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Books that defeated you!

(256 Posts)
TerriBull Wed 01-Mar-23 11:45:06

Hot on the heels of Doodledog's uplifting thread, best novels and why?. What book/s have you abandoned or wished you had!

Mine would be, Cloud Atlas, I did finish it but found really heavy going, at the time a few people around me were saying "what a great book" I think it was a very clever concept and although I can be ok with a non linear narrative, I just didn't get on with it at all. Similarly, Lincoln in The Bardo which has won so many literary awards, Booker Prize winner and then the best Booker Prize Winner ever shock and very much loved over on MN, not by me, I think, it was my worst book ever. Other than that Johnathan Strange and Mr Norrell, I gave up 100 pages in, not enjoying it with 600 or more pages to go. The Lovey Bones, I just hated it, thought it was utter shite, I couldn't understand why it had so many accolades heaped on it at the time.

So what did you hate and abandon and what did you finish but wish you hadn't wasted your time on?

GrammarGrandma Sat 04-Mar-23 11:11:42

Oh, I knew straightaway someone would say Ulysses! I havre read it four or five times and it is my desert island book. I did read Lincoln in the Bardo but haven't kept it. Loved Jonathan Strange and Mr Norrell. Have read War and Peace several times and all Dickens. Also Proust more than once. One of the few books I haven't finished is Tirant lo Blanc. Adored Wolf Hall and the sequels, saw the plays and Tv version twice. I am clearly out on a limb here on Gransnet.

Secondwind Sat 04-Mar-23 11:10:04

What an interesting thread.smile
I used to plough through books regardless of whether I was enjoying them or not. Until I picked up ‘Wild Swans - the first book I abandoned!
There have been many more since…

CBBL Sat 04-Mar-23 11:09:59

Definitely "Wolf Hall" despite being a fan of books set in the Elizabethan era!

red1 Sat 04-Mar-23 11:08:38

war and peace,one day........ trying to re read 'hungry ghosts' joe fisher about the dangers of spiritualism,a tough read,my question is why? im working on it!

Ali08 Sat 04-Mar-23 11:08:21

Wuthering Heights!!
The very first time I attempted to read it, UGH! It was in olde English and I stuttered inside my head!
I gave it a good go, but it wasn't meant to be, at least not in that form.
A couple of years later I found it in plain, up-to-date, English and thoroughly enjoyed it!

NanaPlenty Sat 04-Mar-23 11:08:07

I’m often defeated by books. If I’m not ‘in it’ by the end of the first chapter I usually give up. I hate giving up but with so many good books to read life’s too short to waste it struggling. I also think whether you like a book is a really personal thing.

Mere1 Fri 03-Mar-23 17:53:18

Hilary Mantel ‘ A Place of Greater safety’
C Dickens ‘ Barnaby Rudge’.

muppett1 Fri 03-Mar-23 15:43:42

Sorry everyone. Just reread the initial post. I replied I was was defeated by Some other Rainbow and a Brief History of Time - not novels! Lord of the Rings falls into the correct category and I gave up on that. Fifty Shades of Grey (thought I should after all the hype!) just bored me very quickly and I gave up.

Mollygo Fri 03-Mar-23 14:00:04

Not Wolf Hall-I didn’t like the style and Captain Corelli’s Mandolin was another no, though I did try several times.
I read Dr Zhivago way back, but I couldn’t reread it. Can’t do with Richard Osman books at all, even on Audible.

Sara1954 Fri 03-Mar-23 13:34:57

NotsSpaghetti
I really loved A Little Life
Give it a go

Sara1954 Fri 03-Mar-23 13:33:12

Foxie
I am in general agreement with you.
Midnights Children, awful
Wolf Hall, brilliant
Secret History, masterpiece
The Goldfinch, disappointing
Catch 22, just awful, couldn’t finish it.

foxie48 Fri 03-Mar-23 13:08:20

I'm another who couldn't get through "Midnight's Children". I loved Wolf Hall and Bring up the Bodies but listened to the Mirror and the Light when it was serialised on radio 4. Loved Catch 22, it makes me laugh out loud. I also couldn't finish Shadow of the Wind. Absolutely adored The Secret History but couldn't get into Tartt's, The Goldfinch and I ditched Piranesi by Susan Clarke two thirds of the way through because it just got very tedious.

