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I think in many cases there certainly is an "intended" way to enjoy a book... Legolas Send a noteboard - 11/08/2011 11:17:30 PM
It appears that he's saying, "there is a right way to experience a book." The study (as far as I can tell) just asked people which version of the story --spoiled, or unspoiled-- they preferred. People can prefer things for a thousand different reasons.

which is without having it spoiled for you first. Of course, the books for which that is most true are generally not the books with the biggest literary value, but then, that's perhaps all the more reason to respect the "intended" way to enjoy the book. If the book you're reading does not have particular literary quality, and the author used spectacular plot twists as one of the main attractions of reading the story, it may well be the case that if you already know of the plot twists beforehand, you feel you might as well skip the book entirely. The Da Vinci Code comes to mind.

For better books with more literary value, obviously there will be more room for different readings of the book, and readers appreciating different aspects, and then spoilers may not matter as much - but many readers will still prefer not to get them. At the end of the day, every writer's intended audience has to be people who know nothing about the book except what they read in it, per definition, as there always has to be a first reader. So many people feel that they will get the most authentic experience, the closest to what the author intended, if they read without spoilers. There are naturally post-modernists among us who don't care what the author intended and don't think it matters, but I dare say that's a minority...
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Interesting article: "Spoilers don't spoil anything." - 11/08/2011 08:33:42 PM 1952 Views
It's probably one of those things that works "in general" - 11/08/2011 08:43:03 PM 1099 Views
Could be! - 11/08/2011 10:21:15 PM 1085 Views
Here's a rebuttal. - 11/08/2011 09:02:06 PM 1261 Views
That rebuttal is about as strong as the original article (not very ). - 11/08/2011 10:15:36 PM 1252 Views
The point I like in it ... - 11/08/2011 10:52:02 PM 990 Views
I think in many cases there certainly is an "intended" way to enjoy a book... - 11/08/2011 11:17:30 PM 1000 Views
Tor.com has a vested interest in us not getting spoilers - 12/08/2011 03:24:20 AM 926 Views
I wouldn't call either of those spoilers ... - 12/08/2011 01:38:08 PM 813 Views
I agree it is case by case - 12/08/2011 09:08:25 PM 953 Views
I dunno. My personal experience leans the other way. - 12/08/2011 01:57:37 AM 910 Views
Yeah, I don't think it's for everyone. - 12/08/2011 02:51:19 AM 1210 Views
Not having read the article... - 12/08/2011 03:04:13 AM 984 Views
Spoilers don't spoil anything if the story is well-written. - 12/08/2011 04:25:44 AM 885 Views
And I agree with this too. - 12/08/2011 12:46:03 PM 966 Views
Interesting. - 12/08/2011 04:38:19 PM 932 Views
It depends on what you want to get out of a story - 19/08/2011 12:16:42 AM 941 Views
this brings a question to mind - 19/08/2011 03:25:31 AM 973 Views
If it were true that most stories have twist endings - 19/08/2011 07:53:42 AM 799 Views

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