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Anti-suggestion: Do NOT read these books!

I tried Historian, history and vamps in one read, what could be fin..."
I have to second you on that one. There are a few books on here that I also loved. Some are very complex and not simple reading. So I can understand why many do not like them. I am not one to knock down books because my views are different from others. And I like wide range of genres.Each book is unique and reaches each individual differently.

Rachel wrote: "


My sister loves this serie..."
Wow, I'm surprised you didn't like the Lioness Rampant series. I love Tamora Pierce. I think her books are perfect for people going through the transition from child to teenager. I have been reading her books since I was about 13/14 years old, and I still love them. Although, everyone has a different taste in books. So, I understand that you don't like them.




Wow, I'm surprised you didn't like the Lioness Rampant series. I love Tamora Pierce. I think her books are perfect for people going through the transition from child to teenager. I have been reading her books since I was about 13/14 years old, and I still love them. Although, everyone has a different taste in books. So, I understand that you don't like them.

I LOVED The Hunger Games Triology though. I think it's one of the more well developed young adult books. It took me awhile to digest the third book; I originally felt disappointed, but the more I thought about it the more I think Collins ended it well.
I also really enjoyed The Historian. I found the place descriptions to be beautiful and vivid - Istanbul has bumped up on my list of places I want to get to! However, I can see how others may find this book a bit slow.





It's both nasty and boring.
[spoilers removed]"
LOL The name sounds kinda nasty :)

I just finished The Long Quiche Goodbye. I did finish it but unfortunately didn't enjoy it and won't be reading the next in the series. If I could I would have reached through my nook screen and smacked the main character. She was annoying and too emotional. Also, rather juvenile when it came to the guy she was all gaga over. I actually liked the cop investigating the murder who had gone to school with her. But I ended up thinking he was too good for her. And the whole thing with her best friend was over the top. Sure there was something that the best friend wasn't ready to tell her but the friend's whole behavior, avoidance and not speaking to her, was IMO borderline psycho. There's actually more stuff but I don't want to go on and on. This is a rarity I'm usually not this disappointed in a book.

It read like an entire novel of filler. Descriptions are great unless they are overdone. Far too many metaphors as well. I didn't even finish this one.

Warlock Rock by Christopher Stasheff (painfully not funny)
Still Life by A.S. Byatt (bland compared to Possession)

Baxter Clare Trautman, The River Within
Web site: http://baxterclare.com
Blog: http://baxterclare.com/blog

I absolutely, positively *hated* [book:The Catcher ..."
Personally, I think "Catcher in the Rye" just didn't age gracefully. Perhaps it was 'quite rebellious' for the time it was written but now it just seems crummy?

I just couldn't get into this book at all. Found the storyline and characters unbelievable even for fantasy/romance.

Lucky T by Kate Brian. This was just AWFUL. I have my review for it on my page; only book thus far I've given a one star to and have been able to find NOTHING redeeming of it at all. It was just horrible.
Another book I haven't rated on GoodReads yet; a book called "The Way Home". It was terrible and the story made absolutely no sense. It was like trying to make Twilight Zone into a book, except it was awful and nonsensical to a point where the reader couldn't even comprehend anything happening. I think a character died, but I'm not even sure because the writing was trying to be a huge riddle, except there was no answer.





I am number4 was SUCH A DISSAPOINTMENT! Read it BEFORE the movie, and you know Urban fantasy: they came from another place and try to blend in. But it never works. But this time, Pittacus Lore wrote a story about a boy who succeesfully blend in, and THIS IS JUST NOT INTERESTING!!! A prove that the line between urban fantasy to reality is so damn thin!





I tried Historian, history and vamps in one read, what could be fin..."
I'm afraid I have to agree with Helen, when i read the back cover of The Historian I though i was going to love it. Turned out to be great if you wanted long descriptions of historical settings. Bit of a let down if you were expecting the historical vampire romp advertised.

The examples you provided of just plain bad grammar made me laugh though. "We're moving and that's finale." That's the sort of mistake a second grader would make! It astonishes me how some books get published!

http://www.smashwords.com/books/view/... that code is on the page, Smashword's July promotion. This is my main issue with self-publication. I mean, I'm all for it, believe in yourself and all that jazz. But come on! I was laughing at the story for all the wrong reasons.


No, you're not the only one!


I tried Historian, history and vamps in one read, what could be finer? I found ..."
I adore The Historian. It's one of my favorite books.

That's what I like about this group so far. We can all say what we like or don't like and no one gets upset over it. We can all agree to disagree.



Okay, I know everyone is usually all like, "Oh this book is SO great, everybody loves it, it's totally heartbreaking and beautiful", but I'm reading it right now, and I don't see any of it. It's not well written, it's too fast, not enough development, skippy scenes/writing, and just plain bad. At this point, I wouldn't recommend it to anybody, so I'm going to put it on this anti-list.

