The Sword and Laser discussion
What's in the tree?




I'm usually ambivalent about epic fantasy, so it doesn't surprise me that The Name of the Wind didn't really do it for me despite it being one of the cornerstones of 21st century epic fantasy. And the flaws that I couldn't get past are mostly flaws of the whole genre rather than of the specific book.
OTOH, space opera has been front and center in my preferences for decades so something like Ancillary Justice hits me where I live.

For example, I read The Road and thought it was bad when it seemed to be universally acclaimed.
I think the best we can do is try to understand our own taste so we can better choose in the future.

There are a lot of trees in the forest. Many of them are just as good, smell as nice, have a great shape. Pick the one that fits for you and who cares what everyone else says.
I like Charlie Brown's little tree the best ;)
Books are very personal in how they speak to you as a reader. Some manage to speak to a lot of people. Some people don't have as much experience as readers of a genre and so anything impresses them. Some people have almost too much experience in a genre and so only something very different can impress them.
Too many factors here to let yourself feel like you are missing something. Your unique experience is the only thing that matters. Though you can of course learn a little something from each book you try, if only that certain things just don't appeal to you.

Sometimes it depends on what you've read before or how old you are or what race or religion or education level. And sometimes it's nothing you can put your finger on, you just know it's not your thing.
I think the important thing is to not feel bad about whether or not you agree with everyone else and just move on.
But one of the good things about a group like this or any book list is once in a while it's a good excuse to try something a little outside your normal sphere and maybe you'll hate it or maybe you'll find something new to love that you wouldn't have found otherwise.
Edit: Damn it. Michele posted her response while I was writing mine and she always seems to say what I think but in a more articulate manner.
It goes without saying that everyone's tastes are individual and no one should feel bad for not enjoying a particular book, but sometimes it is hard for me not to feel like I might have some deficiency as a reader when I'm the guy who can't see what's in the tree. The Name of the Wind is not a perfect example, because I did like it, but certainly not to the degree that many others did. I loved the writing, but wasn't crazy about the story or characters, and I wasn't inspired enough to read the follow ups (though I may at one point).
Sometimes the crowd around the tree can create nearly impossible expectations. Ancillary Justice has been mentioned here, which again is not a perfect example for me because I loved it, but I read it before catching on to most of the hype and the sweep of the major awards. Had I read it with more awareness of the hype, I'm sure I would have done so with a more critical eye and may not have enjoyed it as much.
I'm having a hard time thinking of other examples of books that received huge acclaim, but didn't really do it for me. I've seen a lot of people gushing over The Emperor's Blades, which I thought was merely above average fantasy at best. I don't think that book has quite enough hype to qualify though.
The Alchemist by Paulo Coehlo is a book that people seem to have a deep, almost religious reverence for, and I absolutely hated it. I don't know if that book qualifies either, because it does seem to be a bit divisive - there's a separate, smaller tree with a crowd of us looking up and hating it. That's an example of a book that I don't feel bad about not liking, despite all the acclaim - I'm pretty confident in my opinion of it as new age pseudo-spiritual drivel.
Sometimes the crowd around the tree can create nearly impossible expectations. Ancillary Justice has been mentioned here, which again is not a perfect example for me because I loved it, but I read it before catching on to most of the hype and the sweep of the major awards. Had I read it with more awareness of the hype, I'm sure I would have done so with a more critical eye and may not have enjoyed it as much.
I'm having a hard time thinking of other examples of books that received huge acclaim, but didn't really do it for me. I've seen a lot of people gushing over The Emperor's Blades, which I thought was merely above average fantasy at best. I don't think that book has quite enough hype to qualify though.
The Alchemist by Paulo Coehlo is a book that people seem to have a deep, almost religious reverence for, and I absolutely hated it. I don't know if that book qualifies either, because it does seem to be a bit divisive - there's a separate, smaller tree with a crowd of us looking up and hating it. That's an example of a book that I don't feel bad about not liking, despite all the acclaim - I'm pretty confident in my opinion of it as new age pseudo-spiritual drivel.

The Dragonriders of Pern. I don't really understand why so many people like those books. I could barely make it through the first one.
Personally I'm not bothered by it though. I like what I like and I don't spend much time on things I don't.
Personally I'm not bothered by it though. I like what I like and I don't spend much time on things I don't.

