― Phastbuck, Friday, 28 May 2004 18:10 (twenty years ago) link
― Jocelyn (Jocelyn), Friday, 28 May 2004 19:33 (twenty years ago) link
― prima fassy (mwah), Friday, 28 May 2004 20:47 (twenty years ago) link
I was planning to read The Crimson Petal... but these comments make me think I'll save myself a heavy load coming back from the library after all.
― Archel (Archel), Tuesday, 1 June 2004 11:34 (twenty years ago) link
Fante - Ask the Dust - I fear I may have lost my taste for Bukowski (and co.)
― Big Willy and the Twins (miloaukerman), Tuesday, 11 April 2006 01:41 (eighteen years ago) link
Gibson - Pattern Recognition. Read a line I think it was "the fridge was empty except for the smell of long-chain polymers." I laughed, stumbled on for a few more chapters and closed the book.
― Navek Rednam (Navek Rednam), Tuesday, 11 April 2006 05:02 (eighteen years ago) link
I recently gave up on the second vol of The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen because the pictures ran out ha. I have no concentration span these days. I used to never give up on books but now I sometimes get overcome by inertia before I even start them and before I know it they're due back.
― Archel (Archel), Tuesday, 11 April 2006 07:20 (eighteen years ago) link
― m coleman (lovebug starski), Tuesday, 11 April 2006 09:19 (eighteen years ago) link
― Martin Van Buren (Martin Van Buren), Thursday, 13 April 2006 18:39 (eighteen years ago) link
― stewart downes (sdownes), Thursday, 13 April 2006 19:47 (eighteen years ago) link
― Josh (Josh), Friday, 14 April 2006 03:46 (eighteen years ago) link
― Beth Parker (Beth Parker), Saturday, 15 April 2006 13:49 (eighteen years ago) link
― anthony easton (anthony), Sunday, 16 April 2006 08:09 (eighteen years ago) link
― Martin Van Buren (Martin Van Buren), Sunday, 16 April 2006 18:05 (eighteen years ago) link
― Cherish, Wednesday, 19 April 2006 02:44 (eighteen years ago) link
― Abbadavid Berman (Hurting), Wednesday, 19 April 2006 03:26 (eighteen years ago) link
― google pr main, Thursday, 20 April 2006 08:14 (eighteen years ago) link
― Jaq (Jaq), Thursday, 20 April 2006 11:38 (eighteen years ago) link
― Docpacey (docpacey), Thursday, 20 April 2006 14:59 (eighteen years ago) link
― Mikey G (Mikey G), Thursday, 20 April 2006 15:11 (eighteen years ago) link
― Docpacey (docpacey), Thursday, 20 April 2006 19:56 (eighteen years ago) link
Books started and not finished this year include George RR Martin's A Game of Thrones (too flatulent), Jasper Fforde's The Eyre Affair (appallingly written) and A Long Long Way by Sebastian Barry (too Oirish). I've just finished Auster's City of Glass having failed to finish it the first time, despite its being no more than a novella. I'm not incapable of liking metaphyical novels, but I feel pretty lukewarm about Auster's work despite his impressive brain. Beckett did much the same thing even more cleverly without making me feel more of it would be a good thing.
― frankiemachine, Monday, 1 May 2006 10:34 (eighteen years ago) link
100 Years isn't hard to get through in the sense that dense, difficult prose is hard to get through. It's more like a Country Time Lemonade with five extra sugars.
― Abbadavid Berman (Hurting), Monday, 1 May 2006 14:15 (eighteen years ago) link
― spam, Thursday, 4 May 2006 08:04 (eighteen years ago) link
― weird SPEMtones, Thursday, 11 May 2006 21:28 (eighteen years ago) link
I tend to do this more often with nonfiction books than fiction. It's a natural litmus test to how interested I am in a particular subject. I may be interested enough to check out the book but not 800 pages interested.
One work of fiction I can specifically remember not finishing was The Stand. I saw the 8 hour miniseries when they aired it back in the early 90s, and the book seemed like a more drawn out screenplay of that series so I didn't bother.
― musicfanatic, Wednesday, 25 July 2012 12:58 (twelve years ago) link
i wish i was still a moderator here so i could change this thread title. i must have been drunk. and i didn't believe in the space bar in 2003 for some reason. all my posts do that. so annoying.
― scott seward, Wednesday, 25 July 2012 13:02 (twelve years ago) link
Recent unfinished books include
Ramsey Campbell "Hungry Moon" - profoundly boring. Couldn't keep the characters straight or bring myself to care about any of them.Mick Wall "When Giants Walked the Earth: A Biography of Led Zeppelin" - Couldn't get over the sections written in second person. Jack Ketchum "Peaceable Kingdom" - by the 3rd or 4th story there had just been too much rape
― how's life, Wednesday, 25 July 2012 13:05 (twelve years ago) link
think I hit this last night with Nigel Smith's biography of Andrew Marvell. Love marvell, & smith knows an awful lot, but he's a terrible, terrible writer, shits out the worst sort of academic prose, no head for structuring his material. It made me quite angry.
― woof, Wednesday, 25 July 2012 13:12 (twelve years ago) link
It's not up to the level of most of the books mentioned ott, but I looked at the first page of James Hadley Chase's Blonde's Requiem, got up and pulled my copy of Red Harvest from the shelf, and confirmed that Chase had plagiarized a couple of Hammett's paragraphs from that novel's first page. That did not work for me.