@Thalia: Really? All I've heard about it is how amazing it is. I can't say I'm surprised though, a lot of those highly praised books tend to turn out kind of bad


I hate this book. The cover is awesome but man does the story suck. I thought the main character, Nora, was a complete idiot. I mean when someone scares you to the point that you think they might want to kill you, do you allow yourself excess contact? NO Do you let them into your house? NO! Not to mention the fact that the main guy is named Patch...PATCH! *bangs head on desk* How utterly ridiculous.
A lot of people love this book though, but obviously it just wasn't for me at all.






WHATT??!!?? I LOVEE THE SONG OF THE LIONESS series! THERE'S ADVENTURE AND IT PROVES THAT A GIRL CAN BE AS STRONG AS ANY OTHER MALE. <3

If you would like to talk about why you like that series, why don't you start a discussion about it?

I enjoyed The Hitchhiker's Guide, but I wouldn't recommend at all any past the second in the series. I recently read the second and just felt as if it was trying to hard to compete with the first. The first was original, and kind of fun because of it's originality, but taking the story further than that just screamed "trying too hard". In my opinion anyway.
One I couldn't get in to at all was P.S. I Love You by Cecelia Ahern. I just felt that the plot was way too slow and it didn't move along at all. The idea was nice, and I've seen the movie which I thought was quite good, but I wouldn't bother reading it!

Guilty Pleasures by Laurell K. Hamilton - very badly written (about 50 similes too many), the main character was flat and irritating and it was lacking greatly in romance for a paranormal romance book. I do hear that the others are better but I'm not trying one anytime soon.
The Demon's Lexicon and The Demon's Covenant by Sarah Rees Brennan - The first book was boring but the twist at the end was interesting enough to try the next one. Epic Fail, they both sucked.
Mind Games by Carolyn Crane - I know that some people loved this book but I don't get way. The main character is a super hero who's power is hypochondria!!! Really? She spends most the book freaking out about being sick, in detail. I almost became a hypochondriac after this book.

I read it years ago because my daughters kept quoting from it. I thought it was okay. However, I simply don't like to read stories about the world ending. I find it depressing, but that's just me.

P.S. I Love You I actually really enjoyed. However, I have not been thrilled with any of her other books. I thought Love, Rosie was rather flat.
Then I tried A Place Called Here and If You Could See Me Now because they both sounded interesting and different (mixing realistic fiction with low fantasy), but I didn't think either of them worked very well. However, in fairness to Ahern, I think these kind of books can be very difficult to write because you need people to buy into these fantastical events happening in their world. Some creators can make you completely buy into it (has anyone seen the movie "Stranger Than Fiction"? I don't know what it was, but for some reason I completely went along with the idea that an author was controlling this guys life), but I couldn't buy into Ahern's world. I thought the only redeeming factor for If You Could See Me Now was the fact that nothing much changed for the narrator except for her outlook on life, which kind of changed everything, and I thought that was refreshing.





I've never tried to read any of her other work, and unfortunately after my failed attempt at P.S. I Love You, I probably won't. I enjoyed the movie, but felt that in written form it was slow and took too long to get moving. As a side, I loved the movie Stranger Than Fiction!



Personally Hitchhikers Guide is one of my absolute favourite books but I have to agree with you Trina, the second one didn't have the same originality and didn't grab me as much. I couldn't finish it cos it just didn't interest me.

I did manage to get through the second one, but I doubt I'll bother with the rest. It's kind of like way too much of a good thing, it just gets spoiled.

LOTR, Hobbit, all of Maguire's books, & The Historian I have read & enjoyed. I've also read Beloved & Gatsby. I own The Historian, & Wicked.
It tickles me that several people have mentioned the Twilight series. Yeah, I read it too, & yeah, I couldn't agree more. it's ridiculously stupid, see through & utterly predictable. Give me HP any day.
I would add anything by Salman Rushdie. He's so awful that I can't even remember the name of the first book of his I read, or rather, attempted to read. I just hacked my way through The Satanic Verses simply because I wondered what all the hype was about the book. Weird, very weird. I found nothing redeeming about it. Maybe it's not him, maybe it's me. I'm not a part of those cultures, & I just didn't "get" it.
Another book I would add is Slaughterhouse Five, yet another classic. I detest war stories anyway, & this one with the time travel element was just a little too out there for my taste. BUT, if you like time travel & war stories, read it!
Everyone who knows me knows I absolutely adore Hemingway, I've read everything he's ever written, & as many biographies/autobiographies, etc that I can get my hands on. However, 2 of his classics I simply couldn't wrap my head around, no surprise, they were both war stories, For Whom the Bell Tolls, & Farewell to Arms. They were just too DRY.
2 more classics I'd add would be War & Peace, & Le Miserables. I've attempted them several times, ditched them several times, finally ended up determined to finish them, & skimmed the parts I thought were too long winded or boring.

I don't understand the Twilight hate. Yeah, it's not Harry Potter, but it doesn't have to be. I wish everybody would stop comparing the two of them; they're not supposed to be alike.
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I tried Historian, history and vamps in one read, what could be finer? I found ..."
I agree there are a lot of great books here (by my opinion of course) I loved a good deal of them, including The Historian. It's one of my favorites actually. It's so funny how people's tastes in books are so different at times.