


Examples include Romeo "in stubble and a tight white tank top on a new Penguin edition of Romeo and Juliet" a Harper cover for Wuthering Heights with "a stark black background, a close-up of a red rose and an inscription that reads, 'Bella & Edward's favorite book' " and a Puffin cover of Dracula with "a ghostly woman floating in the center, her platinum hair flying in the air. In order "to tap into the soaring popularity of the young-adult genre," publishers are putting new covers on classics-"provocative, modern jackets in bold shades of scarlet and lime green that are explicitly aimed at teenagers raised on Twilight and the Hunger Games," the New York Times wrote.
