Books I Loathed discussion
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authors you keep reading even though you have no idea why
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Neil
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Mar 19, 2008 02:41PM

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And sadly, Anne Rice, from Vampire to Belinda to Beauty to Jesus. I wish I'd stopped after the Mayfair witch book. It's been downhill for me ever since.
And I'm also one of those hapless Laurell K. Hamilton readers. I keep hoping that Anita will step out of the shower one day and realize that all the books after Obsidian Butterfly were just a dream.




And btw - I LOVE Susan and Spenser. And Hawk? How can you go wrong?

I keep wondering when Parker will let Susan eat more than one-half of a club sandwich, eaten tiny bite by tiny bite, layer by layer, during half an hour of tedious, bird-like picking.
For Christ's sake, let her have something to eat!
Not to mention that Spenser must be 70 at this point, and the whole thing has just gotten weird and icky.

Someone please tell high school teachers that the Lords of Discipline & Prince of Tides are terrible books. Particularly if you are a woman. You live in the South. You eat food. You breathe air.






although i'm sure eventually i'll give in and give him another try.



Every time I start another Patricia Cornwell (she is pretty popular on this thread), I remember why I promise each time not to waste my money or time.
Ditto for John Glatt, Aphrodite Jones, Joseph Wambaugh (misogynist)(how can I forget that?).
I gave up on John Irving years ago. Setting Free the Bears, 158 Pound Marriage I loved. Garp I thought was okay. The rest, drivel.
I did that for Robert Olen Butler for a while too.
I read a great book and I just keep reading hoping I find another. Do the same thing with music.


My problem author is Niel Gaiman. Every time, I read his novels I look for the pictures. I did like Anansi Boys, but I listened to the audio and maybe that made the difference. I was stocking cloths at a department store, so I didn't have time to wonder where all the pictures were...

I tried to read A Portrait of the Artist by James Joyce 8,000 times and finally gave up.




I would like to add Dan Brown, who's merely had a mention here: all the leads are taller, smarter, more charming and more attractive than everyone else...and they're humbler! Gosh, isn't that a coincidence. Makes me meanly wonder if Mr. Brown is, in fact, not very tall and not really very popular. He'd better pull it together, because he's already lost this reader.

I went through this too, I read Rules of Attraction (love it) went for Less than Zero and kept waiting for something to happen. I dropped Ellis...

AHHH, I just picked up Shampoo Planet and am struggling to finish. I added like four of his books to my to read list...


And yet I have all ready pre-ordered the latest installment. *sigh*

I have to agree with you here on Merry Gentry (havent read Anita Blake). I only keep reading because I love the mythology so much.
A friend of mine (who will never admit to disliking anything about a book) defends it by saying 'oh its because Merry is a fertility goddess'. Pfft, that doesnt make it any less ridiculous and obnoxious.

A friend of mine (who will never admit to disliking anything about a book) defends it by saying 'oh its because Merry is a fertility goddess'. Pfft, that doesnt make it any less ridiculous and obnoxious.
"
Yeah, I truely enjoy the non-sex scenes. In both series. I love the characters and the situations. Her writing is wonderful. I just wish she wouldn't through in so much sex this and sex that. Merry is a fertility goddess, and Anita feeds off of sex. So, a small amount is expected really. But when the last couple books have nothing else but, I get a bit turned off honestly. I'd rather see more action, not that sort of action.


Ikr it's probably more than 90% sex. And then when some kind of exciting drama starts happening, it usually ends in sex. *sigh* I keep going but it truly is tiring.
Another thing that bothers me about the Merry books is that most of them seem to occur over a couple of days. I feel like Im watching some kind of 24/7 surveillance camera and nobody knows how to fast forward it. Is it that way in the Anita books, or not?


Oh god, and at the end of Swallowing Darkness, Merry had like 6 dads for her babies or something :| it was such a copout


It was a lot like the way that Stephenie Meyer made everybody happy at the end of Breaking Dawn >_> so anticlimactic


I really disliked all the books, but I kept reading them to see if they were get better....they didnt. Breaking Dawn was just a big joke.
I dont mind if characters get a happy ending, but not if the author builds it up like OMGEVERYBODYISGOINGTODIE!!!!1!!!shiftone!!! beforehand >_>

I dont mind if characters get a happy ending, but not if the author builds it up like OMGEVERYBODYISGOINGTODIE!!!!1!!!shiftone!!! beforehand >_>"
That is too funny!

meaningless they were.
Nearly 40 years later, its James Patterson. I can't stand his ridiculously short chapters and the way he chops up his stories, but he comes up with good plots early on and gets me hooked.
Most recently, I read Dave Eggers first book--I hated it after about 3 pages, but all the rave reviews I saw kept me going until the end. It seemed like it had promise--but just never really did it for me.



Books mentioned in this topic
Bag of Bones (other topics)The Eyes of the Dragon (other topics)
Men in Kilts (other topics)
Authors mentioned in this topic
Karen Marie Moning (other topics)Kerrelyn Sparks (other topics)