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What's the worst story you've ever read or heard of?
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Dennis
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Sep 14, 2015 10:31PM

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Generally, it takes place in Dresden and a planet called Tralfamadore. It takes place in the 1940s through the 60s.


Dennis wrote: "So which parts are happening where and when?"
The parts that say they are in Dresden are in Dresden. The parts that say they are on Tralfamadore take place on Tralfamadore. The parts that say they are in World War II are in the 1940s (that is when that war took place). When Billy Pilgrim is older, those parts are taking place in the 1960s.
Vonnegut isn't for everyone, to be sure. Those that struggle getting past his first name are probably doomed to struggle through his books.
And so it goes.

I don't want to say the actual worst book I've ever read - In the off chance that the author accidentally found this I don't want any hurt feelings for something that just wasn't my cup of tea.

Sort of the same here. I don't really want to give a list of my "worst" books. My reason is that it would just be a list of my measly two-bit opinion and nothing else. Books are books. You like some, you hate some. But, what what I might find schlocky, stupid, boring or pointless, someone else may love. My saying X book is terrible does nothing but add a little more negativity in an already overly negative world.

Dwayne wrote: "Vonnegut isn't for everyone, to be sure. Those that struggle getting past his first name are probably doomed to struggle through his books."
Hmmm....

"Beauty lies in the eye of the beholder."
Opinion and taste are subjective and are, therefore, influenced by culture, prejudice, upbringing, education, and personal experience. One person's worst book ever may very well be another person's best book ever.




One that I really couldn't stand, and couldn't read more than about 1/3 of was "The Bridges of Madison County." The problem was the writing was horrible. Bloated run-on sentences, so that by the time you got to the end, you forgot what the writer was talking about. That and the excessive use of adjectives and adverbs just left me totally cold. (By the way, I tried to watch the movie and didn't like it either, and turned it off.)


I also skip most of the current bestsellers -- and this says more about them than about you or me. That's what happens when the bestseller lists (and the whole trad-pub establishment) enforce mediocrity instead of excellence, as they're doing now!

The problem with some popular works is that they stick to the same tired formula of storytelling for the genre in which they are mass produced. While Indies might get a bad rap for quality of work, there can be more of a tendency to break the mold of fiction writing, and that can be fresh to readers that are tired of the "same 'ol".

Books mentioned in this topic
Little Women (other topics)The Scarlet Letter (other topics)