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Description
The primary challenge was the subject matter itself. The manatee and its relatives are cuddly-looking creatures, but humankind’s treatment of them has been anything but cuddly. The mandate of the poem and the publisher was that there be no cuteness to the portrayal in the typography and illustration.
The solution is born out of the language and content of the poem. The language is of a peculiar 19th-century style—turning back on itself, using clauses to modify clauses to modify clauses, and a vocabulary suited to Victorian descriptions. The typography alludes to the period: De Vinne and a host of other typefaces are from that period. The poem refers to the geographic locations of the dugong, manatee and sea cow throughout, and so the design steals aspects of late-19th-century maps—line numbers undulating like latitude lines, a cordoned text block tucked low and toward the spine like a legend, pages lettered in circles rather than numbered.
Credits
Art director/designer: Charles Nix
Illustrator: Stefano Arcella
Author: Arnold Klein
Production coordinator: Charles Nix
Trim size: 9 x 9 1/4 inches
Pages: 32
Quantity printed: 500
Compositor: Charles Nix
Typefaces: Caslon Open Face, Engravers Bold Face, Monotype Grotesque, Usherwood Book, Bitstream De Vinne
Printer/binder: Oddi Printing (Iceland)
Paper: 150 gram Munken Pure
Binding method: Smythe sewn, hardbound
Binding materials: Brillianta Cloth
Publisher/client: Tsimmes Editions