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Taken from another site--What books that everyone else seemed to love did you read and just hated?

I've a pretty long list, but it begins with "A Heartbreaking Work of Staggering Genius" and ends with "Jonathan Strange and Mr. Norrell" There's at least 20 hours of my life I wish I'd spent doing literally anything else.

Let's hate on some popular books.

seaspot_run 7 May 14
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Catcher in the Rye

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Anything Hobbit related, including the parody Bored of the Rings...

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The Jungle by Upton Sinclair

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Satanic Verses but I think Rushdie's popularity got a big bump from the fatwah. He kind of got the dead musician popularity before he died. Dracula by Bram Stoker, so stilted, how did he become a sex symbol.

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The Gormenghast Trilogy

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I hated 'To Kill A Mocking Bird', 'Of Mice And Men' and 'Catcher In The Rye'.

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Steinbeck’s The Grapes of Wrath. Read it in high school and absolutely hated it which was disappointing because I’d loved everything else if his that I had read.

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Harry Potter, started the first book 3 times before I gave up. Can barely watch the films. Having said that, we have the audio book by Stephen Fry in the car which is going well.
The Hobit. Could not get past the first 100 or whatever pages of history and lore.
The Hunger Games. The first book was a gift that I felt obliged to trudge through, then I had to finish the trilogy. What absolute drivel. How is it possible for a baker's son to be experimenting with icing when all around are starving!
Autobiographies, even by people I really like and admire, I just can't get into them.

They are kid's books and read like kid's books, I never had the patience.

@Buttercup yes you're right, they are. I've never been into grown up books. I read for the escapism.

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As much as I hate to admit it, I am embarrassed to say it it was one Stephen Hawking's books about 25 years ago. I think it was called "A brief History of Time" or something like that. My biggest problem with the book was that it presented too many mathematical equations and math and numbers has never been my strong suit and so I really struggled with the book and did not appreciate as much as I might have, had I been better at math.

RonB Level 5 May 15, 2018
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"On The Road" by Kerouac. I just thought it was a meandering mess. Now the character Bill Lee (Burroughs) in the book, was a much better writer.

Me, too and I was an actual Bay Area hippie. Practically a sacred text

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Stephen Donaldson's "Thomas Covenant" series....I couldn't get through the first book.

Also "Seize the Day" by Saul Bellow. I had to read that for an English class in college. After that semester, I threw that book in the garbage.

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I don't recall boring books that I gave up on. Instead, I remember books I loved.

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Those insipid "50 Shades" books. Terrible writing. I couldn't even.

Deb57 Level 8 May 15, 2018

I started the first one like 3 different times. I wanted to understand what all the hoopla was about. I really did. I couldn't ever make it through 4 chapters. I can't believe it ever got published...

I came in here to mention these books. Once I heard about how poorly they were written I didn’t even bother.

Never even tried to read them, I did enjoy the clips of Gilbert Gottfried

The Dom/Sub thing is not titillating to me. I have not read them but know I would hate them.

@seaspot_run The author seems to know less about the lifestyle than most vanilla people.

I tried the free sample on Kindle. The writing was so pathetic that I knew I wouldn't bother with them.

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Old Man and the Sea is 90 minutes of my life I'll never get back. Ever. I don't understand why it's a classic beyond the author, and frankly even that ethos isn't enough to salvage a zero-sum plot with one character whose most significant conversation is with his own hand.

For that matter, the Two Towers was unbearably dry (the geneological parts of Genesis in the Bible are more interesting)

Everything about the Twilight series as well as the 50 Shades series (which are bad Twilight fanfiction mixed with a dash of The Secretary and also manage to be complete and utter misinformation about BDSM culture and paradigms) is basically a waste of paper and ink.

And maybe I'm alone on this, but I think JK Rowling should have ended 'the Wizarding World of Harry Potter' with Deathly Hallows and then moved on to a new project instead of shoehorning unrelated chaff into the series like bad direct-to-video Disney sequels. I appreciate it's a business and selling to your market is the name of the game, but I also believe that there is a distinct lack of creators' recognition or acceptance of the difference between 'extending an idea' and 'beating a dead horse.'

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I can't think of any that others loved and I hated. Some I think got greater acclaim because there wasn't as much competition. I still haven't finished suffering through War and Peace. Probably won't. But it does seem that I am the only person that was rather non-plussed with Deadpool.

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Winter's Tale by Mark Helprin. People describe it as "magical" and "delightful". Bored the pants off me.

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I once tried reading a Harry Potter book (The Prisoner of Azerbaijan, or wherever, as if it matters), just because everyone else was raving. Unbearably bad writing.
Oh, and "The God of Small Things".

It's funny how bad writing doesn't hinder financial success in this world.

@Ellatynemouth And she's (Rowling not Roy) a nice person. My objections are purely literary.

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Lord of the Flies terrible writing and ridiculous premise.

JimG Level 8 May 14, 2018
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It's rare that I start a book and don't finish it, but I couldn't bring myself to keep reading Catcher in the Rye.

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...I just like your style.. Honestly, I’d much rather ‘write’ than read. No book, yet. Reading puts me to sleep, I’m too deliberate a reader, it’s like a chore. So taking a chance on novel seems ten times as dangerous as wading 15 minutes into a movie that’s going nowhere 😕

I’ve been doing audio books as of late, but most have been good … let me check.. OK, back, having just looked over my borrowing history - does it make sense that a book I stopped ‘listening to’ must have been so crappy that I can’t tell enough about it to condemn it..? I was reminded of some really good stuff, though books I’d likely never have boughten or checked out from a library.. But we’re talkin trash here 😉

Varn Level 8 May 14, 2018

I do a lot of audiobooks, too. A really good reader can definitely lift a pedestrian novel and make it interesting and dramatic. And a poor audio performance can weigh down a novel that might be quite decent if you actually read it and heard it unspool in your own head.

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