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Thread started 02/09/13 12:41am

imago

What are some of the WORST books YouV'E REad?

?

There are so many, I don't even know where to begin.

First, the sequel to Odd Thomas by Dean Koontz: Forever Odd

Where the first book was just brilliant, this one was tedius. I'm not sure why.

And unfortunately, Haruki Murakami's "Norwegian Wood" bored me to tears,

where I absolutely love his other works, especially Kafka on the Shore.

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Reply #1 posted 02/09/13 2:54am

alphastreet

Avoid Danielle Steel at all costs! The Klone and I was a hot mess when I first read it. I found that book the other day, want to read it one more time for shits & giggles before I give it away.

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Reply #2 posted 02/09/13 3:28am

ZombieKitten

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I know there are books that are like junk food - they are fast, greasy and bad for your brain, but that's OK, they have their place. Like airport layovers - who can be reading heavy intellectual shit when babies are crying and the PA is paging late passengers. You NEED a page-turner, something with plenty of sex and action, that you can read while standing up. Or beaches, as above just with sand in your crack.

I'd put into the category of a BAD read, books that are uninteresting and unmemorable, that fail to connect you with its characters (or worse still, you don't CARE about them at all) or doesn't draw you in to the story by a quarter of the way through and ones where you somehow get all the way to the end and nothing really happened neutral

Of course any book like that I can't remember at all now confuse

I have a stack of my mum's swedish crime thrillers under my bed in shame - shame that I haven't got around to reading any of them yet boxed

I'm the mistake you wanna make
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Reply #3 posted 02/09/13 4:45am

chocolate1

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My cousin fancies herself an author. She is self-published... I think she was going for Urban Drama/Romance...

My big mistake was vowing to support her...

That crap was rife with typos, grammatical errors, and things that just didn't make sense. doh!

She used real names & places- we're from a small town!

I actually read three books from the series before I decided that I done my familial duty...

I was embarrassed that she calls herself an "author". disbelief

She had a signing/reading for the 6th book recently. I couldn't even "like" the pix on FB... boxed

I love my cousin, but, DAMN!

*checked the bookshelf... only 3*

[Edited 2/9/13 6:41am]


"Love Hurts.
Your lies, they cut me.
Now your words don't mean a thing.
I don't give a damn if you ever loved me..."

-Cher, "Woman's World"
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Reply #4 posted 02/09/13 4:54am

ZombieKitten

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chocolate1 said:

My cousin fancies herself an author. She is self-published... I think she was going for Urban Drama/Romance...

My big mistake was vowing to support her...

That crap was rife with typos, grammatical errors, and things that just didn't make sense. doh!

She used real names & places- we're from a small town!

I actually read four books from the series before I decided that I done my familial duty...

I was embarrassed that she calls herself an "author". disbelief

She had a signing/reading for the 6th book recently. I couldn't even "like" the pix on FB... boxed

I love my cousin, but, DAMN!

OK, I haven't read but the excerpts, the Vanity coffee table book

you just reminded me lol

I'm the mistake you wanna make
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Reply #5 posted 02/09/13 8:17am

babynoz

Vanity's book wins hands down, lol

Tyka Nelson was a close second...I wish someone would tell people the value of a good editor. Just because you self publish does not mean you can't invest in one.

The thing is, even a bestselling author drops the ball sometimes. John Grisham's last book, The Racketeer, was just sillly.

Don't even get me started on that Fifty Shades abomination...I could barely get through the exerpt I read. disbelief

Prince, in you I found a kindred spirit...Rest In Paradise.
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Reply #6 posted 02/09/13 8:21am

imago

chocolate1 said:

My cousin fancies herself an author. She is self-published... I think she was going for Urban Drama/Romance...

My big mistake was vowing to support her...

That crap was rife with typos, grammatical errors, and things that just didn't make sense. doh!

She used real names & places- we're from a small town!

I actually read three books from the series before I decided that I done my familial duty...

I was embarrassed that she calls herself an "author". disbelief

She had a signing/reading for the 6th book recently. I couldn't even "like" the pix on FB... boxed

I love my cousin, but, DAMN!

*checked the bookshelf... only 3*

[Edited 2/9/13 6:41am]

falloff

I'm going to be laughing for days. disbelief

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Reply #7 posted 02/09/13 8:37am

alphastreet

Who gave "Vanity 2" a book deal?

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Reply #8 posted 02/09/13 8:45am

RicoN

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erich von daniken - chariots of the gods

Hamburger, Hot Dog, Root Beer, Pussy
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Reply #9 posted 02/09/13 10:08am

AndrePatrone

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this book was a legend in my HS zzz

Fret not that you frighten or offend. Invite the world to dance and marvel at who joins.
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Reply #10 posted 02/09/13 10:35am

JoeTyler

a couple of bestsellers

I actually started reading the Da Vinci code but had to turn it down, bunch of crap

tinkerbell
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Reply #11 posted 02/09/13 11:10am

PurpleJedi

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RicoN said:

erich von daniken - chariots of the gods

fishslap

That book was great!

