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When do you decide to stop reading a particular book?
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I read a lot and if a book doesn't grab me or give me something to care about, I am more than happy to move on to the next one. I usually give a book at least 50 pages, but I have been known to bail within the first 5 pages. Sometimes you can just tell if a book is not for you.
If a book is assigned reading, such as for book club, I usually endure because I feel there is value in effort. I want to contribute to the discussion and be able to articulate why I didn't like the book. I have managed to complete a number of books I didn't like except for Atonement which was dreadful in so many different ways (including being full of awful people) I couldn't bear to read another page.
Occasionally, however, a book has turned out to be worth the effort. An example of one that started very slowly was Wolf Hall. I'm not going to lie, that book was WORK and in nearly every other situation I would have quit. But I had suggested it to the book group so I soldiered on. In the end I was truly glad I had stuck with it. I now consider it one of the greatest works of English literature out there. (Not everyone in the group agreed, but I think they forgive me.)
If a book is assigned reading, such as for book club, I usually endure because I feel there is value in effort. I want to contribute to the discussion and be able to articulate why I didn't like the book. I have managed to complete a number of books I didn't like except for Atonement which was dreadful in so many different ways (including being full of awful people) I couldn't bear to read another page.
Occasionally, however, a book has turned out to be worth the effort. An example of one that started very slowly was Wolf Hall. I'm not going to lie, that book was WORK and in nearly every other situation I would have quit. But I had suggested it to the book group so I soldiered on. In the end I was truly glad I had stuck with it. I now consider it one of the greatest works of English literature out there. (Not everyone in the group agreed, but I think they forgive me.)
I generally go about 50 pages into a book to see how I feel about it, if I find myself having to read the same page multiple times and still find myself glossing over it I move on. My reading list is much to long to put time and effort into books that I don't enjoy.

For my own pleasure, if it's not a book that draws and keeps my attention well by, say, 50-100 pages, I'll get something else. There just aren't enough waking hours to read all the things I want to read, so why waste time reading things that don't interest me?

Wolf Hall? I keep thinking I read that. I'll have to look at it and see.

The other book I gave up on was the alternative history "Hitler's War," by Harry Turtledove. It had a great premise--what if Neville Chamberlain refused to sign the Munich Accords in 1938, prompting Germany to start the war a year early--but the huge cast of characters and settings got too hard to follow. To be sure, the book is well-researched and very detailed. However, the plot jumped between different groups of characters all over Europe. I frequently had to stop and ask myself, "Now, who are these people and what are they doing?" and flipping back through the pages to find out what was happening to them the last time they appeared in the story a hundred pages before. For all its good points, reading it was an effort, not an enjoyment.


Interesting to hear that other folks will quit a book because they don't like the characters. I'm not sure I've ever done that (case in point: Hausfrau). Usually it's writing or plot issues that drive me away. Or in the case of audiobooks, an annoying narrator.


That's what I tell myself anyway. When I was younger I read every book all the way through. Now I read until I can't take it anymore, e.g. bored, fed up with the style, incredulous about the plot or world development, or just tired of the content, I'll give it up where ever that point is. I have better things to do than to read books that don't hold my interest. Like read better books. I think we do our selves a disservice by forcing ourselves to read books that don't edify us in some way, even if they are considered in a good light elsewhere. Even if it is a book club book and I don't like it I don't feel obligated to finish it.

I also keep in mind that sometimes it's just the wrong time. I started and dropped "Steppenwolf" twice. The third time, I couldn't put it down.
Chip wrote: "I'm sure everyone has seen the bumper sticker/T-shirt/book bag slogan - "So many books, so little time." I keep that in mind when I start considering giving up on a book. When my desire to read ano..."
You know, I think I like this method best!
You know, I think I like this method best!
In the past, I would plow through the book to make it to the bitter end but I'm now thinking about just putting the book down if it doesn't do anything for me. Why bother suffering through a book when reading is supposed to be enjoyable? However, the question is how much time should I have the book for it to catch my interest?
Looking forward to other people's thoughts.