I couldn't finish it either! We were supposed to read it in high school and I totally fudged my way through it. Was supposed to read it again after college when I was tutoring a high school kid and I just couldn't do it. So boring! |
I'm the East of Eden poster. I kept getting told that it gets better after the first 100 pages but I couldn't make it past 45. In general though I'm not a Steinbeck fan - of Mice and Men was tolerable but the rest is not for me. On the other hand, I love, love, live The Hobbit and LoTR. To each his own I guess. |
I'm reading The Happiness Project now and it is jaw-dropping for the reasons you cited. She clerked for Justice O'Connor, and that was fine, but she just didn't enjoy it enough... |
| The Corrections, by Jonathan Franzen. I know everyone loved it, and I love other long, dense character studies like that, but I just couldn't get through it. |
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Umberto Eco books
I tried Foucault's pendulum and felt really dumb after 30 pages. I just could not understand the book. Now i feel very impressed when I see someone reading it in public. |
This. |
Agree. I loved Heinlein's early stuff from the 50's, but after the he seemed to go off the rails. The book I couldn't finish was Atlas Shrugged. I was half way though and thought, Ayn, I got you point 300 pages ago, and TBH you're not a great writer. Set it aside and went to work on "The Gunslinger" and was much happier. |
| Call the Midwife - Shadows of the Workhouse, second memoir by Jennifer Worth. Just too hard to bear knowing that the stories were real. Really painful. |
Agree....and I usually force myself to finish a book, even if I don't like it at first. For The English Patient poster--I recommend watching the movie, then reading the book. The book will fill in many of the holes in the movie's plot. I do think it's a rare case of a person needing to do both to get the whole picture. |
| It took me almost 100 pages to get into the Girl with the Dragon Tattoo. Glad I stuck wtih it. |
Hee - I loved, loved, loved The Name of the Rose but it was a hard-earned read; enjoyed one of his recent ones too but it was a toughie. My sister told me that Foucault's Pendulum pretty much made Name of the Rose feel like a beach read, so I think I'll be leaving Foucault's Pendulum be... feel like less of a book-wimp for having read both of your posts
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The Snow Queen by Cunningham. Put me to sleep every night -- and I have read LOTR multiple times with glee. |
You did not miss anything. I think the trend is to write a book about people no reader will like or care about, to rave reviews. |
I didn't finish it either and I was actually a TA for a freshman intro class that had it on the reading list. |
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Ulysses did me in, too. I also couldn't finish Clarissa. She was such a whiner, I just wanted her to die already.
It's not that I don't like a dense book. I love Proust enough to have reread. I have trouble with Dostoevsky. Endless dull grimness. Getting away from classics, I love travel memoirs, but couldn't read more than a few pages of the Eat Pray Love mess. It was bad in that way where you want to viciously slap the writer. |