I felt the same way about this book, I finished it and could not see the appeal, I even had to check the cover a few times to make sure I hadn't some how picked up a different book then every one else.
I often get leary of a book when I hear so much amazing praise, I get a bit of anxiety even knowing that it's so good and I should like it. It's why The Blade Itself sits on my coffee table and hasn't been read yet and almost stopped me from reading The Martian, which I did end up loving.

Another is The Crimson Campaign. A lot of people seem to feel it's a marked improvement over Promise of Blood. I had the opposite experience. PoB's characters were a bit cardboard, and the plot wasn't as engaging as I might have liked, but the interesting worldbuilding kept me going. With CC, that worldbuilding's pretty much finished, and I was left with a bunch of characters who really rubbed me the wrong way.
And to Nick's other observation: I find both these authors likable and charming people in interviews and such.

Ancillary Justice.
The Road.
The Blade Itself.
To Kill a Mockingbird.
Catcher in the Rye.
Atlas Shrugged.
... 100's more.
You're not the only one to not see what's in the tree. Maybe all those people are pointing and looking because their neighbors are.

As for books where I didn't quite like it and I feel like the problem is me, I absolutely have experienced that too. My most recent example(s) are books by Alastair Reynolds. I can see the appeal; I admire that type of work; I have no knock on the craft he used ... but both Blue Remembered Earth and House of Suns left me just a little cold by the end and wondering why I didn't love them.
Ah, I've finally come up with a good example of a tree that I can't seem to understand the appeal of in spite of the crowd of worshipful onlookers: the entire oeuvre of Brandon Sanderson! I keep giving him chance after chance because I figure there's got to be something behind all the praise, and I keep coming up disappointed and scratching my head. Again, not that it's bad, it just doesn't stand out above the average genre stuff for me. I bought all 3 Mistborn books as a set, believing so strongly that it was a can't miss - that series seems to be near the top of every best-of list. The second two books are still sitting unopened in my Kindle, and will probably remain so. I must be a glutton for punishment, because I recently bought the Way of Kings ebook (only because it was on sale at a deep discount). I wasn't feeling pulled in when I read the free sample chapters the first time around, but hey, maybe it will work out better for me this time. It has to, right? Everybody else seems to love it!
*Rolls eyes*
*Rolls eyes*

@Dara: I liked Old Man's War, but despite Scalzi's protestations that he never read it, it feels awfully derivative of Forever War by Joe Haldeman to me. I'm with you on Redshirts though. The jury's still out for me on Scalzi, I need to read more of his stuff, but I do get the sense that he's a bit overrated. He seems like a guy who gets a lot of attention through pure force of personality and a high public profile with his blog and everything... to which I say more power to him! Seems like a very engaging and entertaining guy who is passionate about his craft. The product itself doesn't seem quite up to the hype for me though.

Well said! That's how I feel about him as well. I'd like to try more of his work because he seems like an alright guy but I just don't think it will click for me.

Michele wrote: "Hmm, this is becoming a complaint thread."
It was pretty much set up that way IMHO.
It was pretty much set up that way IMHO.

It was pretty much set up that way IMHO."
ROFL .. yeh sorry bout that.
It's fine by me. It's an interesting discussion at a high level, but most people seem a lot more passionate about things they don't like than I am.
Personally, I'm happy to answer the question, but that's about as much time as I'll spend on it.
Calling someone overrated or complaining about how popular they are simply because you don't like them/there book seems silly to me, but that's pretty much the nature of you internet.
I still find it interesting to see which books/authors people say, but don't caste about their reasoning for it.
Personally, I'm happy to answer the question, but that's about as much time as I'll spend on it.
Calling someone overrated or complaining about how popular they are simply because you don't like them/there book seems silly to me, but that's pretty much the nature of you internet.
I still find it interesting to see which books/authors people say, but don't caste about their reasoning for it.



