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Opposing faces on a die should add up to 7, so 5 and 2 should be opposite each other, not adjacent as shown here.
Check any die... except, I guess, the ones used for this art. :P

The pentagon near the top of the map looks highly significant, but I have no idea what it represents. It could be a lake, a cabin, a fortress, the location of buried treasure, etc.
I’m due to go into hospital next week, probably for a two-week stay; perhaps the novella will be available by the time I come out. Something to look forward to.

The text looks like vaguely Latin, vaguely Greek, firmly fictional script. This is an area where you want to either keep things vague or provide enough consistent detail that professor Tolkien won't haunt you....

Also, I never realized that opposing sides of a die had to add up to 7. One learns something every day.

I feel like they should be 5-sided dice. And there might be 5 of them. All different, representative colors, so 1 of the die would be white, or maybe silver?

I didn’t think of that. Interesting idea. However, I think the reason that we have six-sided dice is because they’re the easiest to make: a simple cube. I’m not sure, but I think five-sided dice would be difficult to make. I suppose the easiest way would be to use a cube but leave one face blank.

In my mind, the dice need to be irregular shapes instead of isohedral.
As for the colors:
Orange with brown numbers?
Blue with white numbers?
Green with gold numbers?
White with silver numbers?
Gray with black numbers?

Opposing faces on a die should add up to 7, so 5 and 2 should be opposite each other, not adjacent as shown here.
..."
I was just waiting for someone to zoom into the cover! As you say, the dice don't conform to "modern standards." The story doesn't take place in our world (where seven has a special significance in some cultures) so this was one way to suggest that customs are different here.

The text looks like vaguely Latin, vaguely Greek, firmly fictional script. This is an area where..."
It's based on 19th century attempts to create Greek cursive.

Also, I never reali..."
Only in our culture.

And, of course, no matter what I theorize about the cover, I know I will enjoy the tale that Lois has written for us.

Opposing faces on a die should add up to 7, so 5 and 2 should be opposite each other, not adjacent as..."
Hah, and here I figured a still-life cover would be impossible to fancrit. I underestimate my fans!
Hee, L.


Opposing faces on a die should add up to 7, so 5 and 2 should be opposite each other, not..."
As I replied to the original post: the opposite sides of a die do add up to 7...in our world. I just posted a longer comment explaining that the placement of the pips was done specifically to make the dice a product of a very different culture.

⚀⚂⚄⚁⚃⚅

I didn’t think of that. ..."
There are variety of different sided dice in the Dungeons and Dragons board games.

Oh yes, please!

I was thinking that five-sided dice would be rather difficult to make in Penric’s world—good ones, that is, that would come up on each side with equal probability.
Not so difficult in our modern world, although there probably isn’t much demand for five-sided ones specifically.

I was thinking that five-sided dice would be rather difficult to make in Penric’s world—good ones..."
But I was thinking that it wouldn't be so important for them to have an equal chance? There would be 5 five-sided dice. One for each deity. The chance would favor each deity's preferred number: "...fifth and white," for example.

Neither artist nor author could have expected this thread about cover design to transform itself into a debate about the design of dice in the World of the Five Gods.
However, it’s not for me to say whether the people of this fictional world would prefer honest or loaded dice.

I agree. Getting author and artist perspectives is wonderful.

Opposing faces on a die should add up to 7, so 5 and 2 should be opposite each other, not adjacent as shown here.
..."
A quick web search and I found that "opposing faces add up to 7" was common in Roman dice and in dice after about 1450. In between, the more common pattern had opposing faces add up to prime numbers (1+2=3, 3+4=7, and 5+6=11). So this is a case where not correct is correct :)
On the other thumb, the dice do look too modern to my eye: Too white (I would have expected ivory, bone (off) white, or wood-brown) and with what look like plastic-dice molded in pips. And the perspective is funky.


Given that, may we assume that the script is Cedonian (rather than, say, Roknari)? I remember from Penric's Demon that Cedonian uses a different script than Wealdian.

Hey Ron. It is very cool that you put such thought in how to make the objects in the cover have that touch of alienness, such as changing the pips on the dice. Also nice work on the map. Cheers.
Early July sounds good to me!