You'll love this one...!! A book club & more discussion
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Books you cannot finish

Good luck with getting through them, I'm sure you can do it :-)
Btw just finished One Hundred Years of Solitude myself, and it does get better as you go along :-)
Don't despair Emma! I have several categories of books that I don't finish! If I can't get into a book, I drop it. I have not-finished Twilight twice now (always at the same place, too)! If I start a book and hate it, I drop it. If I start a book and find it barely tolerable, I skim it and read the ending! (I even have a goodreads bookshelf for them.)
The next category is for books that I think I should read, but they are too intimidating. I have never finished any Dickens except for A Christmas Carol. It seems a lot of the heftier clasics fall into this category, including the French and Russian heavyweights! My husband read about 3/4 of Les Mis and gave up, without reading the ending! I read the ending for him. :)
The next category is for books that I think I should read, but they are too intimidating. I have never finished any Dickens except for A Christmas Carol. It seems a lot of the heftier clasics fall into this category, including the French and Russian heavyweights! My husband read about 3/4 of Les Mis and gave up, without reading the ending! I read the ending for him. :)

Or the Lovely Bones as well as War and Peace and few other classics. I used to finish everything no matter what, now I just feel there's so many books so little time! I give it a good shot and if it's not working there's plenty more out there that does.Sometimes it helps if you take these kind of books away to a foreign place where you can't get anything else then you just HAVE to read them!!

A more recent one that I never finished was The Eyre Affair, but not because it wasn't interesting, but because a few books that I had on hold at the library came up so sacrafices had to be made - in this case it was the Eyre Affair. One day I will finish that one also.
That's why I like having a "to-read" list on goodreads. Library holds can completely run your life!

The way I look at it is that there are so many books out there and so many I still have to read. I read for pleasure. I read to enjoy myself and I am often doing things throughout the day that I don't enjoy. Why take my relax and enjoy time and force myself to be bored. What's the point? I am not going to waste that precious time forcing myself to read something I am not finding interesting to read. If I wanted to do that, I'd take another college course. LOL

..."
I have not finished certain books, some are so far in the past - 20+ years ago, the author and the title elude me. I must confess the one and only Terry Pratchett novel I tried to read I never finished, I just did not take to it.
Stuart wrote: "Emma wrote: "I've decided it's time for me to take part in the global recession and so instead of buying new books I've decided to go back and read those I cast aside over the years. This is my cur..."
Oh, no, try a different Pratchett! Try
Going Postal
Oh, no, try a different Pratchett! Try
Going Postal
Emma wrote: "I've decided it's time for me to take part in the global recession and so instead of buying new books I've decided to go back and read those I cast aside over the years. This is my current pile:
..."
See, Emma, you are not alone!
..."
See, Emma, you are not alone!


Some of those mentioned above are my favourites!
With Gormenghast, I suggest you attempt them separately if you find them daunting. I think the first two are utterly brilliant, but the third is very different in every respect.
McCarthy's The Road is depressing, but so so beautiful. And the film looks promising.
One Hundred Years of solitude can be confusing at first, but if you keep notes, that's not a problem.

I, like Jeannette, cannot stomach Dickens - I've never even made it half way through a Christmas Carol.
I tried the Colour of Magic once and made it about 3 pages in before getting bored.
I read the twilight books with a sort of perverse delight that such awful fiction existed until the last one when I couldn't continue. It took a bribe to kick start me.
Tonight I shall restart Gormenghast I think. I've got a lot of alone time coming up with my other half away for the best part of a month so I can get stuck in :)

You are not alone on Three Cups of Tea. It was highly recommended to my, but it just grates on me. The story is fine the writing sucks. As someone else pointed out every second word is Mortenson. I get it, I know who he is. Write Greg, or he occasionally. The book needs more pace to it. Who care about his breakup with his girlfriend.