What really bugs me about it, more now that before, is that one of the biggest complaints I had was that it felt like it was only a part of a book. At the time, a lot of people defended it. But now that the second book is out, I'm seeing so many of those same "defenders" saying how the second book makes the first one complete (which I'd expect, since AJ was one overhyped setting device).
Oh I hated that book and it's the only book I can think of where I've hated it more (not less) in retrospect, I hate it more every time I think about it.
Rob wrote: "Calling someone overrated or complaining about how popular they are simply because you don't like them/there book seems silly to me, but that's pretty much the nature of you internet."
I don't recall anyone complaining about anyone's popularity, just a few of us discussing the sometimes perplexing phenomenon of why we aren't able to see the same qualities in an author's work that so many others do. And as far as feeling that an author's work is overrated... well gosh, I'm sorry for expressing a reasonable and civil opinion in a forum designed pretty much for that exact purpose.
OK, I did call The Alchemist "drivel", which was a little less civil than the standard I would normally hold myself to. I'm not shy about being critical of books I don't like, but I usually don't resort to anything that harsh. That book just makes me so angry though!
I don't recall anyone complaining about anyone's popularity, just a few of us discussing the sometimes perplexing phenomenon of why we aren't able to see the same qualities in an author's work that so many others do. And as far as feeling that an author's work is overrated... well gosh, I'm sorry for expressing a reasonable and civil opinion in a forum designed pretty much for that exact purpose.
OK, I did call The Alchemist "drivel", which was a little less civil than the standard I would normally hold myself to. I'm not shy about being critical of books I don't like, but I usually don't resort to anything that harsh. That book just makes me so angry though!
Ally wrote: "I also have a hard time reading anything with rape or child abuse... plain homicide perfectly okay though :/"
Funny, I just wrote something similar in a discussion in a horror group here on GR. I have a really hard time reading about anything bad happening to kids, especially now that I've got a few. Animal torture bothers the hell out of me too. Adult human on human mayhem? Bring it on!
Funny, I just wrote something similar in a discussion in a horror group here on GR. I have a really hard time reading about anything bad happening to kids, especially now that I've got a few. Animal torture bothers the hell out of me too. Adult human on human mayhem? Bring it on!

Nick wrote: "@Rob - thats just it though, I don't hate these books. I was just surprised at how crazy some people are about them. It makes thing even more frustrating when people whose opinion I trust gush ov..."
You might not, but other people do. I'm certainly a little crazy about the books I love though. And I always hate when everyone doesn't love them too.
The one thing this club has shown is that no matter the book, some will love it, some will hate it and most will be somewhere in between.
But the haters seem to be the loudest, followed by the lovers and everyone else tends to be less vocal. So going just by comments or reviews can often be misleading.
I wish goodreads would show statistics for ratings by group members for books on the group shelf. Given the data they have it would be trivial to add.
You might not, but other people do. I'm certainly a little crazy about the books I love though. And I always hate when everyone doesn't love them too.
The one thing this club has shown is that no matter the book, some will love it, some will hate it and most will be somewhere in between.
But the haters seem to be the loudest, followed by the lovers and everyone else tends to be less vocal. So going just by comments or reviews can often be misleading.
I wish goodreads would show statistics for ratings by group members for books on the group shelf. Given the data they have it would be trivial to add.
I liked but didn't love Ancillary Justice and I'm enjoying the sequel so far.
I get people not liking it though. But I still don't understand the hate it gets. Or any book for that matter. Seems like a waste of energy to me.
I get people not liking it though. But I still don't understand the hate it gets. Or any book for that matter. Seems like a waste of energy to me.

I actually didn't read the entire OP and agree with the observation that the haters usually are the loudest, the lovers next, and the ambivalent ones are most quiet. Oddly, Alif the Unseen so far seems to be a bit of an exception. There are definitely lovers/haters, but the conversation has been comparatively even keel and the threads haven't all been love or hate.
It's early in the month yet for Alif. All the early discussion seemed mostly negative to me, but it has balanced out as you said.
For me I've only given one book a 1 star rating, Letters from an American Farmer, which was assigned reading in college. And even that book doesn't make me angry. Just glad I'll never read it again. If other people like it/want to read it, more power to them I say.
For me I've only given one book a 1 star rating, Letters from an American Farmer, which was assigned reading in college. And even that book doesn't make me angry. Just glad I'll never read it again. If other people like it/want to read it, more power to them I say.

Among Others is sooo much a teenage geek girl's thoughts, I could totally relate to Mori but it is only natural many would find her tiresome or boring or whatever because that is a very narrow voice to listen to for the length of a book.
Blackout/All Clear is very very very long. And crammed with little details. And the timeline of the various stories within don't match up until near the end. And there are a lot of POV characters, each using 2 names.
I love me some Connie Willis but I struggled with some parts for sure, especially in the middle. Once I had all the main characters and their relative places in the timeline figured out I was fine, but that wasn't until near the end of the first book lol. So I kept on keeping on and I felt it was worth it in the end.
I always really like her characters, they feel like such real people to me. So I trusted her to make it all wrap up in a satisfying way, which it did - for me. BUT, it definitely was a struggle and I'm sure she could have cut out a ton of details and still had a good story, but in the end I loved it, little details and all, and I think when I reread it later I will love it even more. So in this case, I just had to trust the author through the tough parts and I felt it was worth the time.
So, there's my very personal reasons for liking those examples, whoch only make sense for me and I totally see where other people might just lem them.


