Terminalcoffee discussion
Books / Writing
>
Do you think less of people if they read shitty books?


I love horror movies, good, bad, indifferent. But I know the difference between them!

This, exactly. I can't tell y'all how many times* I've heard "OMG, you have to read Blah-de-Blah Blah, it's amazing [first clue it will be anything but]!" and when I do a little research I find out it's a smutty bodice-ripper or a time-travelling, possibly vampire-infested, romance novel.
*Ok, I'll tell you--at least once a week.



Sandy, Jodi Picoult is one of my favorite authors.
Alecia, I also read all genres of books. If others don't like what I'm reading, nobody's forcing them to read them.

But then I don't go around pushing them on people saying oh wow you just have to read this badly written badly edited thing with the major holes in its plot and the wooden characters.
Yeah, that's how I felt...like people were saying, "oh, isn't this writer great? Don't we all agree? Let us all lend these bad books to each other." They're actually compiling a list for distribution. Fuck that shit.

(But they read really shitty books, and they sound like that's all they read, I'm not kidding...:)

I think less of their taste (not them as humans) if they read only shitty books. (They could read nothing but Nicholas Sparks and still be wonderful people who volunteer, serve the poor, house the homeless, are Jesuslike, etc.) I tend to think more highly of people who read a wide variety of stuff and are not snobs about reading genre works, or even shitty works. If someone is such a snob that they will only read Shakespeare, Milton, and Donne, I will actually think less of them than if they read Shakespeare, Milton, Donne, John le Carre, and Harlequin romances. I tend to think of people who read widely and diversely as being more human and more interesting. But I might be biased, because I read pretty widely and diversely myself.


Ooooh, Snookie has a book coming out.

This is the reason I am glad to be part of a book discussion group. I read the assigned books whether or not I want to simply to be able to contribute to the discussion. A case in point is Devil in the White City by Eric Larson.I would never have picked it off a library book shelf but because I read it for the discussion, I gained so much enjoyment from learning about the 1893 Chicago World's Fair and life during those times.

But I'm afraid I have to say that I really don't think "shitty" is subjective. That was sort of my point. Taste certainly is, but there actually are standards, you know, about how to write well.

Couldn't agree more.
Although I enjoy reading truly fine books, I also like being able to understand what people are talking about when they mention things like Twilight or Dan Brown, neither of which is necessarily great literature but worth knowing about if you want to engage with today's culture.
Sometimes I think of it this way: if I had lived in the 19th century and read only canonical works from the past--Shakespeare and Milton and classics in Greek and Latin--I would have missed out on Wilkie Collins and H. Rider Haggard, who were immensely popular but were often put down as simple-minded entertainers by people with "elevated" taste.
So, as Lobstergirl said, it's great to read a diverse range of books--Philip Roth and Stephenie Meyer, Haruki Murakami and Stieg Larson, etc.


Stephenie Meyer and Jody Picault indeed!

Admittedly, it seriously DOES puzzle me how anyone can not read at all. Lots of people do not read for pleasure--how do they stand it?
I had eye surgery and could not read for three weeks till everything healed and I missed reading so much. (This was years ago before audiobooks were readily available.)

I'm ok with that. I think I can express this a little better after thinking this through...although I go back to Rebecca's point about people thinking bad books are the height of good literature as key here. I appreciate when people read a wide variety of books...but when people only read airport-rack spinners and then pronounce them great books I assume an incomplete knowledge of books and want to say "you don't know what you're talking about...books are important to me and pronouncing that crap as great literature or devaluing great books as 'too hard' or 'snobbish' shows you don't know what you're talking about and smacks of reverse snobbery."
There are areas about which I don't know much (e.g. economics) that I'd like to learn more about and might cause similar eye-rolling were I to speak about them around people who cared about them...so I don't, like, yell at people who read bad books or anything. I don't care that much. I just smile politely and back away Like Misha said a while ago, too, maybe I'm misreading intention and someone saying a shitty book is "great" might be more casual than anything.