Not wholly plausible, but fascinating nonetheless. nod

By St. Boogar and all the saints at the backside door of Purgatory!
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Reply #12 posted 02/09/13 11:16am

PurpleJedi

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There was a book that I was forced to read in High School. It was Russian I think (Not "Crime & Punishment")...it may have been "War and Peace" by Tolsty.

Well, for whatever reason I could NOT get past the first chapter!

I am a good reader, love complicated Sci-Fi, and I even read through the World Atlas books they had in the library in H.S. geek

But that damn book I could not process. disbelief

By St. Boogar and all the saints at the backside door of Purgatory!
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Reply #13 posted 02/09/13 11:50am

Ottensen

Any romance drama focusing on obnoxious, upwardly mobile Nouveau Riche AAs featured in the bookstore at Atlanta's International Airport. As far as I'm concerned we could have let Terri McMillan have that genre all by her lonesome and left it back in 1995. lol

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Reply #14 posted 02/09/13 12:21pm

novabrkr

Isn't most fiction pretty bad in any case? lol

I just read philosophy / psychology / other theory books (+ autobiographies), so I can't really say which ones are the "worst". There have been some philosophers and other theorists that have been just plain confused with their argumentation, but I'm not sure if that always results in bad literature. A little bit of "high headedness" usually just makes the books more entertaining. Most film theory books that i've read have been horrible though.

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Reply #15 posted 02/09/13 1:26pm

Ottensen

chocolate1 said:

My cousin fancies herself an author. She is self-published... I think she was going for Urban Drama/Romance...

My big mistake was vowing to support her...

That crap was rife with typos, grammatical errors, and things that just didn't make sense. doh!

She used real names & places- we're from a small town!

I actually read three books from the series before I decided that I done my familial duty...

I was embarrassed that she calls herself an "author". disbelief

She had a signing/reading for the 6th book recently. I couldn't even "like" the pix on FB... boxed

I love my cousin, but, DAMN!

*checked the bookshelf... only 3*

[Edited 2/9/13 6:41am]

Chocolate, no! falloff

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Reply #16 posted 02/09/13 1:29pm

chocolate1

avatar

Ottensen said:

chocolate1 said:

My cousin fancies herself an author. She is self-published... I think she was going for Urban Drama/Romance...

My big mistake was vowing to support her...

That crap was rife with typos, grammatical errors, and things that just didn't make sense. doh!

She used real names & places- we're from a small town!

I actually read three books from the series before I decided that I done my familial duty...

I was embarrassed that she calls herself an "author". disbelief

She had a signing/reading for the 6th book recently. I couldn't even "like" the pix on FB... boxed

I love my cousin, but, DAMN!

*checked the bookshelf... only 3*

[Edited 2/9/13 6:41am]

Chocolate, no! falloff

It was a Hot Mess! disbelief

Then she had the nerve to thank the people who acted as editors...
I don't know any of the illiterate people she listed. confused


"Love Hurts.
Your lies, they cut me.
Now your words don't mean a thing.
I don't give a damn if you ever loved me..."

-Cher, "Woman's World"
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Reply #17 posted 02/09/13 1:33pm

Adorecream

I generally hardly ever read fiction, but I have on occasion. The worst book I have read was some mess by Joan Collins, I forget its name, early 1990s and features such literary gems as "Fuck, Fuck where are the motherfucking matches", and an Italian dude called Umberto Scrofo who changes his name to Hubert S. Croft and starts directing movies in Hollywood in the 50s.

Disagree about Chesapeake, thats a great book, I love all of Micheners writing and grew up reading those books in my teens (I have a very high level of literacy, I think I read "The Source" when I was 11 and understood it well.

But I always avoid, any trashy stuff like Koontz, King, Mills and Boon etc. Read a couple of Nelson De Mille books, they are okay, but his characters always do it by page 20.

I read a lot of biographies, reference, Books of the year, Coffee table (Histories that are usually illustrated with pictures) and historical books.

Worst Prince related book is "Prince" by Steven Ivory published in 1985, its very basic, cheaply written on newsprint and full of inaccuracies. It was definitely aimed at people with a reading age of about 8.

