PixelFish wrote:That would be L. Ron Hubbard.
But to be fair, I haven't read the Battlefield Earth dekalogy. (or whatever it is)
Nathan wrote:Am I the only Neanderthal who couldn't get through A Confederacy of Dunces? I was away on a long weekend on Cape Cod and I actually tossed the thing into the barbeque pit half finished. (First and last time I've ever had that violent a reaction to a book.)
anything by Jack Chalker in case it has an essentially-magically transformed hyper-female submissive nymphomaniac".

Yeah, it really dragged. I think this was the first book where I skipped pages in the middle-- and it didn't really seem to affect my understanding of the book as a whole.Sergeant E wrote:Grapes of Wrath by Steinbeck. The first "important" book I ever read. Sheesh!

Sergeant E wrote:Grapes of Wrath by Steinbeck. The first "important" book I ever read. Sheesh!
Random Michelle wrote: However, I have read Virgil's Aenid and Hesiod's Theogony and loved them.)
Sergeant E wrote:Random Michelle wrote: However, I have read Virgil's Aenid and Hesiod's Theogony and loved them.)
Thucydides and Polybius are certainly more accessible than a lot of what passes for modern military and political history. And Gibbon is fun, so it's not like it's a "spirit of the age" thing.
WinterIsComing wrote:Eragon by Christopher Paolini. Please, no, drink bleach instead. Really, a gallon of it. Much better than a dragon-laden ripoff of Star Wars, Lord of the Rings, and EVERYTHING ELSE.
green_hat wrote:I know lots of folks who loved The Hobbit, but hated Lord of the Rings. I'm just the opposite though-- loved LOTR, hated The Hobbit.
An Inquiry into the Nature and Causes of the Wealth of Nations
Tania wrote:I thought of another author: Sharon Green, writes John Norman-esque novels along the vein of "Ooh, I'm a competent woman that really needs to be dominated by a big strong man so I can realize just how incomplete my life has been". Barf.
penfold wrote:I tried to read Left Behind (or whatever the official title of the first book in that series is) a few months ago, and although I got all the way through it, it was a rough ride. It looks like it was written by a third-grader for a bible school project. Horrible. Just horrible.
Nikitta wrote:I keep fighting the urge to reply to this thread to say that I would't wish any of my favourite books on my worst enemy because they just don't deserve the pleasure. I lost.
Randy Johnson wrote:Nikitta wrote:I keep fighting the urge to reply to this thread to say that I would't wish any of my favourite books on my worst enemy because they just don't deserve the pleasure. I lost.
Good point. That makes sense. We've all been talking books we hate and those surely WOULD be the ones we wish on our worst enemy. Thanks for clearing that up.
DG Lewis wrote:Randy Johnson wrote:Nikitta wrote:I keep fighting the urge to reply to this thread to say that I would't wish any of my favourite books on my worst enemy because they just don't deserve the pleasure. I lost.
Good point. That makes sense. We've all been talking books we hate and those surely WOULD be the ones we wish on our worst enemy. Thanks for clearing that up.
I think the point is that the books are so bad that not only would one not recommend them to one's friends, one wouldn't even wish them on one's worst enemy.
I would have to pick "anything by Jack Chalker in case it has an essentially-magically transformed hyper-female submissive nymphomaniac". Most of the other fetish books are straightforward slave-porn and go for it if that is your thing, but his have pretensions of having plot and character, so you can get sucked in before The Great Gazonga is created.
Ottawa Rob wrote:The Heart of Darkness by Joseph Conrad. - Liked Apocalpse Now however I just could not read Conrad's novel. I tried multiple times to finish it when it was assigned in Grade 12 English. I've read thousands of novels and rarely fail to finish them. When assigned novels for school I usually read them in a day or 2. But this novel was so incredibly boring and I tried repeatedly but I could not get more than 1/3 into the book.
PixelFish wrote:Rhapsody, by Elizabeth Haydon. I'm terrible at culling books from my library but I let this one go in no time flat. (Here be spoilers of a sort.)
The main character is a Mary Sue. A Mary Sue in all of her too-perfect glory. You could go down the Mary Sue checklist:
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