― Brad C., Wednesday, 25 July 2012 13:15 (twelve years ago) link
James Sallis's Drive. Tries to have stylish writing but there are so many clear mistakes that it's laughable. For example: in the first chapter, the narrator repeatedly miscounts the number of dead bodies in the room. Another example: a car "somersaults twice" but somehow lands on its roof.
― abanana, Wednesday, 25 July 2012 13:28 (twelve years ago) link
Yeah, tried to read that one too. His book about Chester Himes is good though. And he has a book or two about guitar players that are OK.
― Can Ruman Sig The Whites? (James Redd and the Blecchs), Wednesday, 25 July 2012 14:39 (twelve years ago) link
thank the moderator gods.
― scott seward, Wednesday, 25 July 2012 14:54 (twelve years ago) link
i am pretty neurotic about finishing books, the last thing i remember stopping was blood meridian by cormac mccarthy because it was giving me horrible depressing nightmares. i haven't tried to read anything else by mccarthy.
it was REALLY hard for me to get through neal stephenson's snow crash... i left it on a park bench because i just didn't want it anywhere near me. lots of people i otherwise respect really like this guy and i don't get it! awful.
― john zorn has ruined klezmer for an entire generation (bene_gesserit), Wednesday, 25 July 2012 14:55 (twelve years ago) link
Old thread title here, for historic purposes:What's A Book You Started To Read Recently(Or Not So Recently)Where All Of A Sudden You Decided-Hmmm-That's Enough,Thanks!
― Can Ruman Sig The Whites? (James Redd and the Blecchs), Wednesday, 25 July 2012 14:58 (twelve years ago) link
stop!
― scott seward, Wednesday, 25 July 2012 15:02 (twelve years ago) link
i think when we switched to nu-ilm i was no longer a moderator here. the only other one was chris p. i think? i made him a moderator cuz he wanted to be one for some reason. so this board is moderator-free. cuz chris isn't around, right? causistry.
― scott seward, Wednesday, 25 July 2012 15:03 (twelve years ago) link
i stopped reading that book air guitar that someone gave me. speaking of guitars. the cultural crit book that some people like a lot. by the art critic...whatshisname.
― scott seward, Wednesday, 25 July 2012 15:04 (twelve years ago) link
"Kafka on the Shore" by Murakami. I think I just got tired of the incessant wackiness.
― Michael B Higgins (Michael B), Wednesday, 25 July 2012 15:09 (twelve years ago) link
xpostDave Hickey. Wish I would've stopped reading Air Guitar, more like Hot Air Guitar amirite
― (REAL NAME) (m coleman), Wednesday, 25 July 2012 15:10 (twelve years ago) link
xpost I struggled through that one but definitely left it with an "OK, no more Murakami for a while" feeling. By the end it was making me pretty angry, though.
― cwkiii, Wednesday, 25 July 2012 15:10 (twelve years ago) link
Read all of Isherwood's memoirs up until the mid '60s, realized I couldn't give a flying turd about the decay of queeny Charles Laughton
― baking (soda), Wednesday, 25 July 2012 15:11 (twelve years ago) link
xxpost
or Air-Conditioned Guitar since he goes on @ great length about being the only living art critic in Las Vegas
― (REAL NAME) (m coleman), Wednesday, 25 July 2012 15:12 (twelve years ago) link
In Cold Blood: True crime, meh.
― Pangborn to be Wilde (Dr Morbius), Wednesday, 25 July 2012 15:15 (twelve years ago) link
xpost I might pick that book up again sometime, there was a lot of things about it I really liked and I enjoyed that book of short stories ('The Elephant Vanishes') he wrote but I really wasnt in the mood for it at the time. I think I put it down after the cat-slicing part.
― Michael B Higgins (Michael B), Wednesday, 25 July 2012 15:15 (twelve years ago) link
In Cold Blood is interesting more for its historical significance in journalism than its narrative drive, I'll give you that
― (REAL NAME) (m coleman), Wednesday, 25 July 2012 15:17 (twelve years ago) link
xpost Have you read any of his other novels? A Wild Sheep Chase, Wind-Up Bird Chronicle and Hard Boiled Wonderland and the End of the World were all way better (those are the only others I've read).
― cwkiii, Wednesday, 25 July 2012 15:21 (twelve years ago) link
i can't even get through a murakami short story in the new yorker. but that's just me. i know people love him.
― scott seward, Wednesday, 25 July 2012 15:29 (twelve years ago) link
I think he works best as a novelist based on the few I've read vs. The Elephant Vanishes which I didn't care for at all, but I can see the novels being polarizing, too. He's someone you definitely have to be in a very specific mood for, as he pretty much just writes subtle variations of the same book over and over.
― cwkiii, Wednesday, 25 July 2012 15:39 (twelve years ago) link
there are some writers...i feel like i'm always watching them do something. like i'm watching them make an elaborate meal and i just want to eat. i don't want to watch them cook. that's why i like good sci-fi. because good sci-fi is like watching a really good magician. i just get wrapped up in the story or i just follow them blindly because i want to know where they are going. and when i'm done with their book i say how'd they do that!?
i tried to read a paul auster book years ago and it was like watching someone cooking in their kitchen and i got SO hungry. like, great, you bought really good ingredients, just put it in the oven already. i have this problem with a lot of kinda magic realism types. they never whisk me away. i'm too busy noticing every little move they make.
i'm really bad at metaphor by the way.
― scott seward, Wednesday, 25 July 2012 15:49 (twelve years ago) link