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Which book title is more appealing?


29 Responses to Option A
I like the tagline on the bottom that includes protection
This title sticks out more to me. I like the Your House, Your Fire title.
the second option sounds like what one should do after a fire while the first one sounds like it is helping from every stop of the way
I feel like B is missing a comma or semi-colon in the sub title
I like the title better. B--from the trash sounds like something you'd just find anywhere, whereas a makes a reference to YOUR home which i think is the point here.
looks more interesting and appealing
I prefer option A because the description gives me more of an idea about what the book talks about, but the design of the cover of both are terrible.
Sounds very practical and relevant to me as a homeowner
The title in option B scares me. I know it could happen to me, but I don't care to be reminded of that fact. Option A talks about the book being a guide to planning, protection, and recovery, which makes it more relevant to me and is not scary.
the second title states it is the ultimate guide which make it sound as if it is the best
The cover text did a better job of describing the topic of the book. I like direct.
I like option A more because the text on the front gives me a much better idea what the book is about. It's descriptive, but without being distracting from the book cover.
it seems good so that i choose it
I choose A because the title is appropriate and more appealing.
its impressive than other
This title works better with the subtitle. The other sounds like it focuses more on the recovery side. This one better indicates the preparation side, I feel.
I think this title is more direct and to the point. The other one seems like a fiction book.
This cover uses the word "your house" and that is immediately attention grabbing as it is something of great value to me that I need to protect.
This title grabs your attention and makes it more personal with the use of the word "your."
The term "your" in the title (your house, your fire) imply ownership and responsibility. It infers that the book will provide guidance for what an individual can do to prevent fires. It suggests that by taking personal responsibility for "your" house, you can possibly prevent a fire that without following the advice in the book, may be "your" fault, and that seems helpful to me.
Sounds like a thorough guide
This option provides you with personal ownership
this is more to the point
The "Your" really drives home the fact that it could happen to you. It's not some abstract concept of a fire at some house, it's YOUR house. More attention-grabbing. Also, the "Special Edition" being larger than the rest of the text that follows really makes it stand out that there is added content.
I like that it insinuates it's your problem and fault
A the title is more descriptive of the topic of the book. B the title is a bit misleading.
I think this title is more attention grabbing as it becomes more personal. It makes you directly think about yourself instead of someone else's story.
I choose A because this book title is descriptive and clear.
I like A because it is straightforward and it is practical and to me it is more positive than B
21 Responses to Option B
It sounds more epic
From the ash sounds much more informative to the book content
A is really strange
I like B because "from the ash" catches my attention right away.
B because A sounds too negative to me like it is your fault.
A sound a bit too much like you're saying the victim started the fire. B is more straightforward.
This is more appealing to the eye.
This title has the nice interesting factor of being simple to understand and take in. The longer titles just don't seem to have the same power of keeping a reader's interest.
Option a sounds like a planning guide to burn your own house down. option b sounds more like a prevention guide.
The title is much more engaging and not so alarming as the other choice
I prefer B, because I find that title flows better and is more memorable.
don't want to take ownership of a fire
"From the Ash" really captures my attention.
This title implies that it will be a redemption story
Has a better ring to it, more dramatic.
Choice B "From the Ashes" makes me believe the book is more about coming back after the fire. Like a phoenix rising from the ashes. "Your house your fire" sounds more negative and like its an insurmountable problem.
I don't like too much repetition in book titles.
It just sounds more professional and I like the layout of the pages better. From the Ash makes if seem like you are rebounding from something-- you're getting up from the ashes and starting again. The other makes it just seem negative where from the ash makes it sound like you're finding the good within the bad.
I didn't like the idea that its your fire. it makes it sound like I would be responsible. I also perferred the smaller picture as it was easier to view.
I chose B because the title sounds more intrigueing and makes the reader want to know more.
The lettering is larger and the title draws your attention and sparks the imagnation more than option A.
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