I don't like it when the author gives away a key part of the story in the preface or introduction of a history book. Or biography. Which are the genres I read almost exclusively.
Let me give you an example. I just started the book Lone Wolf, the Life and Death of U-Boat Ace Werner Henke, by Timothy P. Mulligan, Praeger, 1993. In the introduction, the author describes Henke briefly, then states " he suffered a unique fate, the only U-Boat captain killed while trying to escape as a prisoner of war."
I didn't want to know that now. I haven't even started the body of the book yet. This happens a lot in history and biography books.
Anyway, that's my pet beef. For today.
Paddy
Let me give you an example. I just started the book Lone Wolf, the Life and Death of U-Boat Ace Werner Henke, by Timothy P. Mulligan, Praeger, 1993. In the introduction, the author describes Henke briefly, then states " he suffered a unique fate, the only U-Boat captain killed while trying to escape as a prisoner of war."
I didn't want to know that now. I haven't even started the body of the book yet. This happens a lot in history and biography books.
Anyway, that's my pet beef. For today.
Paddy
Comment