The Sword and Laser discussion
Did you ever read a book that you really hated?
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But I did finish the last book of Jean Auel's Earths Children and I wanted to hunt her down and damage her it was so bad. The first two were the best and they gradually went downhill but this last one jumped off a cliff.
God Emperor of Dune I skip over when I re-read the series.
Oh and Bram Stoker's Dracula. I hate this one and find the entire story stupid.


Eragon by Christopher Paolini. Terribly written and just about every name, scene, and plot point is "borrowed" from Star Wars, the Lord of the Rings, or David Eddings.
Speaking of Eddings; The Redemption of Althalus. I loved his other series but this seemed very juvenile.
It by Stephen King. I think he is popular beyond his merits but I read a few of his books because of a book list I was going through. This was long and boring and I couldn't wait to finish.

My review here: http://onelastsketch.wordpress.com/20...





Metro 2034 - didn't help that I realized it was a sequel after ca. 300 pages, but it was so utterly boring and stupid. First book ever I left in a ferry, not even bothering to throw it away.


Of course, there are books that I don't like, but in my opinion, if a book is too light, sad, brutal, scary, romantic, badly written etc. for you, there will always be other people that see it the other way round.
So, then this book is just not for me, but I wouldn't really say I hate it.
I think the only situation in which I would hate the book, is when it's just a tool to transport racist, fascist or similar ideas, but fortunately I never read one of those.

I did disliked some of the school reads, the ones telling stories of war, occupation etc. I basically try to keep myself away from sad/horrible stories, there's enough of these things in the news every day, I don't need to read more.




Vanity Fair - it was so wordy, elaborate, with nothing much happening...
The entire set of works by Indian writer Chetan Bhagat (sigh... now I'm thinking I can definitely bear Anthem or Vanity Fair but not this guy)


I just finished that myself and it was a slog. I enjoyed it but not until about halfway through.

Cloud Atlas drove me crazy for the first third, then I enjoyed the second third, and just didn't care about the last third. I kind of hated it.
There were a few books of The Wheel of Time that I thought were utterly pointless and hated, but read anyway just to get through the series. I think it was books 6-8 that were the crappy ones.
Inheritance. I wish I had never started the series, but forced myself to finish it. The success of the first book went to his head and he badly needed an editor. There was no need for a fourth book.

I only made it through the first 2 books, and just barely at that.
DragonSpell. I mean, look at the title. Dragon. Spell. Those are both things I like.
You know what I didn't expect? Self-righteous evangelical Christian fiction. Worse, it didn't even have the decency to tout an uplifting message like "Think for yourself, then do the right thing because it's the right thing to do." No. The moral at the end was "Blind faith will get you out of any bad situation. Don't think. Believe. BELIEVE!" The hell, I say. This was the first and last book I bought on a whim because I liked the cover and the title. So in a way, thank you, DragonSpell; you taught me to always read reviews and download the sample first.



That's because it started out as twilight fan fiction.

One of the books I really dislike, possibly even hate, would be Jane Eyre. Yes, I know it is a classic, but I still can't stand it. I have often seen her listed as a strong, independent female character, but she wasn't. She was weak, whiny, totally dependent on others, and utterly annoying. The entire scene where she is lost & "starving" made me roll my eyes, not feel any amount of sympathy for her. I found the entire book boring, and I truly felt like it had been a waste of my time.
I know there are other books I hate, but short of the Twilight series, I can't think of them right now





Oh how I hated that.
I am just a sucker for punishment so I read all nine of the Fate of the Jedi series, three of which were OK, six of which were horrid.
Kevin wrote: "Kevin wrote: "While we're bashing Neil Stephenson - I hate Cryptonomicon. I read about 3000 pages (maybe a 1/3rd) and absolutely nothing had happened so I relegated it to the waste of time pile. I ..."
Oh. Sorta like Snow Crash. I still don't know why people hype that book.

That said, I suppose I'll throw in a few of my own.
The Girl Who Kicked the Hornet's Nest
and similarly the girl who played with fire, by the end of these I felt all the characters were all cut from one big piece of cloth, and five of six paragraphs were filler.
Mockingjay
I disliked all 3 of these books, progressively more and by the third one I ought to have lemmed it, but I just wanted it finished and done. Katniss could have had so much more character development, but she remains largely the same insecure, vapid girl.

I was eager to love this book, but instead I hated every second of it.
Karl wrote: "Revelation Space by Alastair Reynold"
The Revelation Space series is weird for me. I don't usually enjoy the books while reading them, but after a couple of weeks of reflecting I get a greater appreciation for them.

Others that I could not finish:
Ringworld
Frankenstein; Or the Modern Prometheus
Minion
Finished but hated:
The Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants - it was a book club thing
Taltos
Children of the Mind

The only book I can think of that I hated was The Fall of Hyperion. I loved Hyperion and immediately started reading this to see how it would end but found it totally uninteresting. It barely spent any time with the characters I'd grown to love and added new characters and a plot line I hated. When I started it I wanted to read the rest of the series but by the end I couldn't see myself reading another book by the author ever again.

I recently heard about an agent who will read about 50 pages of a mss before deciding to reject it (if they get past the first page, that is) so I've decided to try to give myself 50 pages before lemming a book.

Gone Girl - hated it so much because I just despised everyone in the book but the writing was so damn good I couldn't put it down.
The Shack - probably the worst book I've ever read - the writing makes even V.C. Andrews looks like Dickens - the plot is abysmal - the characters are so unbelievable as to be almost the punch line of a bad joke - just hated hated hated this book


Gone Girl - hated it so much because I just despised everyone in the book but the writing was so damn good I couldn't put it down.
The Shack - probably the worst book I've ever read -..."
Scott, Gone Girl made me realize that I could hate every single character in a book, but still love the story. It was weird. I was so sucked into the story that I actually had to decide if I liked it or not, despite my feelings about the characters.
I used to push through books, no matter how tedious. A couple of years ago I realized that I will never have enough time to read every book in which I am interested, so life is too short to continue reading crappy books.
I know that some books are slow starters, so I try to stick with it at least a quarter of the way.


The Golden Compass series because I felt the "God and religion is evil!" was just as annoying.
The first time I tried to read The Last Unicorn I threw it across the room. Reread it recently and really enjoyed it. Was surprised.

For me Eddings began to slide in the second Sparhawk series. It read too much like the Three Stooges melded into fantasy . . . the omnipotent slap-stick heroes versus the incompetent and pathetic villains. I forced my way through Althalus, but have not read the Elder Gods series for fear that the trend continues.
I still re-read the Belgariad / Mallorean books every few years.

Stonehenge. I read most everything Bernard Cornwell writes, but I couldn't get through this dog.
And Dara, yes, Assassin's Quest was hugely disappointing.
Books mentioned in this topic
Assassin's Quest (other topics)Stonehenge (other topics)
The Number of the Beast (other topics)
Assassin's Quest (other topics)
Gone Girl (other topics)
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Authors mentioned in this topic
Gillian Flynn (other topics)Chetan Bhagat (other topics)
Ayn Rand (other topics)
Vince Flynn (other topics)
Tom Clancy (other topics)
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One hundred years of Solitude. Read halfway through when I realized I didn't care about any of the characters.
I usually try to give a book 5 chapters. If after that I have no interest then I just stop. I have other GOOD books to read instead of wasting my time.