What's the Name of That Book??? discussion

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► Suggest books for me > Really bad books

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message 1: by MJ (new)

MJ | 1613 comments https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/1...

Penelope Fletcher has a series... bk3 has never eventuated. Think she might be Indi tho.

Bk1 has some issues, but the ideas good. I can’t remember all of it cause it’s been a while.

...bk2... Burn...

Hmm, bk1 sets all sorts of world rules, and bk 2 just forgets them. Bk1 clearly sets characters, and bk2 brings in completely different actors.

From memory, they shift from our world to another, and there is a huge time difference. In the few hours the H is gone from our world, around 4 mths have passed in his. In bk2, I think the h has only been gone a week or two when her bff shows up screaming bloody murder about how worried she was when her friend just disappeared and ra ra rah! Going by the initial time difference, the h would have only been gone less than an hour or so and the bff probably still would have been in bed.

And the h is a kickass loyal ra ra rah... who just accepts that the H lied to her adopted son that she didn’t want him anymore and sent to him away into clear danger and gets on with her life. 6-7 years later she thinks, you know? Maybe I should follow up with my missing son who’s been in danger all this time and might even be dead, ya think?


Kate (Feathered Turtle Press Reviews) (stargazer401) | 257 comments Worst books I've read:
Castle of Lies - Sloppy writing, miserable characters, literally nothing is ever solved.
The Queen Underneath - Just a hot mess.


message 4: by SamSpayedPI (new)

SamSpayedPI | 2306 comments The worst book, by a "real" author, that I ever finished is Hawkes Harbor by S.E. Hinton. My review says it all.

A "fun" bad book (guilty pleasure) is Planet of the Gawfs, complete with a cover picture of a scene that never happened in the book. Someone had obviously reading X-Men comics prior to writing the book (I'm surprised it didn't lead to a copyright violation).


message 5: by Rachel (new)

Rachel | 1527 comments Great topic. I think the worst book I have ever read is Sport Armageddon. It's about an extreme triathlon put on by an evil TV network. Absolutely ridiculous on every conceivable level.

The novelization of the movie Face/Off is also very, very bad: Face/Off


message 6: by Anna (last edited Nov 21, 2019 03:26PM) (new)

Anna | 505 comments You should try Not Another Vampire Book. This one is a parody of badly written PNR vampire books but also has a lot of flaws of it's own. Absolutely ridiculous cover, horrible editing, a few gaping plot holes that don't look like they're a part of parody but just holes in their own right... And the weirdest thing is that it still manages to be a VERY entertaing read. IDK how it's possible.


message 8: by Scott (new)

Scott The Fifth Season. Don't let the fact that it won a Nebula put you off! Ha ha!


message 9: by Caotico09 (last edited Nov 27, 2019 10:24PM) (new)

Caotico09 | 7 comments These are the two worst books ive read. And i guess you could maybe enjoy them if you want the over the top ridiculousness.

An over the top, terrible action thriller (which somehow has a decent rating here):Dourado
An eye rolling fantasy: Hidden


Edit; How could i forget? You have to try The Gemini Effect. While an interesting start, the plot starts seguing into less and less likely elements. You know things are going down hill when russian sleeper agents with nerve gas suddenly pop up in what was a fairly contained creature horror book.


message 10: by South (new)

South (bookishbookreviews) | 7 comments Ok, the worst book I have ever read was H.G. Well's War of the Worlds. Just terrible.


message 12: by Moloch (new)

Moloch | 342 comments I've recently found an old blog by webcomic artist Ryan North that humorously reviews a very bad book, the novelization of "Back to the Future"

The book it makes fun of: Back to the Future

Here is the blog, very funny: https://btothef.tumblr.com/
The posts were also published as an ebook: B^F: The Novelization Of The Feature Film


message 13: by ...cats? (new)

...cats? | 470 comments It seems like you're particularly interested in campy, pulpy fiction, rather than just any old "bad" book? If so, maybe check out thriller/horror YA series from the 80s/90s, like:

Sweet Valley High (I'd especially recommend the Evil Twin plot arc - utterly ridiculous)

R.L. Stine's Fear Street series

The Face on the Milk Carton by Caroline B. Cooney

Basically any Point Horror book


message 14: by ...cats? (new)

...cats? | 470 comments The rockabilly werewolf from Mars wrote: "...cats? wrote: "It seems like you're particularly interested in campy, pulpy fiction, rather than just any old "bad" book? If so, maybe check out thriller/horror YA series from the 80s/90s, like:
..."


In that case, maybe check out the blog Too Much Horror - it has covered a lot of obscure horror pulp fiction


message 15: by Ky (last edited Jun 04, 2020 03:11PM) (new)

Ky | 446 comments How about Heroes Wanted by Kyle Crocco? I picked it up to read because it mentioned "...and a battalion of not-too-bright Dude Knights" on the back.


message 16: by Rosa (new)

Rosa (rosaiglarsh) | 5379 comments I don't think The Face on the Milk Carton was a bad book. It has no redeeming social value, perhaps, but sometimes that's refreshing.


message 17: by ...cats? (new)

...cats? | 470 comments Rosa wrote: "I don't think The Face on the Milk Carton was a bad book. It has no redeeming social value, perhaps, but sometimes that's refreshing."