Something about having a baby made me a real pussy about anything bad happening to children. I cried in this episode of Game of Thrones when they left a baby out in the cold.

The simple, polite version is the tree analogy given in the first post. Everyone is looking, but there's nothing there from where I'm standing.


So many times! (Outlander, The Dragonriders of Pern, and ASOIAF all come to mind). That's why I'm glad we have these discussion threads and GoodReads in general. It doesn't matter what my opinion is. I can usually find other people who share my view. So I don't feel so alone and find I don't care what's in the tree.
Ally wrote: "Something about having a baby made me a real pussy about anything bad happening to children. I cried in this episode of Game of Thrones when they left a baby out in the cold."
That scene didn't actually bother me much because the fantasy elements and special effects brought it so far out of reality.
If I recall our conversation on another recent thread you're a Stephen King fan, right? I'm guessing you've got a complicated view of Pet Sematary. Me too. That's his darkest book for me. And since being a King fan these days pretty much = being a Joe Hill fan, I'm wondering what you're take on NOS4A2 was (if you read it)?
Without getting too spoilery, here are a couple of books you may want to avoid if you're uncomfortable with bad stuff happening (or potentially happening) to kids:
Seed by Ania Ahlborn
Bird Box by Josh Malerman (although this one's worth the read anyway I think).
That scene didn't actually bother me much because the fantasy elements and special effects brought it so far out of reality.
If I recall our conversation on another recent thread you're a Stephen King fan, right? I'm guessing you've got a complicated view of Pet Sematary. Me too. That's his darkest book for me. And since being a King fan these days pretty much = being a Joe Hill fan, I'm wondering what you're take on NOS4A2 was (if you read it)?
Without getting too spoilery, here are a couple of books you may want to avoid if you're uncomfortable with bad stuff happening (or potentially happening) to kids:
Seed by Ania Ahlborn
Bird Box by Josh Malerman (although this one's worth the read anyway I think).

Agree! It seemed like that was the only thing happening, over and over and over... Didn't like Blackout so I never read the next book. LOVED To Say Nothing of The Dog!
I can usually see the appeal in a book even if its not for me. There are a few exceptions though so I get that feeling of bewilderment when everyone seems to love something and you just cant understand why. That's The Alchemist for me. Whenever someone brings it up I think I have to reread it because even if I cant stand it I feel compelled to figure out how someone could possibly love it. Or maybe I'm just a masochist.


That sc..."
I did read NOS4A2 and there were moments where I wasn't sure I wanted to continue reading, but the majority of the bad things that happened to the children were kind of fantastical, as opposed to direct violence towards the children. Also, I hadn't had my son yet when I read it. And I never read Pet Semetary, but I would never willingly watch the movie ever again. However I will say that as much as I loved the Shining, the parts where Jack physically hurt Danny were very difficult for me to read.
And those books you mention are nothing I have considered reading, but thanks for the heads up.
Books mentioned in this topic
Quicksilver (other topics)Quicksilver (other topics)
Seed (other topics)
Bird Box (other topics)
Outlander (other topics)
More...
Authors mentioned in this topic
John Scalzi (other topics)Alastair Reynolds (other topics)
Poor Bob keeps looking and looking but doesn't see anything. He asks one of the group what they are looking at and they point to one of the branches. Bob sees nothing.
I tell the previous story as a metaphor(is that the right word?) for the times when a book is really really loved and popular and you read it and don't like it but feel something must be wrong with you because you don't get it. Everyone else can see what is in the tree so something must be wrong with me because to me there is nothing on that branch.
A few books have done this to me. To make matters worse and make me feel even more defective is the fact I've listen to these authors talk in interviews and found them likable and incredibly charming. So it follows the problem must be me.
I've considered the issue of sometimes a book is better put down and picked up again later. I may not be in the right frame of mind to see whats in the tree.
Blackout/All Clear by Connie Willis was one I didn't even finish but intend to revisit.
Among Others by Jo Walton was another.
Anyone sometimes feel they don't see what's in the tree?