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#1
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I'm helping a colleague to put his wartime experiences into book form.
It's not really my field of experience, but we seem to be getting along quite well. However, he has written an Introduction; Acknowledgements; a Prologue and also he wishes to include a Forward written by his wartime boss. I what order would you suggest these items appear in his book? Many thanks for any advice, Regards, David D |
#2
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Well, to start, there's no book part called a "Forward." It's a "foreword."
And it should probably come first if it's written by someone else. Front matter usually begins with an outsider's promotion of the book, whether it's called a preface, an introduction, or a foreword. The author himself can include both a preface (or foreword--they're the same thing) and an introduction. The preface usually explains why the author decided to write the book or gives other personal background information, and it often includes the acknowledgments, though they can also be a separate part. In any case, the preface/foreword is a personal thing, not directly related to the topic of the book. The introduction is usually an introduction to the subject of the book. It may give background information on the subject or briefly review the literature in the field. I'm not sure what a prologue would be in a nonfiction book. In fiction it usually presents events that occurred long before the beginning of the main story. Sometimes the relationship of these events to the plot of the book is not apparent until well into the story. Similarly, an epilogue tells how things ultimately turned out, many years after the conclusion of the main story. -- Suzanne S. Barnhill Microsoft MVP (Word) Words into Type Fairhope, Alabama USA Word MVP FAQ site: http://word.mvps.org Email cannot be acknowledged; please post all follow-ups to the newsgroup so all may benefit. "David" wrote in message ... I'm helping a colleague to put his wartime experiences into book form. It's not really my field of experience, but we seem to be getting along quite well. However, he has written an Introduction; Acknowledgements; a Prologue and also he wishes to include a Forward written by his wartime boss. I what order would you suggest these items appear in his book? Many thanks for any advice, Regards, David D |
#3
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Thank you for that, Suzanne.
From what you say his Prologue would be more accurately described as an epilogue as it does contain some afterthoughts about his wartime experiences. I have suggested some rearranging of the material in the light of your comments -- many thanks! ("Forward" was a typing error - the item IS headed "Foreword"). I've started a new thread about saving long(ish) documents in Word 2002, which are causing some worries -- I hope you can help there, too. Regards, David. "Suzanne S. Barnhill" wrote in message ... Well, to start, there's no book part called a "Forward." It's a "foreword." And it should probably come first if it's written by someone else. Front matter usually begins with an outsider's promotion of the book, whether it's called a preface, an introduction, or a foreword. The author himself can include both a preface (or foreword--they're the same thing) and an introduction. The preface usually explains why the author decided to write the book or gives other personal background information, and it often includes the acknowledgments, though they can also be a separate part. In any case, the preface/foreword is a personal thing, not directly related to the topic of the book. The introduction is usually an introduction to the subject of the book. It may give background information on the subject or briefly review the literature in the field. I'm not sure what a prologue would be in a nonfiction book. In fiction it usually presents events that occurred long before the beginning of the main story. Sometimes the relationship of these events to the plot of the book is not apparent until well into the story. Similarly, an epilogue tells how things ultimately turned out, many years after the conclusion of the main story. -- Suzanne S. Barnhill Microsoft MVP (Word) Words into Type Fairhope, Alabama USA Word MVP FAQ site: http://word.mvps.org Email cannot be acknowledged; please post all follow-ups to the newsgroup so all may benefit. "David" wrote in message ... I'm helping a colleague to put his wartime experiences into book form. It's not really my field of experience, but we seem to be getting along quite well. However, he has written an Introduction; Acknowledgements; a Prologue and also he wishes to include a Forward written by his wartime boss. I what order would you suggest these items appear in his book? Many thanks for any advice, Regards, David D |
#4
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An epilogue or possibly material for a preface--but perhaps better to omit a
preface if there are already a foreword and an introduction! Glad I could help. -- Suzanne S. Barnhill Microsoft MVP (Word) Words into Type Fairhope, Alabama USA Word MVP FAQ site: http://word.mvps.org Email cannot be acknowledged; please post all follow-ups to the newsgroup so all may benefit. "David" wrote in message ... Thank you for that, Suzanne. From what you say his Prologue would be more accurately described as an epilogue as it does contain some afterthoughts about his wartime experiences. I have suggested some rearranging of the material in the light of your comments -- many thanks! ("Forward" was a typing error - the item IS headed "Foreword"). I've started a new thread about saving long(ish) documents in Word 2002, which are causing some worries -- I hope you can help there, too. Regards, David. "Suzanne S. Barnhill" wrote in message ... Well, to start, there's no book part called a "Forward." It's a "foreword." And it should probably come first if it's written by someone else. Front matter usually begins with an outsider's promotion of the book, whether it's called a preface, an introduction, or a foreword. The author himself can include both a preface (or foreword--they're the same thing) and an introduction. The preface usually explains why the author decided to write the book or gives other personal background information, and it often includes the acknowledgments, though they can also be a separate part. In any case, the preface/foreword is a personal thing, not directly related to the topic of the book. The introduction is usually an introduction to the subject of the book. It may give background information on the subject or briefly review the literature in the field. I'm not sure what a prologue would be in a nonfiction book. In fiction it usually presents events that occurred long before the beginning of the main story. Sometimes the relationship of these events to the plot of the book is not apparent until well into the story. Similarly, an epilogue tells how things ultimately turned out, many years after the conclusion of the main story. -- Suzanne S. Barnhill Microsoft MVP (Word) Words into Type Fairhope, Alabama USA Word MVP FAQ site: http://word.mvps.org Email cannot be acknowledged; please post all follow-ups to the newsgroup so all may benefit. "David" wrote in message ... I'm helping a colleague to put his wartime experiences into book form. It's not really my field of experience, but we seem to be getting along quite well. However, he has written an Introduction; Acknowledgements; a Prologue and also he wishes to include a Forward written by his wartime boss. I what order would you suggest these items appear in his book? Many thanks for any advice, Regards, David D |