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Have you given up on any books you started reading?

(197 Posts)
yogagran Sun 05-Jun-11 22:04:08

I was given "Eat, Pray and Love" recently and found it so depressing that I gave up after about 50 pages. Are there any books that you have not managed to get through?

Grindos Wed 17-Oct-12 20:18:20

I've just given up on The Casual Vacancy after 100 pages. I like books I can't put down, this one I couldn't remember, and didn't care, what had happened in it from one day's reading to the next. There are too many good books to read, can't waste time on ones I don't like.

gettingthere Tue 16-Oct-12 23:47:33

War and Peace. I tried, several times, I really did, but I just couldn't get past chapter three.

Grossi Tue 16-Oct-12 07:07:01

I never finished The History of the Siege of Lisbon Jose Saramago.

(The truth is that I never got past the first few pages as the sentences were as long as paragraphs and I always find that off-putting.)

It is supposed to be the story of how a misplaced "not" can alter history, so it should have been interesting!

crimson Mon 15-Oct-12 22:34:28

The film of Captain Corelli's Mandolin was dire. I mean; Nicholas Cage for heavens sake angry. Penelope Cruz is now a good actress, but her English wasn't very good at the time and she wasn't beautiful enough..then again I don't think anyone could have been beautiful enough. When she did that flirty dance I just wanted to scream at the cinema screen that Pelagia would NOT behave like that! And, one of the most romantic things ever written [when Mandras swims out to sea] was LEFT OUT. As you can see, years and years after seeing the film for the first time and I'm still annoyed. [sorry; needed to get that off my chest, albeit not for the first time]

Deedaa Mon 15-Oct-12 22:21:56

I absolutely loved Captain Corelli's Mandolin and was really disappointed with the film. I started Moby Dick many years ago & found it quite unreadable. More recently I got completely bogged down in Robert Harris' Imperium which was odd because I've loved his other books. My big surprise lately has been Wolf Hall -which I started with great misgivings because normally the words Booker Prize have me heading for the door - but I thoroughly enjoyed it !!!

annodomini Thu 11-Oct-12 16:01:35

Ditto, glitabo. I lost the will to live and I'm certain it would empty our book group! feetlebaum, I have downloaded Ulysses onto my Kindle, but am still hesitating to open it!

jemimavic Thu 11-Oct-12 15:53:43

I had to give up on Captain Corelli's Mandolin as it went into such boring detail (I thought) however I enjoyed the film of the book. I gave up on Fifty Shades - just predictable chick-lit so I never got to any of the 'juicy' bits.

glitabo Fri 07-Sept-12 20:20:39

I gave up on the Last Mughal by William Dalrymple.
It was our reading group's book this month. I did not like the style of writing, too many reference quotes, and some very brutal descriptions of the massacre.

feetlebaum Thu 23-Aug-12 11:30:45

I never made it through Crime and Punishment (Dostoyevsky), or The Trial (Kafka)

I never even started on any of Tolkien, after failing to get more than a few pages into The Hobbit

I'm taking bets on Ulysses...

Annobel Wed 22-Aug-12 14:12:42

Thanks, baNANA. I will keep going for a while. I don't like to admit defeat. I've never read any of the Roy Grace series.

baNANA Wed 22-Aug-12 13:22:34

Annobel I have read Perfect People and thought it was OKish, I passed it on to my husband who loves Peter James' Roy Grace series and after reading about 50 pages or so has decided it's not for him. If you aren't enjoying it having hit the half way stage I'd say you should give it up because life's too short. Slight twist in the last few pages but it may not be enough for you to think it's a satisfying read.

Annobel Wed 22-Aug-12 12:59:22

I'm feeling like giving up on 'Perfect People'. I'm about half-way through it and so far most of what's happened has been predictable. Can anyone persuade me to persist?

Nanadogsbody Wed 22-Aug-12 12:50:17

Given up on THAT book. Thought I'd download it after all the hype. Deleted it from my Kindle as a waste of space.

sonearsofar Tue 21-Aug-12 17:51:48

I am trying to get through The Bell by Iris Murdoch for a book group, but finding it a real struggle. Any opinions on it?

AlisonMA Tue 21-Aug-12 09:55:45

Only Satanic Verses, haven't yet met anyone who read it all the way through.

I enjoyed A Suitable Boy Merlot

BoomerBabe Mon 20-Aug-12 14:43:35

James Joyce Ulysses. Years ago it was a badge of honour...how far did you get before you gave up? Well I got to page 73, which is not far! It was on the radio recently and was supposed to be something really special.They went on and on and on about it. Me, I think it's a load of hype, a con, a joke played on us by Joyce. Even he didn't seem to know what it meant.

Hattie64 Sat 28-Apr-12 18:26:15

I have given up 'Gillespie and I' by Jane Harris. A well written book, reasonably interesting, but I was just bored with it, I managed 300 of the 500 pages and made a decision today that I really didn't want to read anymore, why go on, when there are so many other interesting books to read, life is too short.

Mobell Sat 28-Apr-12 17:30:43

I was given The Lacuna by Barbara Kingsolver and gave up half way through as I had just didn't care about the characters, however, I then read The Poisonwood Bible which I adored and can't believe how involved I became even thinking about the characters when not reading it.

NannaAnna Fri 20-Apr-12 00:29:13

The Gulag Archipelago! Bought it when it was first published (and I was very young!) and have given up on it more times than I can remember.

merlotgran Thu 19-Apr-12 19:25:34

I have a copy of A Suitable Boy by Vikram Seth sitting on a shelf. I was given it some time ago but the size puts me off. Is it worth starting?

annannasoon Thu 19-Apr-12 14:11:27

I'm currently struggling through The Historian Elizabeth Kostova and will probably give it up as a bad job. It just isn't gripping me enough to look forward to reading it.
Never been able to finish a Maeve Binchy but am enjoying Minding Frankie at the minute. I've always got two or three books on the go and often go back to old favourites Lark rise to Candleford by Flora Thompson - a joy to read very different from the TV series and i've read Wolf Hall by Hilary Mantel several times.

Hattie64 Tue 10-Apr-12 19:57:08

Tastes certainly do change, I also loved Lord of the Rings, but doubt if I would like it now. When I was 14 read all of Agatha Christie as well. I suppose we all move on. I really disliked the Time Travellers Wife.

Annobel Mon 09-Apr-12 16:36:36

I adored The Lord of the Rings when I read it in my 20s. Now I think the writing is rather pretentious. Tastes change!

crimson Mon 09-Apr-12 15:45:01

Agree about Lord of the Rings. The book itself is one of my oldest and most treasured possessions, but I don't think I could read it now. The same with Titus Groan. I loved the Time Travellers wife by the time I actually managed to complete it. I must get Louis de Brernierre's shirt story The Red Dog after seeing the film. Captain Corelli is probably my favourite book of all time.

NewGranLin Mon 09-Apr-12 14:44:36

I have read Captain Corelli's Mandolin several times, it's one of my favourites. I try never to give up on a book, but A.S Byatt's The Children's Book was a real challenge.