Submitted by DontNotNotReadThis t3_10fligx in books
I've grown increasingly skeptical about the preface/introduction for exactly this reason. Half the time the author (or a commentator) will offer some interesting insight and set up the reader to have the right headspace entering into the book.
The other half of the time, FOR NO REASON AT ALL, the author will just off-handedly mention what happens in the middle/end of the book as if that doesn't completely hamper your expectations/experience reading the book for the first time!
Why do so many authors do this??? I just started reading Lonesome Dove, and I figured I didn't have to worry because the preface was less than two pages, but I had to stop reading because the author suddenly mentions that >!Call is Newt's real father!< and, while I'm only about 70 pages in, I feel like I would be having a very different experience of this book if I didn't have that information floating around in my head.
If I'm supposed to know it, include it in the actual text of the story itself. If not, PLEASE, FOR THE LOVE OF GOD, AT LEAST GIVE ME A DAMN WARNING BEFORE YOU SPOIL A MAJOR PLOT POINT!
Rant over.
goirish2200 t1_j4xp2fi wrote
If you’re reading a work of fiction with a preface, that means you’re probably reading an established work of literature with a cultural reputation robust enough that someone - usually a credentialed academic - was tapped to write said preface. They’re there for the purpose of deeper study and targeted, implicitly, to people who are returning to that book, not encountering it for the first time, so don’t worry about it.
In other words, you’ll know if/when you’ll want to read the preface. This is unlikely to be the case the first time you read it. Skip ‘em.