Turndevelt's Big Book of 
Forewords 
 
Copyright (c) 2004 David R. Perry 
ISBN 0-9753554-0-6 
For more information about this title, or to order hard copies, please 
visit www.davidrperry.com. 
******************** This work is licensed under the Creative 
Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs License. To view a 
copy of this license, visit 
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/2.0/ or send a letter to 
Creative Commons, 559 Nathan Abbott Way, Stanford, California 
94305, USA. 
The License is included at the end of this file. 
******************** Dr. Lewis B. Turndevelt's Big Book of 
Forewords ******************** 
Preface 
Let me begin by saying that I have a personal and moral objection 
against book introductions and prefaces. My reasons are numerous, but 
I will be focusing on just two for the purpose of this unfortunate, but 
publisher-mandated, preface. 
The first is that the only reason they exist is to give would-be book 
buyers a convenient way to check over a book's contents before making 
a purchase. To the consumer, I'm sure that this seems like a good and 
reasonable thing to expect. After all, if someone is going to spend their 
hard-earned money on a stack of papers, they might like to have at least 
a false sense that somewhere in the middle of that stack is something of
value and importance. Yes, I'm sure that the consumer does in fact feel 
this way. 
Now let me tell you how I, the book author, feel. I think it's stealing. 
You stand around in the bookstore, killing time before you head off to 
your "real" entertainment for the evening, consisting of yet another 
regrettably awful Hollywood movie, and decide that you can at least 
browse over the preface of a book, hoping to find out what it is about, 
who this yahoo is that is writing it, and why can't they have 
comfortable chairs in this store anyway? So you, or someone that looks 
suspiciously like you, will read through the whole introduction, decide 
that the book is too complicated - too much English - and put it back on 
the shelf. 
The reason I regard this as stealing is because it was my full intention 
for you to not realize this until well after you had purchased the book, 
taken it home, and cracked the spine of it so that the store wouldn't take 
it back. This was a very well thought out, highly involved tactical 
exercise on my part that was to all but eliminate the possibility of 
having this book returned. Additionally, my specific instructions have 
always been that the book should be constructed from the cheapest 
materials available, using bargain-basement quality glue as a page 
fastener; a fixative that would barely even hold up to the manhandling a 
book receives going through the checkout. This is a book you were 
meant to purchase and then be stuck with forever - "forever" actually 
meaning "in a loose pile inside the store's bag." In fact, I recall my 
initial conversation with my editor about how this book should be sold, 
which went a little something like this: 
Me: Ted, I think the preface is a bad idea. I mean, you've read the book. 
It's sheer genius. Would you buy it if all you had a chance to read was a 
hastily thrown together preface, instead of the glorious prose inside? 
Him (Ted): Well, I mean it's difficult to say. I haven't read the book. 
You were supposed to turn it in last week, what is taking so long? Plus, 
I would like to think that as a book editor I might be a little pickier 
about that kind of...
Me: Just trust me that it is fantastic. And no, Ted, you're not. You're no 
pickier than the next person, who, unless someone else walks in here, 
happens to be me. You're a man that buys x-brand kitty litter simply to 
make a point. You've said so yourself. And to be honest, I'm not even 
sure what that point is supposed to be. 
Him: I just don't think that you have to pay those outrageous, name 
brand prices just to get better clumping. When I scoop up those little 
balls of dried urine, they are perfectly clumped. You've seen them, I 
bring them in here all the time. 
Me: Yes, we've all seen the clumps... But what I mean is that "picky" is 
never a word I would use in the same sentence as your name. Unless, of 
course, that sentence happened to be "I picky Teddy for my teamy." 
Him: Cute, very cute. Are you done? 
Me: "Does Teddy likey the drinkey? Maybe he likey to picky another?" 
Him: Alright, I think I see where this is headed, and it's actually pretty 
annoying... 
Me: ... 
Him: (squirting a leftover packet of ketchup into his mouth, since he is 
not picky enough to care about the contents    
    
		
	
	
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