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Do You Read Books' Introductions/Afterwords?
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I always do. If the intro/afterwords grab my attention, I keep reading. If not, on to the text at hand.



Not always, but more than I used to.
There are some mud puddles in Yellowstone that are quite deep, you may be a deeper person than you realize Barb :-)

I read the introduction and afterword after I finish a book. It makes much more sense to me at that point. I don't even read the back of the book/jacket sleeve before starting. I like to form my own opinion.
I'm with Sally. If it's fiction, I never read the intro or afterword first. Sometimes they have spoilers. Sometimes the dust jacket has spoilers too, for shit's sake. (Book marketers today apparently think people won't want to read something unless the entire story is known in advance.) I want to get my own sense of the text before some expert tells me what to think.
If it's nonfiction, I will read the intro first.
However, this is a gripe I have with some mass market paperbacks - they don't contain any cover, back, or inside summary of the book, or even a suggestion of what it's about. Nada. (I've noticed this with some mystery series.) The titles are so generic (In the Presence of the Enemy, Outright Deception, etc.) you can't remember if you've read it before, and reading the first few pages might not help. I need a hint, people.
If it's nonfiction, I will read the intro first.
However, this is a gripe I have with some mass market paperbacks - they don't contain any cover, back, or inside summary of the book, or even a suggestion of what it's about. Nada. (I've noticed this with some mystery series.) The titles are so generic (In the Presence of the Enemy, Outright Deception, etc.) you can't remember if you've read it before, and reading the first few pages might not help. I need a hint, people.
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I ask because I'm reading The Invention of Morel, but Adolfo Bioy Casares, and there's a lengthy introduction to the text. Similar introductions were in books I read recently by Cather and Woolf. I skip the introductions...they're too much like spoilers, really, and I want to come to the text fresh with my own perspective, not the "right" one. I sometimes go back and read them after I've finished, though.
What do you think?