most books shouldn’t have introductions—they press heavily on the volume. most frontmatter is terrible. you need a title page and maybe a dedication. after that, it should be page one. table of contents belongs at the back unless the work is structured hierarchically.
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the only reason it was done the bad way was to pad things to a multiple of 16 pages, because that’s how print shops worked in the pre-digital world
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Replying to @ctbeiser
Endorsements, dedication, ToC, Foreword, Preface to each edition, Introduction. Unseemly to begin the book before page 76. What were you, raised by twitter?
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Replying to @vgr
as a rule, I skip all introductions and front matter set in different type than the main text. If they didn’t even re-set the type, no way the extra intro they comissioned will be worth anything.
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So you’re saying the way to stop typography nerds from reading things is to vary the fonts randomly? Hmm *makes note*
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