The Sword and Laser discussion
The Lem Challenge
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I lemmed the Hobbit for no good reason really, but I feel particularly bad about now because I bagged the movie out for being so different. So I will finish the Hobbit, I hadn't read it like I thought and as a classic it deserves to be read.


I'm reading Dracula too, but not for my Lem. What a coincidence!

It took me a while to get to this book. I guess it's because I really enjoyed the movie and most of the time book is waaaay better :)
I try not to lem, I just put aside for another day.
I really want to go back to The Liveship Traders, I didn't actually lem it, I burn out easily when im reading a lot of books in the same world and I was finding it a bit long and slow even though the writing was very good, so I would like to return to that.
I really want to go back to The Liveship Traders, I didn't actually lem it, I burn out easily when im reading a lot of books in the same world and I was finding it a bit long and slow even though the writing was very good, so I would like to return to that.

The question is, for the purpose of this challenge, is "to Lem" to merely put down a book after having got part way into it? or is it to put it down having decided not to finish it?
If it's the later then there are hardly any books I've ever Lemmed. If the former I have lots to choose from :)
I did give up on Hyperion once I'd realised I wasn't going to complete it for even the tail end of the group discussion.


Not to discourage you from revisiting a book you once lemmed (how do you spell the past tense of Lem?), but I wonder if it's a different thing to put down a book that you're just not in the mood for, versus deciding that you won't finish a book, and you don't care if you ever do.



I'm with you on that, only I usually give up at about 20-30%
But there are some books that are good, only the writing style doesn't fit me - these I tend to read in parts with some 'breaks' for other books :)

Anyone else?

I'm happier for having done it, but then I did find some gems among those books.


Go for it.




Chronicles of Thomas Covenant (the first book) was one of the few books I Lemmed. Usually I try at least to skim through the book I do not like to see if it has any redeeming features.

One book I've tried and quit on many times is Catch-22. I cannot read that book to save my life.


A few years ago I started on the Dune prequel books by Brian Herbert. I didn't much like Kevin Anderson's work but I loved everything Frank Herbert wrote so I wanted to try them. I was part way through the 2nd one and was complaining to a friend when he asked me why. His opinion is that life is too short to read bad books (bad being a subjective evaluation). I agree with Robert that not every book will be written for every person and it's okay to stop if you don't enjoy it. I put them aside and have loved everything I've read since.
So why should I go back and try to finish something I've LEMed? (I also LEMed Frankstein when I was on a classics kick)
I loved Catch-22. I've also read all of Erikson's Malazan books of the fallen (except the last 2, need to get them on my list). I loved the "Chain of Dogs" in the 2nd one and reread that book at least twice. The Hobbit was great but I can understand why they might get LEMed. Another friend of mine LEMed LotR back in his teenage years during the extensive part about who hobbits are at the beginning.

Read whatever you want. I just know a lot of people finish the book of the month early, so why not throw out a challenge for those who are interested?
I promise that if you don't want to take part in this that I will not remote detonate the dye pack I planted in your wall safe or give the code word for your cat to bite your toe.

Mr Noah wrote: "I've missed out on a lot of great books because they weren't "my type."
I can see what you are both saying. But you are talking more not starting books at all, and I thought we were talking about finishing books we started and gave up on. Have either of you finished a book you wanted to (or actually did) give up on halfway in and ended up liking it in the end?


Does anybody else find themselves using the word "Lem" in other forums and then have to explain it to suddenly silent forums?


But I suspect that's not really 'Lemming' in the strict sense of "I hate this book and I want to hurl it at a wall" ;)

I know everyone generally loves it, but reading it on my Kindle, I found myself confused and tired of it. It felt just soo long to make any kind of progress. I hope that I can find the enjoyment in it that others have.

Actually that is a really good point. So good in fact that next time I want to bail on a book and never look back I will give that a try first.


If it was the last book on earth, I'd give up reading.

I couldn't agree more Kate. I read the Hobbit when I was very young and didn't like it then. Rereading it this time I think I let that colour my opinion and gave up far too early because I was distracted by other books over a busy time of year. Now I feel ready to give it another go with a more open mind.

