afterword
An afterword serves as a final bridge between the narrative and the reader, often shifting the tone from the fictional or argumentative voice of the main text to a more personal or academic perspective. It typically provides a retrospective look at the work's creation or updates the reader on events that occurred after the primary text was completed. This term is distinct from an epilogue, which is usually an integral part of the story's plot or character resolution. An afterword is an external commentary, functioning more like a postscript or a scholarly appendix than a narrative conclusion.
Meanings
A short section at the end of a book that provides additional information, commentary, or a concluding reflection by the author or an editor.
"The author included a brief afterword to explain the sources used for the historical novel."