The Dedication Page

It is the smallest page in the book. Most readers glance at it and move on. Some skip it entirely. It carries no chapter number. It advances no plot. It teaches no lesson.

Authors agonize over it.

I’ve watched writers who sailed through three hundred pages of manuscript sit paralyzed in front of two lines on a dedication page. They draft it, scratch it out, draft it again. They change the name. They change the wording. They wonder if it says too much. They wonder if it says enough.

The dedication is the one place in a book where the author stops talking to the reader and speaks to someone else entirely. It is the most private sentence in the most public thing they’ve ever done. That tension is why it matters.

In more than forty years of publishing, I’ve read hundreds of dedication pages. Every one of them told me something the manuscript alone could not. The dedication reveals the why behind the writing — the person or the purpose the author held in mind through every difficult paragraph, every late night, every moment they considered quitting and didn’t.

Some dedications are simple. A name and nothing more. “For my father.” Those two words carry everything the author couldn’t fit into three hundred pages. They say: this is who I was thinking of. This is who I owe. This is the reason I finished. The brevity is not laziness. It is trust — trust the reader will understand what those two words hold.

Others reach further. “For everyone who was told their story didn’t matter.” A dedication like this tells you the book was born from conviction, not ambition. The author didn’t write to build a career. They wrote to answer an injustice. The dedication puts that purpose on the record before the first chapter begins.

I’ve seen dedications to people who will never read the book — parents who passed before the manuscript was finished, mentors who died without knowing the seeds they planted, children not yet born. These dedications carry a particular weight. They acknowledge a debt the author can never repay except through the act of writing itself. The book becomes the thank-you letter they ran out of time to send. The dedication makes sure the name is not forgotten.

The dedication page is purpose hiding in plain sight.

This is why it deserves more than a passing glance. When you read a dedication, you’re reading the author’s answer to the most important question a writer can face: Why did I write this? The manuscript is the long answer. The dedication is the short one. Both should point in the same direction.

If they don’t, something has gone wrong. I’ve seen manuscripts where the dedication and the book seem to belong to different writers. The dedication speaks from the heart. The manuscript speaks from the head. When that happens, the dedication is usually more honest than the book. The author knew why they started writing, but lost the thread somewhere along the way.

The fix is not to change the dedication. The fix is to bring the book back to the purpose the dedication already holds.

For authors still working on manuscripts, the dedication page can serve as a compass. Write it early. Not as a final draft — just as a private note to yourself. Name the person or the purpose. Put it where you can see it. When the writing gets difficult, when doubt settles in, when you lose your way in the middle chapters, look at that page. It will remind you why you started. I have seen this simple act pull authors through months of uncertainty. The dedication holds steady when everything else shifts.

Every book begins with a reason. The dedication page is where the author says that reason out loud. It is small, quiet, and easy to overlook. It is also the most honest page in the book.

If you haven’t written yours yet, ask yourself: Who is this for? Not the audience. Not the market. The person. The one whose face you see when you wonder if the work is worth finishing.

Write their name. The rest of the book will follow.

The Power of Authors by Evan and Lois Swensen explores what it means to write with purpose — and why the deepest convictions often live in the smallest spaces on the page.

The book is available on Amazon: http://bit.ly/3K6o8AM. If you’d like an autographed copy, you can order it here: http://bit.ly/4pgmzjM.

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