I'm with Stuart on this one. I've never read a whole Terry Pratchett book. Husband loves them but I can't get into them at all.
BUT I have read the Time Traveller's Wife (twice) and War and Peace (too many times to remember)

Ah, relief that someone agrees with me! I was going to mention the break-up with the girlfriend as being irrelevant. And the pacing! Perfectly stated, John.
Mary wrote: "Stuart wrote: "Emma wrote: "I've decided it's time for me to take part in the global recession and so instead of buying new books I've decided to go back and read those I cast aside over the years...."
Anybody who can read War and Peace multiple times (wow) probably needs something "heftier" than Terry Pratchett. But, my whole family loves most of his books! Maybe you could try The Amazing Maurice and His Educated Rodents It's juvenile fiction with an existential theme! :)
Anybody who can read War and Peace multiple times (wow) probably needs something "heftier" than Terry Pratchett. But, my whole family loves most of his books! Maybe you could try The Amazing Maurice and His Educated Rodents It's juvenile fiction with an existential theme! :)

I know what you mean - I found the first probably third of this book to be a chore. But then, when he immersed himself fully over there it really got exciting. I don't know how far you read into it, but once he stops with the background of his life and building up to making connections and raising money, the whole rest of it makes up for it three fold.

I agree Jeannette, I've just got my own copy of War and Peace and it's going to be my personal book challenge of 2010, so maybe Pratchett is a bit of a come down after reading W+P especially more than once (I'm dreading trying it once!)
All I can say Mary is I'm very impressed :-)

Nah, it's just one of those books that in my head has become a huge epic that only really dedicated and clever people read, you know the type of one that when people say they've read it you just go WOW. And I figured it's time I challenged myself a bit more with what I read rather than just reading the same kind of books or 'easier' books all the time, you know expand my mind etc etc (strange I know...)

Absolutely. But you could go half way: read a shorter Tolstoy first or another book that is slightly less challenging. I'm all for expaning one's mind, but I like to enjoy the process.


Anyway, if you've read all of those, W&P should be OK. And if you want something heavy (in pages) but lighter (in content), there's Don Quixote, which is great fun.

Now I've heard in other book discussions that Don Quixote is quite heavy in the content too, but I think the person who read wasn't use to such text so that may have been it. I was looking out for a copy of it when I was in Hay on Wye (where I got W+P) but unfortunately I didn't find one. Will keep an eye out for it though, thanks for the recommendation :-)

I didn't find it so. It has echoes with Shakespeare, but is easier to read (I found) because it is a novel not a play. Anyway, my review is here: http://www.goodreads.com/review/show/... .

I didn't find it so. It has e..."
Thanks for the link Cecily, it does sound really quite good. I'm certaintly going to keep a look out for it :-D
Sam wrote: "Cecily wrote: "Sam, if you're "dreading" reading War and Peace, why are you going to, is it an assignment?"
Nah, it's just one of those books that in my head has become a huge epic that only rea..."
Alot of the books on my to-read list fall into the more complex, classic category. I too, feel that I should challenge myself and join in the "great conversation" by reading these books. Maybe when my daughter heads off for college.
Right now she & I would like to tackle The Odyssey. Can anyone recommend a good "version" of this?
Nah, it's just one of those books that in my head has become a huge epic that only rea..."
Alot of the books on my to-read list fall into the more complex, classic category. I too, feel that I should challenge myself and join in the "great conversation" by reading these books. Maybe when my daughter heads off for college.
Right now she & I would like to tackle The Odyssey. Can anyone recommend a good "version" of this?

I only tried once. Once was enough.

If it's any consolation, I've never found W&P to be terribly challenging. It's very long, you have to have a memory for characters and some knowledge of a (very well-documented) part of history for the context but that's all, otherwise it's a fairly straightforward telling of a tale; an a to b plot, a cast of characters - not especially difficult - unless you're planning to read it in Russian?