I brought The Lies of Locke Lamora with me to work this time so I am going to try to finish that again after finishing The Daylight War. Can't say why I didn't get into Lamora. Something else came up and I never went back to it. Probably hadn't even finished the first chapter yet to even get me hooked.
I keep going back to Gardens of the Moon (this one i have actually gotten a fair ways into) but I keep lemming it when he introduces an entire new set of characters in the middle of the book. I just can't bring myself to care about these new ones, especially when the old ones just got interesting. Makes me feel like its going to be another Jordan, Goodkind and Martin. Couple interesting characters being squeezed out of the pages by completely useless filler characters.
Kp wrote: "I keep going back to Gardens of the Moon (this one i have actually gotten a fair ways into) but I keep lemming it when he introduces an entire new set of characters in the middle of the book. I just can't bring myself to care about these new ones, especially when the old ones just got interesting. Makes me feel like its going to be another Jordan, Goodkind and Martin. Couple interesting characters being squeezed out of the pages by completely useless filler characters. ."
Gardens of the Moon is definitely a hard read, but I've found it very rewarding by the end. I think the group I'm reading with helps a lot.
I didn't have too many issues with Gardens of the Moon, but at the start of Deadhouse Gates it's almost an entirely new cast of characters, with only 4 people overlapping from the previous book so far.
Gardens of the Moon is definitely a hard read, but I've found it very rewarding by the end. I think the group I'm reading with helps a lot.
I didn't have too many issues with Gardens of the Moon, but at the start of Deadhouse Gates it's almost an entirely new cast of characters, with only 4 people overlapping from the previous book so far.

Too late, the cat (Roberta Openheimer Rodriguez, brilliant cat physicist and inventor of the zombie nuke, Bob for short) already does.
;-P

At the moment, for every new book I read, I have to finish one of the ones I have started. It's going pretty well and the pile of abandoned books is shrinking. For example I just finished Cloud Atlas which I put down because I was finding it difficult to read. But I am glad I finished it and now I can reward myself with a new book.

The characters/settings tend to repeat every second book, so you'll return to Genabackis in book 3. There are lots of Malazan wikis/websites to help you out if you're confused; the Malazans have a penchant for nicknames so you may find that characters with different names end up being the same person ;-) .
Erikson is not an author that leads the reader around by the hand; you will have to do some work, but the more effort (ie. careful reading) you put into the stories, the more you'll get out of them. For me, the Malazan books are matchless ... but I do understand how some people give up in frustration.

These characters are probably important in the end but after five books I wanna read about Rand! Not some silly new character with little relevence to the overall story. Most of my lems are due to a story having too many main characters.

The first portion of that book/series was incredibly slow for me too. Only after he gets dropped in the fantasy world did it begin to hold my interest, although I still did not like Covenant as a character. Donaldson seems to have a soft spot for whiny protagonists (I'm looking at you Linden Avery) ;-)

These characters are probably important in the end but after five books I wanna read about Rand! "
That would be book 10Crossroads of Twilight What some would consider the low point of the series. Book 11 kicked it back in gear in a big way and I think Jordan got his groove back. Of course then Jordan passed away and Sanderson took over with books 12-14.
Mark wrote: "The characters/settings tend to repeat every second book, so you'll return to Genabackis in book 3. There are lots of Malazan wikis/websites to help you out if you're confused"
Like I said, I'm reading it with a group, many of which have read it before so I have plenty of help.
Still didn't make it any less confusing when I read it myself.
Like I said, I'm reading it with a group, many of which have read it before so I have plenty of help.
Still didn't make it any less confusing when I read it myself.
Books mentioned in this topic
Crossroads of Twilight (other topics)Gardens of the Moon (other topics)
Deadhouse Gates (other topics)
Gardens of the Moon (other topics)
Prince of Thorns (other topics)
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Motivated by my success in reading it, I then decided to finish Home Fires, which had been in my "Lem" pile for a while. Again, I wasn't a huge fan, but I felt good about completing it.
So, what's the point? I'm so glad you asked! I'd like to challenge each S&L reader to read one book that they have pulled a "Lem" on in the past.
If you accept, please post which book you will tackle and why you gave up the first time around. As a sign of good faith I pledge to finish Hyperion. I think I gave up on because it was just so long and complicated, but I'm ready to take it down. If I can survive Lem, I can do anything!