L.J.
Secrets to Die For
The Baby Thief
The Sex Club
The Suicide Effect
Thrilled to Death


I used to prejudge people a bit (I'll admit it) when they would mention their favorite authors or books and in my mind I had shelved those as "easy reads." Recently, a friend of mine insisted that I read the Sookie Stackhouse series. I enjoyed it, but would shelve it as an "easy read." I suggested the same friend read The World According to Garp and she now thinks that I might be demented. She thought Garp was "too real" and thus not an escape or enjoyable for her.
I've calmed down a bit on judging people for waht they read because I don't want people to judge me for what I read. I'd rather spend my time judging people that don't read. :)

That sums up my feelings about the subject. I have grandchildren who are non-readers and some who read extensively. They are not allowed to say, "I'm bored" when they visit. I tell them to learn to enjoy reading. Then they will never be bored.

:)
Reading is entertainment for me, not unlike watching a movie.

I'm having a "let the fingers fly" day on the keyboard, saying whatever pops into my head first.

Though unquestionably for some people being snooty is simply a personal characteristic, another kind of snobbery derives from a protective instinct or profound passion (I think).
Personally, I don’t care what people read, so long as they look good and like to drink.
Okay, I've just done a book comparision between RA's bookshelves and mine. We have 11 books in common. Does that by definition mean according to RA I read shitty books?
Yay, *High five* Barb, we can skuttle off and read our shitty books together. :D
That book comparison thing isn't really accurate for me as one of my shelves is "will never read."

179 books in common with Sarah Pi
124 with Bun
118 with Gretchen
104 with Lobstergirl
87 with Gail
44 with RA
41 with Barb
and 10 with Phil
But the high numbers are partly because I have a lot of books listed.
Jackie you have just validated 26.28% of my library with a compatibility of 75%. Yay, I have some cred.

Oh god yes, that's me Kelly, guilty.

I must admit, I've never read any Nicholas Sparks, and Twilight wasn't that exciting to me. I read a lot of vampire stories, and Twilight wasn't what I want from that genre. Plus, it needs editing, it's overwritten. ;)

I used to be more insecure, but one of the great things about goodreads is that you can find whole groups of people that read what you like to read and get hyped about it along with you.
I LOVE young adult fiction, and even belong to a group that caters to adult lovers of YA fiction. YA has gotten me back into the sci-fi and fantasy genres, when in the past I would sometimes find the books to be too dry or tedious to read in the adult medium (depending on author of course). There was a point when I felt embarrassed to tell someone that I was reading a romance or paranormal book but not anymore. Reading is fun and it takes me to an imaginary place (I lived in my imagination as a kid).
Some people read in the quest to keep learning, and that's GREAT for them. If I ever go back to college at some point, then that day will come for me. Right now I'm just having fun reading for the heck of it.


Yes. Anyone who reads books other than is reading shitty books.
(kidding, kidding...)

I'm glad! :)


Yet usually people who ONLY read shitty books as we're defining it (badly written, stale genre writing) are very different from me. And yes, I guess inside I'm snobby, but I probably don't have much in common. THis doesn't mean that they are bad people, which is really the only thing that matters to me bottom line.
I know people judge me for loving sci fi, fantasy - what I call speculative fiction.
But hey I read shitty books, when you're in the mood for a popcorn book there's nothing as cozy!
It wasn't that long ago that I read mostly magazines, with some nonfiction books thrown in. I wasn't that interested in fiction. Now, when I reach for a book it's much more likely to be fiction.
I attribute it to a weakness of character.
I attribute it to a weakness of character.

I try not to judge but I'll admit sometimes I do. If I start to judge I remind myself of John's class and that at least they're reading.
And the stupid e-readers keep me from browsing what people are reading!
Books mentioned in this topic
The Selfish Gene (other topics)The Suicide Effect (other topics)
The Sex Club (other topics)
The Baby Thief (other topics)
Secrets to Die for (other topics)
More...
Do you think less of people when they tell you they read shitty books?