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books you loathed
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I loathed Jessica Z.. I don't know why. I just really hated it. The characters bothered me alot for some reason..along with how the dialogue was.
I hated Wicked Lovely. I really hate to say that, because the author is a goodreads author and will probably see this, but I really didn't like the book. I didn't like the characters, I felt that they were shallow, and they didn't have any motivation for the things they did in the book.
I feel like everyone always raves about that book..I almost picked it up the other day for full price at B&N. Glad I didn't. I hate shallow characters.
Wide Sargasso Sea. Wuthering Heights. A Walk to Remember. Madame Bovary. The Princess Bride (I loved the movie, though!). Great Expectations.
I think that reason I hated Great Expectations was because I read it too young. I'm seriously thinking about giving it another try. It just doesn't seem right to be an English major and to not like Charles Dickens.
I liked the Pearl for some reason. I have no idea why...I still hate The Kite Runner. Yeah, I'm still not over it.
Now, I love Bradbury with all my heart, but I didn't like Fahrenheit 451 as much as I thought I would. The ending wasn't the best (and he's usually great at endings too). But, there was one thing that I loved about it. It's how the censorship happens. It wasn't just some random law enacted by an evil government. It was the people. They were too busy watching their huge TVs to read. He goes into more detail in some of his essays.What really happened was that back when their were books, certain groups would find something they didn't like or agree with in a book and take it out. Every group would edit or tear out the parts they didn't agree with, and in the end there were no books left, and the libraries closed. That to me is really poignant, and rather true if you've ever seen how books are edited or looked at the banned books list.
Kayla, I didn't like The Princess Bride either! One of those few cases when the movie is actually better.
I think William Goldman is a misogynist. Buttercup was portrayed so horribly in The Princess Bride and I hated how Westley treated her. There was one scene at the end of the book when Buttercup is trying to defend Westley against Prince Humperdinck, and Westley says to her, "Be quiet woman!". I was through with the book by that point.
Choke by Chuck Palahniuk. None of the characters were likable, except the protagonist's best friend but he wasn't enough to save the book for me. Just horrible. In my opinion.
Kayla, I was an English major and also hate Great Expectations. I don't think we have to enjoy all the classics just because we study them... that's part of being a student of literature, is challenging what are considered to be classics. I also love the movie for The Princess Bride and didn't really care for the book either.And Emily, I wasn't a huge fan of Fahrenheit 451 either... mostly because of the ending.
Tahleen..I agree. I think that also just because they are classics doesn't mean I'm going to like them. I always want to respect and try to read books that have been deemed classics. But..I'm not going to pretend to like something just because it is a classic.
I didn't like The Princess Bride book nearly as much as the movie either. The characters weren't as like able. Though the back story on Fezzik and Inigo were interesting, and the Pit of Despair/ Zoo of Death thing was weird. I really didn't like the notes he put after the ending though. Ugg. They ruined the book for me.And yeah, I agree, the ending of Fahrenheit 451 was pretty bad. Which is strange really, because his ending are usually so amazing. Oh well. I basically still worship the ground he walks on. Or at least the ground his short stories walk on anyway.
There are very few books I loathed but the ones I do make me cringe at the very mention.I despised Beloved and The Bluest Eyeby Toni Morrison. I tried to like them and I'll give the author credit for a wonderful writing style but I just couldn't bring myself to like the books.
I hate the Twilight series, there simply isn't enough plot to satisfy me, among a whole other list of complaints.
I hated most of the books we had to read in high school. But I especially disliked Lord of the Flies and Great Expectations. I've been thinking about trying to reread both...but I can't seem to make myself do it.
More recently I read Julie and Julia: My Year of Cooking Dangerously and I strongly disliked it.
*Sorry to anyone who likes any of these three books!*
Ugh. Exodus by Leon Uris. Horrible Horrible. I couldnt even finish it and its so hard for me not to finish a book because i feel like i have to.
ugh. I didnt like that book.
Cierra wrote: "Choke by Chuck Palahniuk. None of the characters were likable, except the protagonist's best friend but he wasn't enough to save the book for me. Just horrible. In my opinion."I agree. And the ending was just awful.
Of Mice and Men... I hated that. And I hated A Day no Pigs Would Die.
AND Fahrenheit 451. Hated that.
Kissed by an Angel by Elizabeth Chandler.
Candle in the Window by Christina Dodd. I wish someone had told me how trashy that book is... I refused to finish it. lol.
Blah! Now I'm in a bad mood! Haha! Time for chocolate!
Of mice and men!!!!alot of people i know like that book but not me!
the only line i remember is "tell me about the rabbits, george"
and thats just because its a inside joke between me and my friends.
Oh... haha. Sorry! I'll edit it! At least I didn't remember names... That helps, right? :P I really am sorry. :)
It's fine lol I just saw that and got worried for people who would read it and be like "...WHAT THE HELL" haha.
I try! :P It's happened to me before... though not on here. It happened when I was reading a synopsis (!) on B&N's Bookmaster (!!!) in order to figure out if I wanted to read the book I was looking. I didn't really want to read it when I found out the ending. *sigh*
Tough life... I, too, am frustrated when someone spoils something in a book, so I'm glad you pointed it out to me before I ruined it for someone!