Urmstongran Fri 03-Mar-23 13:05:27

Oh Grandyma A Little Life by Hanya Yanagihara defeated me recently. My DD recommended it is one of my all time favourites. Read it years ago and at 700 pages I was bereft when it finished. I felt as though I’d lost a friendship group.
😱

I hated The Thursday Murder Club but finished it as a friend had bought it for me one Christmas. What a turkey!

I never finish any book otherwise if I’m not enjoying it. Life’s to short to read (to me) rubbish books or drink mediocre wine. I’ve ditched a few novels in my time. I remember being on holiday once and seeing a lady by the swimming pool. Open her beach bag and start to read a novel I’d recently given up on and thinking ‘oh poor you!’.

NotSpaghetti Fri 03-Mar-23 12:54:19

A Little Life is in my queue hmm

Dempie55 Fri 03-Mar-23 12:48:33

These are the two most recent fails for me, despite friends and family raving about them both:

Amor Towles - A Gentleman in Moscow
Hanya Yanagihara - A Little Life

Sara1954 Fri 03-Mar-23 12:07:09

Sparklefizz
Yes I did, I thoroughly enjoyed it.
I think I might watch it again if I can find it.

BlueSapphire Fri 03-Mar-23 11:41:04

Dr Zhivago, started it in the late 1960s, got fed up and confused by all the Russian names and characters, and never finished it. Enjoyed the film though.

Sparklefizz Fri 03-Mar-23 11:20:14

Sara1954

Sparklefizz
I agree, she brings it all to life, you can almost hear her characters talking

Did you watch Wolf Hall on tv? I thought the production was wonderful and watched it a 2nd time on iPlayer.

Sara1954 Fri 03-Mar-23 11:08:34

Sparklefizz
I agree, she brings it all to life, you can almost hear her characters talking

Sparklefizz Fri 03-Mar-23 10:50:26

Sara1954

I loved Wolf Hall
I liked the style it was written in, and I fell a little in love with Thomas Cromwell.

Me too Sara1954. Hilary M made him human, and I love her writing style.

HousePlantQueen Thu 02-Mar-23 23:07:36

I loved We need to talk about Kevin, and The Goldfinch although it was very odd.

Have read and enjoyed the first 2 Wolf Hall books, have got third lined up on the bookshelf, and also thoroughly enjoyed everyone of the Richard Osman books!

Sara1954 Thu 02-Mar-23 22:57:53

Doodledog
I raved so much about the book, that I bought the DVD and got everyone to watch it, it definitely lost a lot of the feeling of the book, I don’t remember anyone particularly enjoying it.

Chocolatelovinggran Thu 02-Mar-23 22:56:42

We need to talk about Kevin is one of my top ten books. Very disturbing but unforgettable.

Doodledog Thu 02-Mar-23 22:50:29

Sara1954

Doodledog
I don’t remember finding the beginning of ‘Kevin’ to be too difficult to get into, it’s a book that shocks and horrifies, but the worst thing is that you can see how in a country with few gun laws, this could too easily happen.

I can't remember what it was about the beginning that I disliked, but I really didn't like it the first time round. It would have been a shame if I hadn't persevered though, as it was so well-written.

I enjoyed the film too, but it had nowhere near the nuance of the book - it couldn't I suppose, as decisions would have to be made as to how to represent things that were ambiguous in the book, and the film had to come down on one side or the other.

Sara1954 Thu 02-Mar-23 16:14:16

AGAA4
I think you’re right, but I thought Hillary Mantel wrote sympathetically about him, maybe she loved him a little bit as well.
He got his comeuppance in the end though, inevitable really.