[Edited 2/9/13 13:34pm]

Got some kind of love for you, and I don't even know your name
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Reply #18 posted 02/09/13 2:14pm

ZombieKitten

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RicoN said:

erich von daniken - chariots of the gods


Shut up I love those books falloff
I'm the mistake you wanna make
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Reply #19 posted 02/09/13 3:08pm

purplepolitici
an

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now if i read books, i wouldn't be the eloquent and sophistimicated orger/crazy person that i am. wave the last complete book i can attest to finishing was THE 25TH HOUR by david benioff. it was a movie as well. neutral had no business reading the motherfucker is all's i'm saying. not saying it was bad cuz i honestly don't remember. lol neutral think i got through RUM PUNCH (JACKIE BROWN) and that being decent. hmm have gotten through the first few chapters of CLOCKERS and AMERICAN PSYCHO several times, but them motherfuckers might as well be imago's post in my awesomely forgotten jesus thread. innocent

For all time I am with you, you are with me.
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Reply #20 posted 02/09/13 4:10pm

728huey

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typing

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Reply #21 posted 02/09/13 4:19pm

AndrePatrone

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728huey said:

typing

really? ..i was thinking of this one next

Fret not that you frighten or offend. Invite the world to dance and marvel at who joins.
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Reply #22 posted 02/09/13 4:45pm

CaptainChaos

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I don't read per se but Admiral says this one is not good.

12 inches of non-stop soul
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Reply #23 posted 02/09/13 5:41pm

NDRU

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AndrePatrone said:

728huey said:

typing

really? ..i was thinking of this one next

The book is a real trip, but it could probably be about 500 pages shorter!

And don't look to it for subtlety

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Reply #24 posted 02/09/13 5:42pm

NDRU

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imago said:

First, the sequel to Odd Thomas by Dean Koontz: Forever Odd


I have only read one Koontz book, Midnight, and it stands out to me as fairly inept. Totally run of the mill and uninteresting.

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Reply #25 posted 02/09/13 6:23pm

jone70

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Atonement - Ian McEwan

A Tree Grows in Brooklyn - Betty Smith

Little Women - Louisa May Alcott

One Hundred Years of Solitude - Gabriel García Márquez

I found all of them very slow moving and boring. bored Also not a big fan of Faulkner or Steinbeck. I used to feel similarly about Hemingway (hated The Old Man & the Sea and A Farewell to Arms), but I recently read The Sun Also Rises and really enjoyed it so I am going to read A Moveable Feast next and see how that goes.

The check. The string he dropped. The Mona Lisa. The musical notes taken out of a hat. The glass. The toy shotgun painting. The things he found. Therefore, everything seen–every object, that is, plus the process of looking at it–is a Duchamp.
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Reply #26 posted 02/09/13 6:25pm

imago

jone70 said:

Atonement - Ian McEwan

A Tree Grows in Brooklyn - Betty Smith

Little Women - Louisa May Alcott

One Hundred Years of Solitude - Gabriel García Márquez

I found all of them very slow moving and boring. bored Also not a big fan of Faulkner or Steinbeck. I used to feel similarly about Hemingway (hated The Old Man & the Sea and A Farewell to Arms), but I recently read The Sun Also Rises and really enjoyed it so I am going to read A Moveable Feast next and see how that goes.

What the fuck. Jesus, Paul, and Mary, what in Sam Hanes underwear. omfg

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Reply #27 posted 02/09/13 6:30pm

jone70

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imago said:

jone70 said:

Atonement - Ian McEwan

A Tree Grows in Brooklyn - Betty Smith

Little Women - Louisa May Alcott

One Hundred Years of Solitude - Gabriel García Márquez

I found all of them very slow moving and boring. bored Also not a big fan of Faulkner or Steinbeck. I used to feel similarly about Hemingway (hated The Old Man & the Sea and A Farewell to Arms), but I recently read The Sun Also Rises and really enjoyed it so I am going to read A Moveable Feast next and see how that goes.

What the fuck. Jesus, Paul, and Mary, what in Sam Hanes underwear. omfg

Dude, it is one of the few books I couldn't even finish; I was so bored with it.

The check. The string he dropped. The Mona Lisa. The musical notes taken out of a hat. The glass. The toy shotgun painting. The things he found. Therefore, everything seen–every object, that is, plus the process of looking at it–is a Duchamp.
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Reply #28 posted 02/09/13 6:32pm

riocoolnes

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Dan Brown- Lost symbol.

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Reply #29 posted 02/09/13 6:52pm

babynoz

jone70 said:

Atonement - Ian McEwan

A Tree Grows in Brooklyn - Betty Smith

Little Women - Louisa May Alcott

One Hundred Years of Solitude - Gabriel García Márquez

I found all of them very slow moving and boring. bored Also not a big fan of Faulkner or Steinbeck. I used to feel similarly about Hemingway (hated The Old Man & the Sea and A Farewell to Arms), but I recently read The Sun Also Rises and really enjoyed it so I am going to read A Moveable Feast next and see how that goes.

I love everything by Steinbeck but I could never get into Faulkner.

Right now I'm about halfway through Ken Follett's latest, Winter of the World...pretty good so far.

Next will be a non fiction book about Haiti.

Prince, in you I found a kindred spirit...Rest In Paradise.
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