Fantasy Aficionados discussion
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Do You Ever Skip to the End of a Book?
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Kit★
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Jun 29, 2012 10:00PM

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I particularly remembering doing this with the final Harry Potter book. To the point of having to find the version that was available on line a day or so before the book was released.

Me too. I want to know my favorite characters are going to make it. If they die before the end, sometimes I don't finish it. :(


I just realised I am the exact opposite! The slower I find a book the greater the temptation is for me to peak ahead to see if it will be any better. The more I love a book, the greater my willpower is to resist reading ahead!


Lol!

:-D

Ha-ha. As good a reason as any for our common weakness.


I,m just checking how many pages there are when I do this - any plot points I pick up are purely coincidental ;)


The Lord of the Rings wasn't published until 1954-55, nearly a decade after the war ended. Tolkien was in the midst of writing it during the war. He finished writing it and showed it to the publisher in 1947, and still had revisions to do after that.
I've never heard of paper shortage being the reason for breaking it into 3 volumes. I think it was just a business decision on the part of the publisher. I wonder if L'Engle has her memories a little mixed up?






NOT worrying about these things makes it much easier for me to enjoy a book. IF it is the ONLY thing that matters to me, may cause me to not finish, but if not - just makes it easier.
And, my kids have LEARNED if there are deaths in movies, I need to be warned ahead of time so I can decide how to deal with it. I am not allowed to see or read The Hunger Games. And, it is partially (other than the ya aspect) that keeps me from reading Harry Potter. And, I haven't seen the last 2 of those movies. My daughter cautioned me on the 6th, but I handled the sadness with aplomb and she sobbed her eyes out. We laughed. :D
I read to enjoy the trip with friends. So, for me, it is about the journey, not the destination.

Yep. :D I read the first one when it came out. Never could be bothered to go further.
But, thanks for the heads up. :D


Another one to avoid - Stephen Deas' Memory of Flames Trilogy, starting with The Adamantine Palace. I think there might just possibly be a couple of characters who survived the carnage...

Yeah. I'm like that, too. ALl my friends know that I stay far away from the books that I know are going to upset me.
I couldn't even finish A Game of THrones.

Good to know. These 2 have been on my "hmmmm" list for a while. There was just something that caused me to keep resisting them.
I am currently debating Joe Abercrombie's First Law Trilogy.
MrsJoseph wrote: "Yeah. I'm like that, too. ALl my friends know that I stay far away from the books that I know are going to upset me."
Good to know there is someone else out there like that! Though, from reading through your various comments about various things, I think we may be kindred spirits.
I have even been known to go so far as to re-write endings to books that I loved all the way until the ending. Especially if I think the author only ruined the ending for "shock" value.
I love me some Joss Whedon, but I seriously want to smack him upside the head! His stuff is frequently re-worked in my head. :D


I've noticed a trend lately, not in fantasy books but in another kind: contemporary mainstream with several women friends forming a club of some sort. It could be a book club, a knitting club or whatever, and one of them often dies of cancer at the end of the book. I've already read two or three such books. As if death of cancer is the only bad thing that can happen to a group of female friends. As if it's mandatory. It's getting so frustrating that I'll never read another book with a circle of female friends as the protagonists.



Why not look if you want to?

For me, the tension and emotional intensity of reading is strongest (and best) when I don't know what's coming. To quote Deep Purple: "It's not the kill, it's the thrill of the chase."



But the books I enjoy, the ones that just pull me in, I read straight through.

there are a couple of reasons i do it
- because i want to be able to sleep, so i quickly have to check whether someone will survive or that they'll win a battle in the end
- because i quickly want to peek whether i still have to meet some important characters
- or just simply because i'm too curious and i can't control myself

Part of enjoying a book (for me), is the anticipation. I will even put it down when it gets exciting. Kind of creating my own cliffhanger.

The cliffhangers just annoy me ... the death at the end angst is depressing and since I read for entertainment I prefer to avoid grim and depressing whenever I can.


That's one benefit of ebook or audio, you can't easily skip ahead. But still, occasionally I just have to know if a character is really dead or whatever, so I'll peek to see that they show up again.
Sometimes I am reading a book for a book club, and I don't really like it so I skim the last part or skim till just before the end. That way I can sound intelligent at the meeting without spending dull hours on it.


My daughter does this all the time.I ask her what's the point? And I didn't know so many people did it.
Books mentioned in this topic
The Others (other topics)The Thief (other topics)
Bitten (other topics)
The Adamantine Palace (other topics)
The Hunger Games (other topics)
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Authors mentioned in this topic
Lindsay Buroker (other topics)Joss Whedon (other topics)
Joe Abercrombie (other topics)
Steven Erikson (other topics)
Glen Cook (other topics)
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