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What is the worst book you have wasted your time on and why?
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Mixofsunandcloud
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Jul 28, 2013 03:16PM

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Oh, I see why there's a bad association for you. I was lucky to have professors embrace other opinions about plays, novels, poems, etc., but my husband and a friend had a similar experience in school and to this day my husband doesn't like to analyze works.

The second worst book I've ever read was Relentless. A completely self indulgent pile of shite that absolutely insulted my intelligence as a reader.


My eyes were on the pages, and the pages turned. I finished it. But I haven't a clue what it was about, why I stuck with it or -- most of all -- how this pile of self-indulgent steaming dung found its way to a publisher.

I actually liked Moby Dick -- but only as an audiobook. Bits like the "The Sermon" truly came alive via spoken voice...though I must admit my mind wandered through all the tedious meanderings about types of whales, types of ships, and such things.
I tried reading Moby Dick when I was a teenager. I went through a faze of reading classics. Most I loved, some not so much. I feel I should try it one more time now that I'm older to see if I appreciate it more... or not. The first time I tried to read Frankenstein (same time) I hated it. But I read it a year ago and I now consider it one of the best books ever written.

..."
Sad to say, your Av reminded me of a series that gave me the exact opposite experience. Quite liked the first six Dragonlance™ books when I first read them as a Freshman in college. (Yeah, I'm that old.) Detested them when I tried to re-read them a few years ago.
When I hit some passage about a silver-haired elf-queen bathing in a silvery spring under a silver moon my eyes came very close to permanently crossing. Not sure why writing of that sort bothers me now, but didn't bother me then, but it didn't and now it does. Go figure.
Would I consider them a bunch o' books I wasted my time upon? Definitely maybe.
Funny - I was just thinking I need to change that. I had Alice in Wonderland and got tired of looking at it. I know what you mean though. Dragonlance was my first love and will always have a place in my heart but its definitely a series you need to read a youth to enjoy. I can still enjoy it somewhat, and I will always adore Raistlin, but I can never enjoy it as I did before. You know?


A friend and I still get giggles about that "Man on hill, saving face," line. Though in all honesty I can't remember if it is only in the book, only in the TV movie, or in both.

To my mind, King was at his absolute worst with
Rose Madder. I think after finishing that one I stayed away from him for five or so years.

Traci, that is so funny! I went through a classics phase as a teenager too, and I just loved Frankenstein and Dracula. I recently re-read both (within the last year or two), and Dracula held up for me but Frankenstein did not. On this re-read I wondered what I ever liked about it and ended up dropping my rating from 5 stars to 3.


450ish pages of a guy walking in darkness and eating mushrooms while meeting people with weird names that will die in 3 pages. yep I just told you the whole plot.


I forced myself to read it because I really love some of Palahniuk's other books, but this one was just terrible and pointless. I hated every character, and it got a bit too graphic for my tastes too.



It's a self-published work, and before you anybody rolls their eyes, I've found a lot of really great novels that have been self-published, even if maybe they needed an extra round (or two) of editing.
Having said that, this book is not one of those. The author just can't write. Period.
But, I was given it as a review copy, and that's why I'm trying to slog through it to the end so I can give a review of 100% of the work. Honestly, I'm sticking with it because I'd like to find just one redeeming quality of the book so the whole review won't be negative, but it's not looking that way.

My mom bought me Twilight too. The salesperson told her it was the "next Harry Potter" and my mom figured because I love fantasy so much that I would love it. Yeah. Not so much. Not the worst I've read. But definitely not Harry Potter.

Misty I like the rusty nails though,I can totally agree.






I think the simple fact you bought it from the dollar store should have been your red flag. I mean maybe theres rare gems of books in dollar stores but highly unlikely.

Admittedly, she has suggested that this is the end of at least the Vampire Chronicles, but this book was so unenjoyable for me that it has basically coloured all of my memories of the previous books. I cannot read them (even the ones that are good) without remembering how everything ends in one big mess of a story. I'm not usually overly critical but this book really, really made me feel like I'd completely wasted my time.


I found Anne hit her stride when she got successful. I enjoyed her books before Queen of the Damned. I gave up after Tale of the Body Thief and the Witching Hour (I hated the latter with a passion).


I love Stephen King, and I know many HA members hate him; so we are even.
Not sure what it is about Barker, but I just cannot like his stuff... i just don't get it, i guess. Mister B. Gone was the last straw. I literally threw the book against the wall more than once. When i got to the end, i almost burned that book in the fireplace... truly.



I would have to agree with you there. But I persisted, if only because I kept hoping she would improve. Blood Canticle made it clear I'd wasted my time.

There are some other books I couldn't even bother finishing but as I can't recall them, I can't list them.
Bitterwood though was one. The first in a dragon series.

I agree! The first two or three I enjoyed, but couldn't bring myself to look at his others once I stumbled upon The Conqueror Worms.



The author is arrogant and full of his own self importance.
A book full of hearsay and downright disrespectful towards the people who cannot answer his accusations - the victims.
He then proceeded to state that 7/7 in London was a cover up but gave no basis to his comment at all.
At that point the book exited my train window and hopefully and deservedly it has decomposed.
I cannot write any more other than to say I think it is the lowest of the low to make profit from the tragic death of now over 3,000 people.



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