literally why
So that the people at the printing place stop calling
>>7595291
>the page is no longer blank
you had one job
>>7595291
The process of bookbinding (as in, the making a physical book) involves working several units of paper together into a book. Those units of paper usually come in standard quantities (quirts or reams or whatever). So if you're working with units of 32 pages, and you want to make a book that's 63 pages long, you need to use two blocks of 32 pages. Now, you can choose to cut off one page, so you actually end up with 63 printed pages. But that cutting off of the last page involves an additional expense in the production process - it's cheaper to leave it in. But now you have a book of 63 printed pages and a blank page. People might wonder if they have a flawed product and the last page has been accidentally unprinted. So, to eliminate confusion, you print 'this page intentionally left blank' on the last page. It's pretty dumb and most people don't think about twice about a blank page at the end of a book, but apparently at one point printers thought that was necessary.
>>7595308
Thank you, Ms. Swift. I learned something today.
>>7595291
So I don't think there was an error and information got lost.
>>7595308
I thought publishers put flyleaves in so people could write notes, or just for the sheer luxury of it. I'm kind of disillusioned desu.
>>7595301
Kek, this.
Wait, hold on. Isn't that supposed to be your scrap paper where you write down all the major plot points and character traits so you dont forget them?
>>7595291
>author paid by number of pages
This doesn't happen in Mexico. I've never seen something like that.
It's an 'ironic' 'meta' joke, and inside 'joke' about the 'meaning' of emptiness, or 'emprtiness', if you 'will'.
>>7596177
>yfw dickens was paid a pound per paragraph
>>7596166
>plot