94 WINTERHOUSE | MICHAEL BIERUT
“The book has no purpose except to entertain and enlighten
our readers,” says its coauthor William Drenttel. Together
with Jessica Helfand and Michael Bierut, Drenttel created
Contents for the 2007 AIGA Next conference, to promote
Helfand’s erudite blog Design Observer. Looking to create an
object around the subject of “Next,” they found themselves
pondering what to read next and the process of navigating through the
passages of a book. A collection of 30 tables of contents was their solution.
“The design of the book was driven by the variety and nature of
the tables of contents we were featuring,” Drenttel says, adding
that the book essentially designed itself, except for the “screaming
green throughout.” Choosing books was fun, and he admits
that while architecture and design titles make up the lion’s share,
“There’s Philip Larkin, Dale Carnegie, Italo Calvino, Vladimir
Nabokov and the Preppy Handbook!” In their introduction,
the partners commemorate the table of contents as a great and
complex form. “In the realm of the printed word, it heralds what
comes next, a verbal proscenium with its own peculiar prose and
typographic conventions.” But the truth, as the authors themselves
acknowledge, is that “none of us really knows what’s coming
next. Not even designers.” by Romy Ashby
Winterhouse/Michael Bierut | authors: Michael Bierut, Jessica Helfand, William Drenttel | Designers: Winterhouse, Michael Bierut
font: Retina Agate by Hoefler & Frere-Jones | printing: Finlay Printing | paper: Mohawk | Client: Design Observer | Contact: www.winterhouse.com