We are always writing about books we recommend but what about a book you wish you'd never bothered with? I've just finished one that was a complete waste of time (well I've got a lot of that now!). It's called Never Too Late For Love by Rosie Harris. Set in the present it has a woman 70+ who breaks her leg and is given underarm crutches (no mention of a zimmer), a nurse who gets the sack because she refuses to "live in" (are there still nurses' homes?) and various other anomalies. I would have thought it was set in the '50s but mobile phone is mentioned!!! So what's your Bad Book?
Terribull I’ve tried to read ‘One Hundred Years of Solitude”twice and never got beyond the first chapter.
I really enjoyed Love in the Time of Cholera. I didn’t find it “heavy” but recently it has been accused of being sexist. I must confess to finding it quite amusing in places. Perhaps I should re-read it and maybe I would feel differently about it.
Can I have a gold star for having actually finished "One Hundred Years of Solitude" please? I kept hoping that it would stop being so boring and that something interesting would happen, but sadly, no.
No no no! I just read the post about Never Let Me Go - I thought it was wonderful, if you haven't tried it yet don't be put off; and Ladder To The Stars - brilliant.
Another thread that mentioned Barbara Pym, reminded me that after reading her a long time ago and enjoying her books. I tried to read her two years ago and gave up about 10 chapters in, and even getting that far was hard work. I dipped into several more and came to the conclusion that she had dated very badly and I would give up the struggle to read her.
Just finished The Doll Factory by Elizabeth Macneal, but wouldn’t have bothered if the library wasn’t closed and I had anything better. It was apparently read on Radio 4 and had quite good reviews. Sorry I persisted as it definitely didn’t appeal to me.
Anything by Jane Austin I really have tried but just cannot get to grips with them, and also Stephen King Did enjoy Pride & Prejudice on TV though but think that was down to Colin Firth ?
I belong to two book clubs and the books we e read recently have been real stinkers! ‘Little friend ‘ by Donna Tartt. How tedious and long winded - I couldn’t finish it. The Underground Railroad ( can’t remember the author) was brutal and over descriptive. Again couldn’t finish it. I’m beginning to think it’s me. The next book is Swamplandia by Karen Russell. About alligator wrestling! ........ fascinating! ??
My son gave me "Gentleman in Moscow" with the comment "you must read this book it's really good", I found it dull! dull! dull! I noticed it's a great favourite over on MN. Son studied Soviet Union for a history and politics module at university, so he finds anything about that era wildly interesting, unfortunately I don't!
Muriel Spark's 'Little Red Chairs'. Had to read it for book group but it should never,never have been published. Just because she's a famous old lady. Nobody else could have got away with such a load of old tosh.
I'm not sure any book can be classified as "bad". People have different opinions and different tastes. A poster said she hated To Kill a Mockingbird, but I think it's a wonderful book.
Here are the ones I didn't enjoy - many of which I didn't even bother to persevere with:
Catcher in the Rye - a supposed modern "classic"
Wuthering Heights - thoroughly depressing
The Time Traveller's Wife
The Accidental - a much lauded writer but I just don't get it
Middlemarch - worthy but so dull, dull, dull. Don Quixote - each chapter ended with something like, 'in the next part we will learn etc' which removed any surprise. Parts of it were funny but I wouldn't want to read it again.
Just staggered to the end of "Time & the Hunter" by Italo Calvino. Short stories of which maybe 2 were slightly interesting and the rest I found incomprehensible, but I suspect that they are actually very intellectual and I am thick.
Also read a couple of books by Elizabeth Bowen (inherited from DM) with which I was unimpressed.
Still, I don't ever have to read any of them again
I can't read Thomas Hardy, although I enjoy (some) of his poetry. Managed to read Far from the Madding Crowd when daughter did it for GCSE, and another one about somebody called Eustacia (?) for book group, but I just can't concentrate on them.
I agree with some of your choices Eloethan, but not "Star of the Sea" I absolutely adored that book. Still we are all different, as Blue Sapphire has testified above with her liking of "A Gentleman in Moscow" a much loved book on MN, I just found it tedious. One man's meat and all that!