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Books that Require Dictionaries to Read
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Anyway, I haven't read said book by Peter Orullian so I can't comment on his language (though avuncular isn't that strange, just a little archaic and extravagant perhaps :P).
The classics tend to have this sort of thing, being an English Lit student I have to deal with that quite a lot. Luckily we have Google now!
As for sci-fi/fantasy. I'd say Tolkien uses a lot of big words, and its not just unusual words but its combined with mass piles of info dump too, making it harder to read. :P
Aldous Huxley needed a slap and an editor too.



Sometimes if there's too many unusual/rare words, it puts a hiccup into the flow.

It depends on whether the language is appropriate to the story, I guess. You wouldn't have a modern day teenager say something like 'avuncular' because it's unrealistic in most cases. It tends to bother me when I feel that words like that were thrown in just to make the author seem more intelligent. I frown upon excess word usage in general, especially in novels that deal with contemporary issues.
Fantasy novels are a little easier to bear, because the world is generally set in a pseudo-historical period so it makes sense. But archaic and/or strange unused words for the sake of words just annoy me.
I love finding new words, but I'll read a thesaurus if I want to, thanks very much. Having to look into one while reading breaks the flow of the story. (Not to mention it reminds me of the exercises we did in the first year and a half of university - each semester we had to find a book that contained as many new words as possible and then transcribe all of them in a notebook with meanings and uses. Then learn them all by heart. The Blind Assassin was stripped of its loveliness when I had to go for the thesaurus for every word my professor was likely to ask me about.)


André


In my native language I always enjoy seeing the language being used to the fullest (unless it's too forced).
In English I appreciate it a lot more after having bought an eReader. Now I actually look up all the words I don't know, and it really helps setting the atmosphere, especially in fantasy (getting to know that a word is medieval English, for example).

The most notable exception is The Darkness That Comes Before. I read that literally with a dictionary next to me. I haven't finished it actually, though I still intend to. Trying to get through all the philosophical concepts Bakker throws around, when you only understand half the words he uses makes for slow reading. I still suggest it to everyone who likes dark epic fantasy with a bit of meat on the bones though.





Infinite Jest is a rather disjointed book in the first place, so I didn't think it disrupted the flow too much to look up words. I think it may have disrupted the flow if I had actually had to go to a dictionary, instead of reading it in-line on the Kindle. The act of putting one book down and picking up another might have been more jarring...or it may have made me not pick up Infinite Jest again, especially in the beginning when I was still trying to get into the book.
More generally, I think it really depends on the book itself as to if it will interrupt the flow of the story. I've read plenty of books where I haven't known a word but was able to get it from context (and would look the word up later to confirm the meaning). In those situations, it barely interrupts the flow, if at all. I've also had situations where the complete opposite is true, where words can't be determined from context and it becomes frustrating.


I was going to make another topic on just that. The Unremembered has a lot of made up words like Anias (which the kindle dictionary says is Anal) but seems to be some kind of honourific to a woman (Anias Wendra). I think it would be nice if authors make up words that they should provide a glossary at the end!


I ususally don't mind unknown words, I figure that eventually they will make sense. I rarely look them up.

I don't mind big words and I am able to figure out the meaning of most words through context, I am asking if you think if they negatively impact the flow of the story.

I don't mind big words and I am able to figure out the meaning of most words through context, I am asking if you think if they negatively impact..."
No, they do not. Sometimes slang words can take away from the story though. Weird how a difficult word doesn't but slang does... If I remember correctly,
The Court of the Air had quite a bit of slang in it.

A lot of people also complain about our curse words in fantasy breaking up the authenticity of the genre. I disagree with this mainly because I laugh at some characters curses because they sound so rediculous.

I don't mind big words and I am able to figure out the meaning of most words through context, I am asking if you think if they negatively impact..."
I guess it depends really on the story it's self and the amount of times it happens. I know for me personally if I have to constantly look and see what something is I'm probably going to start to not enjoy the book so much.
Something that annoys me is when a story is set in the past and the author uses modern slang for things, it can make it stand out like a sore thumb (Off topic but I felt the need to share)


I did have a teacher who liked to assign copying pages out of the dictionary when the class got into to trouble. ..."

Then why bother commenting? :D

I love when the author uses words that are within my vocabulary but not in common usage and a few new words are great but frequently such words are misused or used with an anachronistic definition (archaic usage in modern dialogue or vice-versa)
Books mentioned in this topic
The Court of the Air (other topics)The Shadow of the Torturer (other topics)
The Unremembered (other topics)
Infinite Jest (other topics)
The Darkness That Comes Before (other topics)
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Do people find that the flow of the story tends to be stalled when they run across a word they do not know? I have found that it stalls more for me in felled-tree editions when compared to my kindle app (click the word and you have a definition). Or do you like to read books with words you have never heard before?
Edit: I have always found that these big words are used in place of a smaller word that would have explained the authors idea just as well/if not better. I don't mind reading new words but most books that require dictionaries to read and understand tend to feel like the author is saying "look how smart i am!"