The Next Best Book Club discussion
Revive a Dead Thread
>
Spinoff of "When to stop" thread..
date
newest »



Well, i know I have tryed... I picked up Atlas Shrugged in High School, and shut it shortly after starting. Then I tryed it again last year, thinking Ive evolved and was more mature, and still ended up shutting it shortly after starting.....
hee hee
hee hee

I think time of life has a lot to do with it but also expectation. Sometimes a book has been so hyped up that I go into it with such high expectations and then I feel really let down. Sometimes it's better when you go into a book blind.

Oprah thrives on sad, depressioning, victim type books. So not into Oprah books anymore.





I am actually the Queen of abandoning books and coming back to them at a later date. I have done this quite a few times.
I did this with Atonement. I hated it the first time I picked it up and shelved it after about 2/3 chapters. About a year later something made me pick it up again and I loved it. I have done this with classics and chick-lit alike.
I'm not sure why, sometimes I can read a few chapters and just don't want to go on, but yet something draws me back to it later.
I think maybe I'm just easily bored which is why I have a fear of massive long books as I worry about not being able to get through it incase something else catches my eye half way through (mind you I did read The Count of Monte Cristo earlier this year and loved it).
With my favorite author, John Irving, there are 3 books that I had to start over again after getting stuck and not getting back to them soon enough and I loved all 3 books.
I wonder how much our own life experience comes into play when we like a book later in life.
I wonder how much our own life experience comes into play when we like a book later in life.




Isnt that book as thick as the yellow pages? is that the one I am thinking of? Its set in the 1800's or something? it was in my local salvo and was only a buck but I read the first page and didnt really like it. so there it sat.


I enjoyed all the books assigned in school, that is, I enjoyed them before we dissected them into little pieces in class and put them under magnifying glass. Then the books became something other than what I enjoyed, and well, to this day I can't bring myself to re-read any of 'em!

I am still afraid of George Eliot. Adam Bede is sitting on my tbr pile, taunting me.



I don't think I've used the "talent" since then, though!
And like I said, I've never gone near George Eliot again, after that perfectly dreadful experience in tenth grade.

I was supposed to read Middlemarch for a literature class in college but I had a hard time keeping up with the reading. It is on my shelf now just waiting to be read. She must have written it in installments because that was the basis of the class. Is anyone else aware of how some books used to be written and published in installments and that was such a huge form of entertainment for families?

Great topic, btw, Rose Ann. It's interesting to me as I am in the process of this very topic at the moment. I made it halfway through Anna Karenina a couple years ago and stopped for whatever reason and have started over again in the last couple weeks. Middlemarch is another one I've started/stopped but want to revisit in the future.



Sometimes I wonder if I dont enjoy a book, because it wasnt the right genre for me at that time. or didnt fit my mood. For example, maybe too many things on my mind, stress, pre-occupied....
What do you think? Does that make sense? LOL