The Sword and Laser discussion
Other Polarizing Books
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As far as lasers go, Starship Troopers is one very polarizing book; I personally love it, but I know a lot of people who detested it.
For the record, I really enjoyed The Magicians, myself.

I happen to love these books and think that they are some of the best and more important novels to come out in the last decade, regardless of genre.

Twilight is the consummate polarization book, though I agree with Jonathan Strange and Mr. Norrell. I can vote for the same with The Hunger Games and even, occasionally, wonderful books like Ender's Game (my husband hates it. I wonder how I married him.).
Perdido Street Station. Lots of folks love the hell out of this book and Mieville in general.
A whole other set of us wanted to stab ourselves in the face reading PSS.
A whole other set of us wanted to stab ourselves in the face reading PSS.

Sure. But you are wrong :) (I kid).

Also, books by L Ron Hubbard that formed Scientology.


Are there non-scientologists who like these? I read Battlefield Earth (before the movie came out) out of sheer stubbornness, but I can't recommend the experience to anyone else. I normally love badly written pulp sci-fi, but even I have my limits.




The starter of thread called these books "Marmite books" (I guess that's "Vegemite books" for all Australians), referring as well to books that people either love or hate.


Some are polarized by the staggering length of it. And even amongst those who liked it I think we are polarized internally by the one scene near the end of the book (if you've read it you know what scene I mean). Can we still like the book despite that scene which to me and probably many felt utterly wrong, unnecessary, borderline child pornographic, and absurd? (view spoiler) I know for me it completely ruined a book that I had really enjoyed to that point.

Some are polarized by the staggering length of it. And even amongst those who liked it I think we are polarized internally by the one scene near the end of the book (if you've r..."
I agree about that one scene in "It" but I've been able to separate my dislike of that scene from the rest of the book. In the case of "It" the length and King's tendency to have a staggering amount of side stories work in favor of the overall story. The sides stories in the case of "It" work to build a rich history of the main monster and help you understand what is really happening in the town. I read "It" when I was younger and had a much lower tolerance for King's ramblings so it speaks to the strength of that particular book that I was able to make it through that whole book.

That's what XKCD says."
Thanks for the link. I got a good chuckle out of it.


Books mentioned in this topic
Blindsight (other topics)God Emperor of Dune (other topics)
It (other topics)
The Night Circus (other topics)
Twilight (other topics)
More...
Authors mentioned in this topic
Philip Pullman (other topics)L. Ron Hubbard (other topics)
By the way, I personally liked the Magicians, but I can totally get why it doesn't appeal to everyone.