Anonymous wrote:I finished Never by Ken Follett and wish I hadn't. I usually love his books but this one was terrible.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Little Fires Everywhere
Where the Crawdad Sings
I don’t finish books often but I seriously tried with these two. Huge mistake.
I liked both of these! 🤣
Anonymous wrote:I've had Isabel Wilkerson's Caste on my book shelf for a while now and was really looking forward to reading it.
I started it today, and am really not enjoying her sentence structure. I keep reading parts and immediately wanting to fix them for better flow. Same thing with some of the paragraphs. I enjoy reading for the subject but mostly I really enjoy well constructed writing. This is pushing towards a DNF for me and I'm disappointed!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Gentleman in Moscow. I tried three times!
I LOVED Gentleman in Moscow. But I did not like The Lincoln Highway at all.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How can I be the first person here to say Infinite Jest!?
Because most people don't pick it up in the first place.- No way, no how. I read a paragraph and put it back down.
Anonymous wrote:Gentleman in Moscow. I tried three times!
Anonymous wrote:Little Fires Everywhere
Where the Crawdad Sings
I don’t finish books often but I seriously tried with these two. Huge mistake.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I could not get through any of the BearTown. It was like a book I read in early middle school and the writing was very immature.
I agree with this one
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: The Invisible Life of Addie LaRue was the first novel I haven’t been able to finish in years. It was just so slow and drawn out.
I finished it - but I agree - oh my goodness, did it take a long time to wrap up.
I loved the writing of Addie LaRue, but kept thinking about how small her life was. There was a little mention of her possibly being a spy during WW2, but other than that, it seems just just wandered around France, England, and the US? If you had hundreds of years, wouldn't you have explored a bit more? Done some more things?
So. Many. More. Things.
Her life was SO SMALL.
The part that killed me was here she was hanging out with the literal devil, and she had zero curiosity about what HIS life was like, even. Infinite years to find out about infinite things, and she has not the remotest interest in ANYTHING other than the number of freckles on her cheek and how they look quite like a constellation.
I hated that book. Finished it, but hated it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: The Invisible Life of Addie LaRue was the first novel I haven’t been able to finish in years. It was just so slow and drawn out.
I finished it - but I agree - oh my goodness, did it take a long time to wrap up.
I loved the writing of Addie LaRue, but kept thinking about how small her life was. There was a little mention of her possibly being a spy during WW2, but other than that, it seems just just wandered around France, England, and the US? If you had hundreds of years, wouldn't you have explored a bit more? Done some more things?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The Goldfinch.
I finished it but I wish I hadn’t… that’s weeks of my life I’ll never get back. If ever a book were in need of an editor, The Goldfinch is it. I loved Tartt’s The Secret History and was really disappointed with this one.
Anonymous wrote:The Goldfinch.