The book you like most discussion
Is the book or books you dislike the most badly written or just not your typical Read?
message 1:
by
Gypsy
(new)
May 10, 2024 07:15AM

reply
|
flag

Like, I love romance books but sometimes I read them and they’re just GARBAGE.
Same with mysteries I’ve read and fantasies.







Followed by agreeing and not fixing Grammarly suggestions and other editing errors.

I have pet peeves - such as the current fashion for putting a character's name at the top of a chapter to tell us the POV. With some rare exceptions, the reader ought to be able to pick this up from the writing.
I get frustrated by insipid heroines. Why I can't stand A Tale of Two Cities, which I know others love.

Long story short: I’d rather read a million books that make me uncomfortable, than read books void of intention.


lmao, bad writing is the worst especially if there are a lot of grammatical errors. I can sometimes deal with a bad storyline but if I have to reread sentences because of bad grammar that drives me up the wall and like you I'm like "how did they get published" it takes a whole line of people to really screw that up, I don't get it lmao.

Followed by agreei..."
I agree I don't know how people can get away with that or even have the audacity to rip someone else's work.

I can get that, if the characters are unlikable it makes it difficult to connect to the book.

That is a valid point and to be fair, I've only gotten through book 3 of the Franchise but I do enjoy the movies better, if anything because I like the actors and the magical realism of it all. But I get what you mean.


However, there are always cases where books can descend into "so bad, it's good" territory, which I love.




If I read a genre that I don’t normally read and just didn’t enjoy the story, I give the rating the benefit of the doubt.





But there have been a few exceptions like Haruki Murakami. His writing seems exceptional, it’s imaginative, and thoughtful and engaging. And then out of nowhere there seems to be a pedophilic fantasy aspect. And it ruins the book. Enough to give me concerns about the author. And not to say this is just a broad spectrum. It’s good to have books that can talk about pedophiles and the dangers, through fiction or fact. But when it romanticizes it or describes it dreamily that’s something I do not tolerate.

Also on the hit list is cliches eg person from Yorkshire being mean.
Implausible plot twists.
And when the author tells rather than shows: don’t tell me a character is worried, indicate it by way of their behaviour, appearance, thought process etc.
And when a male author inserts a female character purely to be a love interest, not allowing her any hopes or aspirations of her own.




BUT authors like Lauren Asher, Rebecca Yarros, Ali Hazelwood and Jenifer Lyn Barnners make me sick. Their writing is too "simply uselessly descriptive" to be liked by me.
Rebba Yarros' Fourth Wing was loved by every human on earth except me, because her writing is just annoying. Same with Lauren Asher, she just ahhh! Their books are labeled "ENEMIES TO LOVERS" but start with both MCs eye FUVKIN each other since day 1. its just dumb.



Can you give some examples, please?

I also really can't stand stupid behavior by the characters. It makes me crazy when a character doesn't use his/her brain to think through problems, etc. I also hate it when they do nonsensical things or when they are horrible to another character for no reason. Is that supposed to make them appealing?
The last pet peeve of mine is when the author spoon feeds every scene to the reader - with no depth to the interaction. I always appreciate when the characters are well thought out and I can intuit what they mean- they may be thinking or saying one thing but their actions are telling the readers something else. When the characters speak, not only with words, but with their gestures and faces, as well as their actions. That's good writing. Hard to find sometimes!

