Books I Loathed discussion
Great Concepts/Ideas - Badly Written




I thought The Historian was a great idea for a novel, but found it painstakingly boring to read.


It absolutely infuriated me that, with such a wonderful subject to play with, he focused on a little teen popularity battle.





I've learned that I simply can't read Kazuo Ishiguro. I can't accept the worlds that he creates as-is. I need much more.
Darcie, I had the same experience with Ishiguro. I felt like it was all way over my head but I think maybe the way he writes about the world was so unlike my experience of it I was confused about where I was.


I have to disagree with y'all about Kazuo Ishiguro, though. In a world where the things are legal that are legal in Never Let Me Go, people wouldn't spend all day thinking about it. It would have been a far worse novel if there had been a page or two of exposition or worse, a timeline, instead of the narrator's peek-a-booing. Tom's right - TROTD is great.
My own nomination for this thread: Octavia Butler's Parable of the Sower. I'm sure she could've come up with an interesting way to tell that story. Instead, the prose is laughable.
I have always wondered about Remains of the Day - from what I have heard of it, it seems more accessible. I'll put it on my (unrealistically long) list!
Oh, I can't recommend it highly enough, Kate. Ishiguro is one of my favorites.



I know this is for books, but...
Has anyone seen the movie Ginger Snaps Back??? Not Ginger Snaps, but Ginger Snaps Back??????? It was a good attempt, but the ending seemed like they were running the last half hour on the last day before it was due. WARNING: DO NOT WATCH.
Has anyone seen the movie Ginger Snaps Back??? Not Ginger Snaps, but Ginger Snaps Back??????? It was a good attempt, but the ending seemed like they were running the last half hour on the last day before it was due. WARNING: DO NOT WATCH.




I haven't read lord of the rings ... well, i read the hobbit, and it was okay. i'm not sure if i ever finished it. i read most of it, anyway.



I agree with Twilight being in this thread, though I'm going to go out on a limb and say that the idea wasn't all that great or original either. I mean really, a girl falling in love with an amazingly handsome vampire? Where have I seen that before? Oh yeah, in just about every vampire romance novel ever written.
And I'm also going to agree with Wicked being on here. Great idea, terrible writing.
And right now, I'm reading (or trying to read) The History of the End of the World, which is a book about how Revelations has shaped history, usually in some not-so-great ways. It seems like a really cool book as far as non-fiction goes, but the writing is just not engaging at all and he never really seems to make his point. I'm like 20 pages in and I feel like I'm still reading the introduction. So it's a really cool topic, but really bad writing.

I can´t say I agree with WICKED though. I thought it was good, going to re-read soon.


Mary, I actually liked The Da Vinci Code. Yes, Dan Brown is a terrible writer, but the plot lines were great.

Dan Brown's plots resemble Gruyere cheese. Unfortunately unlike Gruyere the enormous holes do not add to the charm.


Exactly!! Great idea, terrible writing. Isn't that what we're talking about in this thread? I've read
The Da Vinci Code twice and it's a page-turner but at the same time I'm groaning aloud to myself at some of the more awkward, hackneyed bits.

I have read a lot of rubbish in my time, one of the dangers of being a voracious book worm, so I can forgive myself for that.
I can't believe I bought it. Having read Holy Blood Holy Grail my mother thought it would be interesting. What a mistake!

I really liked Sandman but Gaiman's prose is just the worst. I don't necessarily need high literature but his stuff is 9th grade reading level at best. American Gods was a total waste of potential.


More for this thread: The Man in the High Castle, by Philip K. Dick, is based on the premise that the Axis won WWII and the US is divided up between Germany and Japan. Awesome idea, worse than horrible execution. I kept reading it because I figured it had to get better, somehow. I didn't realize at the time that he came up with all of his (bizarre) plot points via repeated consultation of the I Ching. Really ridiculous.

Loved Mr Darcy, Vampyre though, because it was set after the events of Pride & Prejudice and didnt use such flowery language.


I havent read it yet, purely because S&S&S was so painful and I dont want to go through that anytime soon. But from what I've heard from friends who are reading it, it's just like S&S&S - the zombie parts are awesome, but the original text is still boring as hell
A lot of PNR books fall into this category, IMO. But possibly the winner of the shiny trophy of sad letdown, for me, was Nightkeepers. Premise was fabulous, and the story was practically sitting up and begging to be wriien, but no. Denied Stairway to Heaven.


This. I loved the idea for WICKED, but then I hated the way it was written. I couldn't make it all the way through.

Hi John,
Curious what you mean about needing to forget the movie -- Wicked seemed to me to be true tot he original Wizard of Oz book, not the movie? Thanks!
Curious what you mean about needing to forget the movie -- Wicked seemed to me to be true tot he original Wizard of Oz book, not the movie? Thanks!


It's about killer unicorns...which sounds awesome. Be warned though: it is complete and utter pooh about a bunch of whiny virgins

Given the concept (Depression era travelling circus!) there was so much room for fantastical wonderfulness that this story lacks entirely. All the bits that almost got there- the mischievousness of the elephant that didn’t understand English, the moonshine paralysis, a hippo in formaldehyde, murdering elephants- weren’t the authors ideas, but anecdotes from her research. How dull.
It would have been far more gratifying had it been written as non-fiction, because the details were good. And even interesting. But the fiction part… basically is an unimaginative love story with boring, cliché characters that I couldn’t stand with a Hollywood ending.
Books mentioned in this topic
House of Leaves (other topics)Wool Omnibus (other topics)
Twilight (other topics)
Thirteen Reasons Why (other topics)
The Perks of Being a Wallflower (other topics)
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Castaway's of the Flying Dutchman by Brian Jacques (author of Redwall) looked like a totally awesome book and even though I never liked Redwall the book sounded so cool that I wanted to read it anyway. Well, the whole book besides the idea behind it was awful and I basically had a permanent cringe on my face through the whole thing.