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Have you ever given up reading a book in the middle?


I remember reading a very well-written, exciting action/detective novel a few years back (I can't remember the title now), and in about the middle of the book, it was revealed that the villain was a werewolf. The genre had completely flipped and I closed the cover and that was that.

For a very long time I was of the "If I start it I will finish it school" but not any more. It is liberating to be able to put down a book and move on to something else. I can't remember specifically which book was the tipping point. It was more the realization that there are just too many good books and too little free time.





This most often occurs when beautifully written and compelling themes and plotlines end up starring protagnoists that fail to reach me, that don't resonate.
There have also been those which, as the poster above said, were good thematically (by which I mean the author was damn sure about what he or she wanted to say with the book), plotted well, with engaging characters, but the prose was so clumsy I couldn't stand reading it. My inner editor at work. He's a critical sonofabitch.



I teach a version of a creative writing workshop in which I begin by asking how is it you can make up your mind so quickly whether or not to read a book, often only a sentence or two. We spend a class on the first sentence and then, with some provocation (usually musical) I tell them to go away and write as many first sentences as they can, and bring back the ones they like the best. It's really amazing how much theory and practice one can find by scrutinizing first sentences this way.


That being said I have not since been able to stop reading a really bad book. I have this pride issue that keeps me going no matter how painful. If there is an audio version at the library I might switch to that just to get through the book.

“Rule of Fifty”
from: http://nancypearlbooks.wordpress.com/...
People frequently ask me how many pages they should give a book before they give up on it. In response to that question, I came up with my “rule of fifty,” which is based on the shortness of time and the immensity of the world of books. If you’re fifty years of age or younger, give a book fifty pages before you decide to commit to reading it or give it up. If you’re over fifty, which is when time gets even shorter, subtract your age from 100—the result is the number of pages you should read before making your decision to stay with it or quit. Since that number gets smaller and smaller as we get older and older, our big reward is that when we turn 100, we can judge a book by its cover!

I used to be like this too, Donna. Until one day I was reading a really boring book and it occurred to me that if I were to die that day, that would be my last book ever. And then I thought...would I want this CRAP to be the last book I read? Hell no!
I was cured after that. Now I don't feel guilty when I don't finish a book - in fact, the name of my dnf shelf is 'life is too short.' :)

Short self, I suppose. Dean, I'm not going to disagree about Harry Potter, but I actually did enjoy watching my last live-action root canal.

Brian

I am one of those odd people who always reads the last page of a book first. If I don't like it or the hero of the book doesn't make it to the end I don't read it!



I am in the older bracket where Nancy Pearl's rule would have me reading under 40 pages to decide. I am not sure that is enough. I definitely can't tell in the first few pages.
I think my rule would also include length of book. Try any book for 50 pages minimum (almost anything) and give the really longer ones maybe 100 pages.

I didn't used to give up completely on any books-- I might decide after a few chapters that "now" wasn't the right time for that particular book, put it aside and then try it again in the future. But they stayed in my TBR pile. Some I ended up skimming through just so I could get rid of them though, but they (kinda) got read.
Now if I have a freebie or cheap read on my Kindle, I'm more than happy to just abandon it and delete it from my device, without any feelings of guilt at all.
Now if I have a freebie or cheap read on my Kindle, I'm more than happy to just abandon it and delete it from my device, without any feelings of guilt at all.

I have to like the feel of the writing, and I can usually figure that out in a page or two, so If I'm getting a paper book, I'll know pretty quick. There are some Kindle freebies I've downloaded without checking them out first, and I feel no guilt about dumping those, especially if it's because the author doesn't know how to construct a sentence.






Life is indeed too short and there are too many other books to read that might prove better.



I'm taking up the 50 rule and the life is short rule!

The other thing I do, is (assuming I like the sample) I then go to reviews on Amazon or Goodreads, and read them to see if I see any red flags, like "started out good, but fell apart," things like that. If I don't find any, I buy.

Way too many books to read for me to slog through books that I can't get a feel for.

I've quit a couple of them.


Oh what a pertinent question. I'm 2/3 of the way through Dead Beat by Val McDermid and really want to give up. But I'm so close to the end ... thing is, I really don't care who dunnit. But the guilt of giving up!

I also gave up on The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo. I know, I know, EVERYONE loved it. Not me.....just couldn't get into it.
I am currently struggling with Shadow of the Night. I liked the first one, but this one is just not grabbing with me.
Should we give up together Julie? We can start a mutual support group :)

I have a 50 pp test and if any book doesn't interest me by then, if is a DNF. Too many good books waiting to be read. Life is too short to read bad books

the only Twilight I watched was the second one i think, because I was on a flight from Seattle to Paris France, and had watched 4 movies so far, and put that movie on because there was nothing else to watch. I was a trapped audience, and I was, like, omg 10 minutes of watching her sit on her bed and spin through the seasons this is terrible! HA!
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Recently I was reading Seize the Night by Dean Koontz
I found it hard to proceed after few pages. I did not like the way it was written. When I went through the review of the book in Goodreads many has said they liked it.
This is my second book I gave up reading. First was Twilight by Stephenie Meyer
I just want to know whether any other readers gave up a book for any reason.