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What book have you tried to read but just didn't get it?
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Sara
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Apr 09, 2014 08:35AM

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I paid for the darn thing so I did finish it, but it wasn't for me. It's supposed to be humorous and lighthearted... I guess I'm broken because I certainly didn't lol like everyone else.



Hey, at least you tried! I think fashions in fiction and writing, and the general zeitgeist outside the book, change so much over time it's really not surprising some of them are hard to read.

I can see your points though. Faulkner's style is not an easy read, nor will it be popular for everyone. Hemingway is very bare bones and I actually kind of agree with you about the characters. I don't hate them, but a lot of them are vanilla. I respect your opinions


I was just about to post something in the same vein. Ugh, he was such a jerk. But I suppose it wouldn't have worked if he was just a nice kid.

One book with a similar "anti-hero" plot line that I loved was Less than Zero by Bret Easton Ellis. That book was great and didn't come across as so spoiled and whiny.

Ugh, Wuthering Heights really pissed me off. The characters were just so crazy. I can't accurately judge Hemingway though, cause the only thing I read by him was The Old Man and the Sea, and it was definitely not entertaining at the time for 15-year-old me.

I didn't get past the first book either. For some reason I had a really hard time picturing what was being described. The descriptions seemed to go on forever and I just couldn't see clearly. It didn't inspire me to keep going.

I tried Jane Austen. I like the movies based on her books but I couldn't get through the books.

I loved the movie. How closely did it follow the book?

I've restarted that book half a dozen time but never could finish it. It's not a bad book, but I guess I was not up for 'epic' quests. I got tired of the 'go somewhere, fight. Move somewhere else, fight. Move again, fight. It's like it was the only story.
Maybe I was just not in the mood for that kind of book. I know many people loved that series.

Lately: Fifty Shades of Grey. Got about 20 pages in, the female lead does a face plant and I was out. Slap stick comedy is not my idea of erotica.

I loved the movie. How closely did it follow..."
Some of the individual stories followed the book fairly closely and others like the Korean future segment and the Tom Hanks/Halle Berry Post Apocalyptic future segment were very different story wise but the underlining theme was the same. I loved both versions.


You're probably not missing anything crucial with that one... :-)
But Lily and her Jane Austen aversion, tsk tsk... Maybe you'd have better luck with [book:Pr..."
Hah, I own that one ;)




Yeah it was a tough read. I did finish it and overall I enjoyed it but it took me quite a while!


Haha, speaking of...Easy was one that everyone loved and I couldn't finish. The girl narrowly escapes a rape, and literally 20 pages later is whining about not getting laid. Um, I'm sorry, but talk about trivializing an assault! Sensitive topic for me, but, geez.
I also don't really 'get' most of the older romance novels where the women are helpless and the guys are jerks. The genre got a lot better for a while, but I think it's swinging back the other way again.
I'm a bit of a bad guy here(please don't judge!), I once agreed to read this womens's self published book on Shakespeare in another group. Started it but could not get into it and never finished. Never told the woman either :/ I'm sure she forgot all about me reading it as she has plenty of reviews already.
Also did it with a steampunk book about Gods and an Irish demon like book. After those incidents I told myself I will never not finish a book to that degree and will make sure it's something I know I'll enjoy.
Also did it with a steampunk book about Gods and an Irish demon like book. After those incidents I told myself I will never not finish a book to that degree and will make sure it's something I know I'll enjoy.

I read this book and another by Scott O Dell. I just. don't. like."
Oh wow, I remember that book! Taking me back to my childhood there :)

Heck, all the stories seemed to be the same thing. Always a woman forcing a man (slave) to make love to her. Even the words used were practically the same, only the name, places, and status changed. I confess; I didn't read far into the books. I knew they would not be 4-5 stars. The stories were all 'tell' and no 'show'. I couldn't force myself to read them.
There are so many SP authors that are worthy of my time. Why waste it on something I already knew I wouldn't like?

And then, we wonder why rape victims are so often told "oh come on, admit it: you wanted it and you liked it" (or varying versions of the same crap). -_-
Almost any "classic," with the exception of Poe, Kipling, Doyle... You know, all the ones the literary snobs don't consider part of the club. Can't get to sleep? Reading three pages of Dickens ought to take care of that. And reading three pages of any of the Bronte sisters makes suicide look attractive. I have the reading tastes of a ten-year old boy, and refuse to apologize for it; if it doesn't put some excitement in my life that I can't get by walking out the door, it's a waste of ink and paper.

I read this book and another by Scott O Dell. I just. don't. like."
Oh wow, I remember that book! Taking me back to my ..."
Me too! I remember loving it way back when. Maybe I should read it again to see if it still holds up.

To me, Patricia Highsmith is clasic. Austen is a cure for insomnia by not finishing the books.

I think the definition does change...The Road, Catcher in the Rye, Salinger, Orwell, and some others written in the mid 1990s are now classics. Anything that has stood the test of time for over 50 years or so seems to go in the canon as a classic.

So... yay for the survival of the novel!

I read this book and another by Scott O Dell. I just. don't. like."
Awww....I loved that when I was a kid.
Some that people will probably throw garbage at me for saying I just didn't get the hype...





*covers head and ducks*

On the topic of reading someone elses manuscript and finding it lacking, I once offered to read one because both myself and the character where high functioning autistic. I almost cried. :-(
I'd never attempt to read the Lord of the Rings books. You'd have to pay me and even then I cannot guarantee I wouldn't throw them at you.



Totally agree. I found them to be the most boring books that I had to read in high school. I cliffnoted those books.

I also quit the series:


I couldn't get past the first chapter of 50 Shades. It just didn't make sense. Okay, wait, he has grey eyes (grey written in UK English when it's supposed to be an American setting), WITH copper coloured hair (UK spelling again) actually ON his grey tie? What, glued on...?
And since this thread is being renewed, I'll add Heartsick by Chelsea Cain. Worse book I tried to read since 50 Shades. Hmm, probably not a coincidence. I couldn't make it past 10 pages.


I flipped through it in a Walmart when it first hit the mass market shelves. James lost me at "butt plugs". (Says is bimbo voice: "Oooooo, what's that?" Answers in Johnny Bravo voice: "Those, my dear, are butt plugs.")

I read all that stuff as a teen (i was so gothe) and actually liked falkner and hemingway. O_O but would i praise them now? uh, no. I found my battered old copy of 'as i lay dying' and tried to go through the first chapter. i thought WTF WAS I ON AS A TEEN?

My husband said it was his favorite as a boy. I hadn't read it so I gave it a try. I love classics like Catcher in the Rye, Gatsby, Mockingbird. But I just couldn't get into Flies. No idea why. I kept sitting there, chapter after chapter wondering why I still reading it.

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