Funny that so many of my favourite books were mencioned here ;) Of Mice and Men, Great Expectations, The Great Gatsby...As for me, I absolutely hated the first Harry Potter; I couldn't even go through it. And Virginia Woolf's Orlando, that I didn't go through as well - but I'll try to someday. And I didn't understand what's all the hype about On The Road. Took me a month to finish that, and it wasn't much of an enjoyable read.
Laura Bush: An Intimate Portrait of the First Lady by Ronald Kessler.
Okay, I am not a republican, or a democrat, or any party affiliate. I enjoyed the book until they arrived at the White House. She was a caring person that the author showed would pretty much bend over backwards and help whoever she could. But then....when they arived at the White House, the Clinton bashing began. Either she wasn't as loving as the author said, or the author had his own opinions, and Mrs. Bush didn't censor him like she had others within the book.
You don't have to agree with the presidents actions or policies, but isn't it best to show some respect! Especially when you complain about not being showed the same respect. UGH!
Why do we hate so many school-reads and classics? I guess because if you hate an ordinary book you can stop reading it (I used to have must-finish-book-syndrome, until I got less free time and had the epiphany that hobbies were supposed to be, you know, enjoyable)- but a school read or a classic is dwelt upon forever.So, school reads I hated: immediately rolling off the mind The Poisonwood Bible, Heart of Darkness, The Alchemist (paper-thin), Where the Red Fern Grows, Grendel, and Jane Eyre (I strongly dislike Romanticism).
Books already mentioned that I disliked, but couldn't care enough about to hate: Siddhartha (I'm Buddhist and I found this ponderous, dull, and contrived) and The Kite Runner (weak character-ization and weak character, ridiculous plot, poor pacing). There was a inquiry earlier as to why someone could possibly hate To Kill A Mockingbird. Here's why: the plot meanders, the characters are cast into such black-and-white stereotypes as to be rendered unbelievable, it's melodramatic and overwrought, and the "symbols" while attempting to give high-handed messages about racism (etc) fail on the literal level.
As for on-my-own-time reads, I only have the memory to hate them relatively briefly in comparison, so the only book I hated that I read the entirety of this year was Rewind by Laura Downer (ugh, physical abuse is not okay, and teenage mutual emotional whining is not love). I also got through most of The Secret History of the Pink Carnation and loathed it thoroughly. More often books frustrate or exasperate me than earn my hate (A Wizard of Earthsea).
I can understand some of the other choices here. I was apathetic to Of Mice and Men (paper-thin character types/situations again), Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone (cliche-ish mostly just okay- it's the hype that is bothersome, not the book itself... and I've never been a fan of the "extra-special destiny" fantasy trope), and The Great Gatsby (the whole ending is just unnecessary crash-and-burn).
I *was* wondering what people really disliked about Fareinheit 451 though.
What about the ending? The limbo-ness of Guy's future? The heavy-handed idea that people will need them again one day. The incredibly all-male-ness again? The confederation of well-read hobos? The bombing?
**SPOILER FOR FAHRENHEIT 451** I'm just saying I didn't like the ending. And that's why I didn't like the book. It had nothing to do with "the confederation of well-read hobos" or anything, just the fact that they destroyed the books too and memorized them. I don't buy it, that's all. I don't think they'd be able to memorize books word for word. They can't all have a photographic memory.
Kaion said "teenage mutual emotional whining is not love"
What a great quote. I totally agree although I haven't read the book you mentioned, this happens in A LOT of others. :)
I think the only book I've read that I really hated was Gulliver's Travels. The actual content was interesting, but the writing killed me, and I was barely able to get through it. There are other books I've read that I consider pretty stupid, but I wouldn't say I hated them.
So, I was in my Eastern Civ class and the professor made a reference to Heart of Darkness and audibly reacted.
God yes. It's less than 100 pages long and it took me three days (with no big distractions) to finish it.
I had weeks to read it for my senior high school English class and I wound up skimming and having to try very hard to not impale myself with my pen. And, of course, after I made my reaction, my friend just laughed and laughed. I though it was funny, but not that funny.
The only books I hated were A Thousand Splendid Suns because it was so full of gratuitous violence that made me wonder if the author was actually enjoying writing aout it in a sadistic way, and the carachters were so flat and the story so boring I cannot really rememer much of it. I also coudn't stand the last three of the Twilight series. I hated the way she took a nice idea and turned it into an endless and pointless ...nothing!
As many of you said, it's really funny noticing how some of the books others hate are actually among my all time favourites!
I HATED Heart of Darkness by Joseph Conrad. It was one of the novels I was required to read in high school, and I couldn't stand it. I have never had so much trouble getting through page after page. I just thought the whole story was senseless and over-descriptive.
I dislike anything by Chuck Palahniuk. I guess the reason I've read his stuff is that I have a habit of reading anything cover to cover if it's in my apartment/house, unless something better falls into my lap.I actually read Great Expectations because it was sitting on my bookshelf, but unlike a lot of people here, I absolutely loved that book!
I couldn't finish reading Reading Lolita in Tehran A Memoir in Books; I kept mixing people up and I got bored. The style of writing didn't engage me. I tried.
Chrissie, I haven't spoken to anyone who like Reading Lolita in Tehran. I tried to get through it too, and it just didn't happen.
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Books mentioned in this topic
Inkheart (other topics)Heart of Darkness (other topics)
Siddhartha (other topics)
Bookends: A Novel (other topics)
A Heartbreaking Work of Staggering Genius (other topics)
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Authors mentioned in this topic
Stephenie Meyer (other topics)Chuck Palahniuk (other topics)


