openings

The first sentence of any piece of writing is important, and last night I read one of the best openings ever written. It sits atop the acknowledgements of The Complete Calvin and Hobbes, a 30 lb., 3-volume boxed tome that contains every Calvin and Hobbes comic strip every drawn:

"As flattering as it is to have a lavish book like this,
it can be a little disturbing to see one's own career
embalmed in a box..."

The ingenuity is underscored by appropriateness. Watterson downplays the magnitude of the collection, yet the contents of the box contains a large staple of my childhood.

Another teriffic opening is on the back cover blurb for Perl Testing: A Developer's Notebook, written by chromatic:

"Can you think of a sexier topic in software development
than software testing?"

If there's a hall of fame for this sort of thing, let me know. I have two nominations.

© Ian Langworth