
#10
Catch-22 By Joseph Heller

There have been a few redesigns of Catch-22 here and there, similar to To Kill a Mockingbird, but the original has endured. Paul Bacon’s version is simply iconic in so many ways.
#11
The Godfather By Mario Puzo

This cover has benefited by being used to sell the film adaptation, which in this case was the highest-grossing movie of 1972 and, at the time, the highest-grossing movie ever made—not to mention one of the most influential. This is similar to how Psycho’s promotional usage of its book helped that movie’s overall success. Not a horrible formula for iconicity.
#12
In Cold Blood By Truman Capote

Fujita’s cover for Capote’s book is almost identical to its first version. Just one minor thing was changed – in the draft version, the ‘hatpin’ was bright red, but Capote told Fujita to make it more burgundy because, in the book, the ‘crime wasn’t so fresh.’ If you read it, you know what they were on about!
#13
The Hobbit By J.R.R. Tolkien

I Know Why The Caged Bird Sings By Maya Angelou

This must be one of the most adored and marketable book covers. Despite that, there’s very little information on its creator Halverson.
#15
Slaughterhouse-Five By Kurt Vonnegut

Although the Dell paperback edition from the 1990s has largely supplanted this one in schools, another Paul Bacon classic that has been retrieved numerous times still holds its own in the t-shirt business. Have you ever noticed that the second ‘S’ is flipped over?
#16
A Clockwork Orange By Anthony Burgess

Although the majority of the book covers on this list are first editions, David Pelham’s paperback edition of A Clockwork Orange was released ten years after the novel’s initial release. Stanley Kubrick forbade Penguin from using any of the movie’s Philip Castle-designed poster elements in the new edition, so Penguin’s art director, David Pelham, commissioned an entirely new one. It was a tie-in edition to coincide with the release of Kubrick’s film adaptation.
#17
1984 By George Orwell

The Little Prince By Antoine De Saint – Exupéry

Jaws By Peter Benchley

Another illustration of a design concept that was so excellent it permeated the entire book. Editor Tom Congdon and creative director Alex Gotfryd decided on a stark typographic jacket after Bantam’s salesmen rejected Benchley’s first cover idea, which was “a peaceful unsuspecting town [shown] through the bleached jaws of a shark,” in accordance with Benchley’s own vision.
#20
Jurassic Park By Michael Crichton

A Teaspoon Of Earth And Sea By Dina Nayeri

The Bell Jar By Sylvia Plath

Harper & Row’s first American edition introduced Davida as the unofficial Bell Jar font, which can now be found (along with the rose motif) on quite a few book editions. And that’s what we call an iconic design!
#23
The Handmaid’s Tale By Margaret Atwood

The Goldfinch By Donna Tartt

Portnoy’s Complaint By Philip Roth

All The Lives We Ever Lived: Seeking Solace In Virginia Woolf By Katharine Smyth

The Snowy Day By Ezra Jack Keats

The Psychopath Test By Jon Ronson

Harry Potter And The Sorcerer’s Stone By By J.K. Rowling

Song Of Solomon By Toni Morrison

The Color Purple By Alice Walker

The Unbearable Lightness Of Being By Milan Kundera

The Grapes Of Wrath By John Steinbeck

The Animorphs By K.A. Applegate

This Is How You Lose The Time War By Amal El-Mohtar And Max Gladstone

A Princess Of Mars By Edgar Rice Burroughs

Loneliness By John T. Cacioppo And William Patrick

Night Shift By Stephen King

The Divine Comedy: Inferno, Purgatorio, Paradiso By Dante Alighieri

All My Friends Are Dead By Jory John And Avery Monsen

The Craftsman By Richard Sennett

Atlas Shrugged By Ayn Rand

Instructions For A Funeral: Stories By David Means

Flowers In The Attic By V.C. Andrews

Thick: And Other Essays By Tressie McMillan Cottom

When You Are Engulfed In Flames By David Sedaris

An Ethics Of Interrogation By Michael Skerker

American Psycho By Bret Easton Ellis

More Than This By Patrick Ness

kaddish.com By Nathan Englander

Face Of An Angel By Dorothy Eden

A Cultural Dictionary Of Punk By Nicholas Rombes

You Only Live Twice By Ian Fleming

Resistance By Barry Lopez

The White Album By Joan Didion

Joseph Anton: A Memoir By Salman Rushdie

Labyrinths: Selected Stories & Other Writings By Jorge Luis Borges

I’m Glad My Mom Died By Jennette McCurdy

From The Memoirs Of A Non-Enemy Combatant By Alex Gilvarry

Aerogrammes By Tania James

Kidney For Sale By Owner By Mark J. Cherry

One Flew Over The Cuckoo’s Nest By Ken Kesey

The Hate U Give By Angie Thomas And Amandla Stenberg

To The Lighthouse By Virginia Woolf

Interview With The Vampire By Anne Rice

The Mothers By Brit Bennett

A Little Life By Hanya Yanagihara

Frankenstein By Mary Shelley

Everything Is Illuminated By Jonathan Safran Foer

Tree Of Codes By Jonathan Safran Foer

Know My Name By Chanel Miller

Shatter Me By Tahereh Mafi

The Stranger By Albert Camus

Insanity By Andre Gonzalez