If it's any consolation, I've never found W&P to be terribly challenging. It's very long, you h..."
I'd agree with this. Admittedly the first time I read it,as a teenager, was shortly after watching a very long running BBC adaptation so the plot outline and characters were already in my head. Don't try watching a film adaptation first though, as they have to miss out such a tremendous amount.
Sometimes seeing the film first helps you with a long and complicated story. It certainly makes it easier to keep all of the characters straight.


Yea go for it Emma, I'm saving mine for the new year so will start reading it on the 1st (yup I'm that sad I've planned when I'm going to start it lol). We can encourage each other to keep going with it when we struggle too if you want :-) it's always easier to keep going when someone else is motivating you too

It's a deal :)
I'll save Titus Groan for Christmas I think... the front cover got me all nervous this morning.

It's a deal :)
I'll save Titus Groan for Christmas I think... the front cover got ..."
Fabulous :-) is starting on the 1st Jan okay for you too, I don't mind starting it earlier/later if you want :-)
Oh dear, that's never a good thing.


You may want to check out the Pevear & Volokhonsky translation which just came out a few years ago I believe. I read their translation of Anna Karenina and it was beautiful. From what I have read - they bring out a much truer representation of Tolstoy than some of the older versions. And, theirs is more readable.

Thanks for the support too Cecily and Sam, I'll be waiting in the new year to hear your views! :)

Well it's 2010 and I've made a start on War and Peace, only up to page 41 (keep getting distracted by my new ones but now determined and focused) and so far it's nowhere near as bad as I thought it was going to be. I'm actually finding it surprisingly readable and luckily my copy came with its own family tree bookmark so I can keep track of all the people, which I think is going to be very helpful.
How's everyone else getting on?
Emma, how'd you get on with Titus Groan over Christmas? IS it worth a read?



Here are a "few" quotes from Titus Groan that I think illustrate Peake's power with words (and which aren't in the review I linked to in my previous reply):
A voice “like the warm, sick notes of some prodigious mouldering bell”.
A room was “untidy to the extent of being a shambles. Everything had the appearance of being put aside for the moment.”
“She appeared to inhabit, rather than to wear her clothes.”
“As empty as an unremembered heart.”
Faces that “were quite expressionless, as though they were preliminary layouts for faces and were waiting for sentience to be injected”.
“more the appearance of having been plucked and peeled than of cleanliness, though clean she was... in the sense of a rasher of bacon”!
“Treading in a pool of his own midnight.”
“We are all imprisoned by the dictionary. We choose out of that vast, paper-walled prison our convicts, the little black printed words, when in truth we need fresh sounds to utter, new enfranchised noises which would produce a new effect.”
Burned books are “the corpses of thought”.
“lambent darkness” is a good oxymoron.
Lightning is, “a light like razors. It not only showed to the least minutiae the anatomy of masonry, pillars and towers, trees, grass-blades and pebbles, it conjured these things, it constructed them from nothing... then a creation reigned in a blinding and ghastly glory as a torrent of electric fire coursed across the heavens.”
“The outpouring of a continent of sky had incarcerated and given a weird hyper-reality of closeness to those who were shielded from all but the sound of the storm.”



the one thing i find with books that i struggle to finish is that i am not inclined to read more books by that writer

(Incidentally, out of my pile of 33 books, I have read 0.)
Books mentioned in this topic
The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo (other topics)A Heartbreaking Work of Staggering Genius (other topics)
Something Happened (other topics)
The Poisonwood Bible (other topics)
A Clockwork Orange (other topics)
More...
Authors mentioned in this topic
Joshua Ferris (other topics)Ian McEwan (other topics)
Jane Austen (other topics)
Jodi Picoult (other topics)
Cormac McCarthy (other topics)
More...
Les Misérables
Birdsong A Novel of Love and War
A Prayer for Owen Meany
One Hundred Years of Solitude
Middlemarch
The Gormenghast Novels Titus Groan, Gormenghast, Titus Alone
There are others, too numerous to list - I counted 33. It seems I am very shabby when it comes to follow-through.
There must be others like me? Surely one of you fine people out there must have cast aside a book or too, make me feel better about my ways - I beg you!