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When do you give up on a book?
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Kris
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Mar 06, 2015 08:54PM

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I might go a few chapters, or 1/2 of the book

Some books were so bad, I gave up after a few pages. Others I slogged through close to 100 (and in one case almost 300) pages before I quit because there was something in the story to that point that made me hope it would get better.


1) The plot is stale (same old plot -- different names) or the story jumps around enough to make it hard to follow.
2) The protagonist's actions are not believable (too much a superhero).
3) The author is obviously unfamiliar with his material (errors in weapons and firearms terminology).
4) The writing is just so poor that I can't abide it.
Often a quick glance at the middle of a new book will let me know if I even want to start it. Ditto with reading the sample pages on Amazon or Goodreads. Usually doing this screening makes it unlikely that I will quit on a book, but I have been fooled a few times.




Your reference to those great "first chapters" that devolve into muddle is well put.


So true.



There is also a difference between "giving up" and losing interest. I start books on a whim sometimes, even if I'm in the middle of another. Sometimes I go back to the original book to finish it. If I never go back, I just never had enough interest. It feels different than formally "giving up," but the result is the same.



I stopped reading Patricia Cornwell's Kay Scarpetta novels because she had turned her stars into characters I no longer cared about. I gave up on Stephen J. Cannell's At First Sight and Nelson DeMille's The Gold Coast because I couldn't stand their main characters.
In a bit of irony, I read DeMille's The Gate House, the sequel to The Gold Coast, and loved it.
Go figure.

I agree about Cornwell's Scarpetta series. I read one recently to see if she had changed direction -- and she had a bit -- but I really do think she is slogging a dead horse with the series. Just what else can she do or have done to Kay? I won't be reading any more ...

I have a REALLY hard time NOT finishing books. Mostly I keep hoping they'll get better. Some writers start weak and end strong. So I keep looking for the strong. My husband makes fun of me for that. I'm the same way about movies. My husband can put down a book in the first couple of pages or stop watching a movie at anytime while he's watching.
Help me, people!!! How can I learn to stop wasting time reading books I don't really like!!!
I SO totally agree with Andrea. "There's too many good books waiting to be read for me to trudge through one that's only so-so."
I've never given up on a book, and believe me, that's nothing to brag about. Hint: 77 Shadow Street
It may take a while to finish it, but I get it done.
It may take a while to finish it, but I get it done.

I think you are both right. A slow developing story can be saved if it really gets to something special in the end. A badly written book rarely recovers. I can think of only one example of such a recovery - EL James.
For me, The Fifty Shades trilogy is an example of the phenomenon Quillracer raised. (No implication that Quillracer likes such trashy stuff). It is full of examples of how not to write. An eighth grade teacher would find plenty of fault in the prose, structure and childish writing overall. Experts in psych and S&M cringe at the technicals. However, the characters and the broader story saved it for me. In the end it is just a romance between two interesting people.
BTW, the second book shows substantial improvement. The publisher must have realized after the initial sales that it was worth investing in a real editor. It still has way too many "oh my"s and inner goddesses, but it is improved.

So far, I have never given up on a book. I try to be careful before starting to read. If I'm iffy about a book, I will read a few pages here and there throughout the book to see if it grabs me. If it doesn't, I won't get the book. I've also used reviews here (GoodReads) to see what other think of the book. If I get into a book and find it's not as good and I thought, I will still read it, skimming through it as fast as I can to get to the end.
There was only one book I was tempted to stop reading. It was a mystery I picked up as a kid (high school, maybe) that was about a school bus of children kidnapped. It reminded me of a movie I had seen or a story I'd read--can't remember which. It tuned out not to be the story I remembered at all. The people were holding the kids for ransom, but while the police searched, the kidnappers tortured some of the kids. Sickened me so much that I was going to stop reading, but I knew if I didn't get to the end, it would haunt me forever. Sort of still does, but at least I know the kids were saved/saved themselves and the kidnappers dealt with. ICK!
After reading Whispers, which grossed me out, I won't read Dean Koontz.
I stopped watching the first season of American Horror Story when the Jessica Lange character locked her daughter in the mirrored closet.
I guess what I can't stand is reading/watching children being abused. It's not that I won't ever read a book that covers the topic--there are some good books that treat the subject as well as can be expected, but gratuitous violence against children is a turn-off for me.







I say I try. I simply could NOT read James Mitchner. I am more action oriented. I also find general fiction tough to get through, so I look for audiobooks when it's a book club read that i am iffy about or a friend really wants me to read something.


I was a teenager so time didn't seem so critical- now I have more books come to my attention than I can read each week.
I started The Girl on The Train in January and couldn't get going into it - so I have shunted it into a siding and will return to it later this year.
The great thing about Goodreads is revising my to read section. I have loads to read but I always have my next book ready to start. I list three books currently reading and therefore I have found a smooth progression through my list.
A further joy is I get a recommendation I can include that if it is available so my reading is refreshed although I could just read all Rankin's Rebus books in sequence at any time I am looking to go beyond my comfort zone.
As at this time I have never given up on a book but then I always am clear what I am going to read.


I usually give up on the book when the narrator drives me crazy and I get to the point if frustration with the narrator.







Sometimes a book will seem promising, but then the author will do something that drives me crazy and I'll stop reading. I'd say the most common reason for that is head-hopping. The only time I'll stick with a book after that is when the author is someone whose work I already know and love, and even then I'll stop and wonder what they could possibly have been thinking.



I bet I have missed some good books by giving up "too soon". I know I have that problem with movies. I walked out on "The King's Speech" early on, it felt predictable to me and maybe I was in a cranky mood. Then people I trusted kept telling me how great it was, so I gave it a full viewing, and was glad I did. (Maybe patience is a virtue?)