I don't think it's really that bad either, but it's certainly pulpy, and imo the series does get kind of over-the-top


message 18: by Rosa (new)

Rosa (rosaiglarsh) | 5379 comments I think Lois Duncan wrote more satisfying thrillers for teens. They have more depth than Ms. Cooney's.
Isn't it interesting that thrillers are considered a more "adult" genre, because they assume that adults aren't interested in a message, only escapism and holding off boredom?


message 19: by Rosa (last edited Jun 05, 2020 07:52AM) (new)

Rosa (rosaiglarsh) | 5379 comments Wretched Writing: A Compendium of Crimes Against the English Language has some hilarious suggestions. (As a bonus, the book is also very badly written itself!) The first hundred or so books mentioned are on this list: "Wretched Writing" Booklist

Here are some of the campiest, worst books I've read, focusing on horror, thrillers, and sci-fi:
Finding Daddy
The Trident
The Kidnapping of the President
The Serpent
Jaws (if you've already read this, and actually like it, sorry!)
The Children (found this in Paperbacks from Hell: The Twisted History of '70s and '80s Horror Fiction)
Manhattan (not in your preferred genre, but campy and terrible)
User Unfriendly (This book was almost impossible to read, it was so mean.)
The Committed Men
Rock 'n' Roll Babes From Outer Space (lives up to its title, but depressing)
The House on the Hill (deliberately gross, offensive, and campy, probably not to your taste. Well, not to anyone's taste, actually. Totally tasteless!)
Retribution (TERRIBLE!)
Nightmare Baby (right up your alley!)
The Stepdaughter
Jade Green
Contract on the President (competently written, but morally reprehensible, sensational, and deeply cynical in that '70's way)
Buddy Holly is Alive and Well on Ganymede (doesn't live up to its title, in my opinion)
Can't forget Ritual!

I feel bad about recommending some of these.


message 20: by Alex (last edited Jun 05, 2020 09:13AM) (new)

Alex | 6 comments Artemis

I know, The Martian was pretty good. This though.... this is something truly special in how godawful it is. I ended up writing a 2200+ words review of how much I hated it after I finished it out of pure spite.


message 21: by Rosa (new)

Rosa (rosaiglarsh) | 5379 comments Even more entertainingly terrible than Ritual: Fanghorn


message 22: by Scott (new)

Scott The rockabilly werewolf from Mars wrote: "Thanks. Incidentally, I recently read a book of this variety: The Flying Eyes, which is literally about the earth being attacked by giant disembodied eyes from outer space. The early..."

Haha that looks amazing.


message 23: by Rosa (last edited Jun 16, 2020 02:04PM) (new)

Rosa (rosaiglarsh) | 5379 comments "J. Hunter Holly" wasn't a nom de plume of Mr. Lionel Fanthorpe, by any chance?
I like the early '60s. But I think 1966 (when Fanghorn came out) to 1968 was the wildest, most exhilarating time, before the forces of disillusionment and cynicism tried to crush any vestigial idealism and hope (see certain stories in Social Problems Through Science Fiction, especially those by Norman Spinrad and Robert Thurston).
More in this depressing vein: Wild in the Streets.


message 24: by Aerulan (new)

Aerulan | 1316 comments Santa Steps Out hits a few of the notes you're looking for.


message 25: by Rosa (new)

Rosa (rosaiglarsh) | 5379 comments Of course, this exciting period (1966-68) meant some bad choices were made, like encouraging David Pinner, or publishing a poetry collection by a 19-year-old boy that included poems he'd written when he was 17 (The Boy from the Green Cabaret Tells of his Mother: Poems 1965 to 1968). That collection was part of the New Authors Limited imprint, which published several good books by debut authors, but also multiple bad ones, including The Committed Men.
I don't mean to trash teenage writers—after all, there are S.E. Hinton (also published during this fruitful period), Mary Shelley, and Anne Frank, among others. It's just that Barry MacSweeney's earliest poems weren't very good, except for one (which I include in my review).
Yet for some reason I'm still happy he got his big break.


message 26: by Cycad (new)

Cycad | 133 comments J Hunter Holly was really Joan Carol Holly.


message 27: by Cycad (new)

Cycad | 133 comments And if you haven't gotten hold of Paperbacks from Hell or Bill Pronzini's 2 books on bad mysteries (Gun in Cheek and Son of Gun in Cheek) or his ode to bad Westerns (Six Gun in Cheek), you should.


message 28: by Richard (new)

Richard Craven | 10 comments On the Road by Jack Kerouac
Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas by Hunter S Thompson
Anything by Charles Bukowski.


message 29: by Josephine (new)

Josephine | 5 comments We were liars by E. Lockhart
I hated that book!!!


message 31: by Cassandra (last edited Jun 18, 2020 10:28PM) (new)

Cassandra | 43 comments One of the worst books I have ever read is The Golden by Lucius Shepard. I read it years ago and still cringe when I think of it. It seems he published several books, so maybe some of the others are better, but I don't think I'll risk it.

