My Did Not Finish bookshelf

Recently I created a new bookshelf called “Did Not Finish.” Several of my GR friends asked me why the books on this DNF shelf are unrated and not reviewed. “If they were such stinkers that you couldn’t finish them, why not say so?” they ask.
The answer is two fold. First, I created the DNF shelf because people asked me why I was shelving books as “Read” without rating (or reviewing) them. The DNF shelf was my answer to that critique. Second, DNF literally means what it says and is no reflection on the merits of the book. Let me explain.
I’ve been reading books for many decades and have read thousands. Since joining GR a little under a year ago I have shelved 2040 books as Read: about a hundred that I’ve read in that year and the rest that I came across browsing in the master GR To Read list. Prior to joining GR and getting my kindle I browsed for books in brick and mortar bookstores. Like some other readers, I read broadly across many genres. Like many other readers, I like particular types of and not all books that I find in those genres. I select books for my To Read list based primarily on the descriptions provided in the rear cover blurb (or electronic equivalent). Occasionally, rarely, I find that when I get into a book it isn’t what I expect it to be.
That book goes to my DNF shelf unfinished.
Prior to joining GR (and prior to becoming an Indie author myself), I read mostly the works of established authors only occasionally taking a flyer on a new author whose book description caught my fancy. Since GR and finding a treasure trove of potentially interesting reads by fellow Indie authors (at ridiculously low prices, often free), I’ve changed my reading habits. Fifty percent of my reads are now GR Indie authors. Where previously I had a backlog of six to twelve print books sitting in my bookcase, I now have 306 books (almost all eBooks) on my TR shelf. The result? I’m perhaps quicker to move on and DNF (or before DNF shelf as Read but unrated) a book that I have difficulty getting into.
The reasons for DNFs vary. It could be I don’t like the writing or the editing. It is more likely that both were good indeed and the story just wasn’t my cup of tea. If a book is poorly written or edited, why don’t I give it one star and say why? Because to give a fair and balanced rating and review I’d have to finish the book. Some authors have PM’d me about their DNF book, and I have given them my reason(s) privately.
I hope this post has cleared up the mystery.
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Published on March 17, 2012 11:11
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message 1: by Kevin (new)

Kevin Farrell When I first joined GR a little more than a year ago I was listing books as DNF and giving them a low rating. I reconsidered after seeing how the rest of the community rates things and shifted my scale slightly (not much, though). I then reconsidered the DNF category and thought about creating a DNF shelf. Like a purgatory for books. After some consideration, I did not see a point in doing that for myself. I knew I wasn't going back to read them later. Instead, I have chosen to delete them from my list if they don't work for me. Usually I do some homework before starting a book. When I just can't get myself to finish the book it usually has something to do with the style of writing or a mood that I just don't like. That doesn't make it a bad book; just not my cup of tea.

I think your plan is a good one but it takes more maintenance than I want to do.


message 2: by Lee (new)

Lee Holz Interesting comment, Kevin. My DNF books were in my TR list to begin with (which is a long list and a necessity for me). I followed the practice of moving them to Currently Reading when I started them because people seem to want to know what I'm reading, particularly the authors. I found that when I tried to simply delete books from CR, GR moved them to Read, hence the DNF bookshelf so I could keep track of them separately.


message 3: by Kevin (new)

Kevin Farrell Lee, you have a good system and GR allows us to keep track of these things. I am very grateful for GR. Thanks to GR my TR list is 10X larger than it used to be.


message 4: by Claude (new)

Claude Forthomme In spite of that DNF shelf, I continue to be impressed by the amount of reading you do, particularly considering that you are also a full time writer! I find that I can't read when I'm in the middle of the writing process (of course, I spend also a lot of time on my blog and working up a presence on Twitter, FB and LinkedIn - all perfectly good social media but certainly very time-demanding!)

So if I had to read books at the rate of 2 or 3 per week, I really couldn't do it. By the way,I just finished your Abomination Assignment, a fun read and I'd recommend it to anybody looking for a story with a truly unusual protagonist...but I have to admit I'm not really into thrillers, murders and spy stories, (I never was) and so I'm probably not the best person to judge or rate it. But I wish you every success with it!


message 5: by Lee (new)

Lee Holz Claude wrote: "In spite of that DNF shelf, I continue to be impressed by the amount of reading you do, particularly considering that you are also a full time writer! I find that I can't read when I'm in the middl..."

Thank you for your kind words. I take it that you didn't rate or review The Abomination Assignment because, as you say, you're really not into thrillers, and I appreciate you're not doing so. You might find my Impediments, a coming of age story set largely in 1950s Switzerland, more to your taste.


message 6: by Claude (new)

Claude Forthomme Lee wrote: "Claude wrote: "In spite of that DNF shelf, I continue to be impressed by the amount of reading you do, particularly considering that you are also a full time writer! I find that I can't read when I..."

Yes, I'd definitely like to review one of your books - shall look up Impediments!


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