There was also a horse book that I read once upon a time that I only kept reading because I knew it had to get better in order to get published in the first place. I was wrong. It didn't. Unfortunately, I cannot remember either the author or the title, although I think the title was just the horse's name, so possibly one word. The horse was a stallion, and I remember the author kept running on and on about the horse screaming in fury at whatever it didn't like and biting with his fangs. Apparently, this guy writing a book about horses told from the horse's point of view didn't know much about horses.


message 32: by Rosa (new)

Rosa (rosaiglarsh) | 5379 comments I’ve got another one for you: Twins


message 33: by Richard (last edited Oct 18, 2020 06:54AM) (new)

Richard Craven | 10 comments How about some racist anti-white filth.

Why I'm no longer talking to crackers about race, by Reni Eddo-Lodge
White Fragility, by Robin diAngelo


Elizabeth ♛Smart Girls Love Trashy Books♛  (pinkhairedwannabe) | 255 comments I don't know if purposefully bad counts, but I'm going to toss a suggestion your way anyway

Atlanta Nights

It was written by a group of famous authors who wanted to mock the sleaziness and snobbishness of a famous publisher who was revealed to be a vainty publisher. Originally they claimed they only accepted about 5% of all manuscripts sent in, and they turned down sci-fi and fantasy on sight. Wanting to test that, some sci-fi and fantasy authors got together and wrote this, a purposefully horrible book with stuff like a chapter that's flat-out missing, a chapter written entirely by a text-to-speech program, two chapters that are exact copies of each other, and not to mention all the other plot nonsense. I can't remember if they genuinely did publish it or withdrew it after the company exposed themselves, but it's an interesting and noteworthy read anyway I might imagine. Some have even compared it to The Eye of Argon

Alternatively, I don't remember if he was mentioned here before or not but you could look into some works by William Ashbless. He's a fake author created by two authors who wanted to satirize the terrible 'free poetry' craze of the seventies especially among college students. Needless to say, they wrote horrible poetry under a pen-name on purpose


message 35: by Wendy (new)

Wendy | 25 comments I haven't personally read it but it is a joke here at the Library. We are keeping it purely for the conversational shock value.
Hot Pterodactyl Boyfriend
by Alan Cumyn
"Prepare to be blown away—or rather, carried away on huge muscular wings—by this blissfully outlandish, bracingly-smart, tour de force about a teen who has to come to terms with relinquishing control for the first time as she falls for the hot new…pterodactyl…at school."


message 36: by Rosa (new)

Rosa (rosaiglarsh) | 5379 comments Hot Pterodactyl Boyfriend
That is just silly.


message 37: by starrynight17 (new)

starrynight17 Children of the Lamps


message 38: by Wendy (new)

Wendy | 25 comments josie wrote: "We were liars by E. Lockhart
I hated that book!!!"


I heard a scream and a thump come from my daughters room after she read it. She threw the book at the wall. She liked it but she hated it too. I read it to see why she felt as she did. I don't feel comfortable recommending it to people at the library. It was anger inducing for sure :)


message 40: by Rainbowheart (new)

Rainbowheart | 28616 comments Relevant list!

Actually Terrible Books


message 43: by Astra (new)

Astra Shinestar | 151 comments Haunting Adeline by H D Carlton...
and personally about eighty percent of most BookTok romance novels. ESPECIALLY the romantasies.


message 44: by Artimes (new)

Artimes Eslamihaghighat | 14 comments Wait. Astra, you've read haunting adeline?

And also the book "Can you see me?" Is the worst book ever. I was forced to read it in grade six and I wanted to burn it the whole time.


message 46: by Astra (last edited May 29, 2024 04:37PM) (new)

Astra Shinestar | 151 comments Artimes wrote: "Wait. Astra, you've read haunting adeline?

And also the book "Can you see me?" Is the worst book ever. I was forced to read it in grade six and I wanted to burn it the whole time."

OKAY IN MY DEFENSE
I didn't know how bad it was at the time I knew it was like "BookTok romance" stereotype
but um
I have learned the err of my ways
And curiosity killed the cat so...😅

And do you mean "Can you see me" by Libby Scott or Lynne Lee?


message 47: by Phil (new)

Phil | 195 comments Riptide by Donald Cheatham - a Jaws ripoff about a giant tiger shark menacing the central west coast of Florida

The Crash of ‘79 by Paul Erdman - plodding financial “thriller” about high-stakes global economics. A promising idea, but not written for the layman, and features a loutish, sexist main character.


message 48: by Astra (new)

Astra Shinestar | 151 comments Fourth Wing by Rebecca Yarros
Everything in the book is just so meh and kinda predictable at times


message 49: by Artimes (new)

Artimes Eslamihaghighat | 14 comments Astra wrote: "Artimes wrote: "Wait. Astra, you've read haunting adeline?

And also the book "Can you see me?" Is the worst book ever. I was forced to read it in grade six and I wanted to burn it the whole time...."


By libby scott


message 50: by Artimes (new)

Artimes Eslamihaghighat | 14 comments Astra wrote: "Fourth Wing by Rebecca Yarros
Everything in the book is just so meh and kinda predictable at times"


Wait seriously?


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