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Hey Pandas, What Is A Book You Would Never Recommend Reading?
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The Bible.
I don't know about that. On the one hand, it is a long and for the most part tedious read, but on the other hand, it's only by reading it that one can get a real understanding of how nonsensical it is. It has been said that the one sure way to become an atheist is to read the Bible
My pick would be the zodiac academy series. I don’t know if it’s supposed to be some sort of satire but it has poor grammar, distasteful a*****t and “romance” scenes and is overall rather awful. I still cannot believe there are about 10 entire books in the series.
I gave up on "Pattern Recognition" (William Gibson) because of the amount of purple prose - padding shouldn't feel like padding.
'Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance'. Nothing but a couple of hundred pages of self-indulgent, self-pitying, remorselessly dull whining.
"The Road" by Cormac McCarthy. Oh Em Gee. Nothing but one horrid episode followed by another horrid episode. Grim. Weepingly sad.
Came here to say this. I have read most books I own at least twice (especially before ebooks), but I’ll never read this again. I remember parts vividly… and wish I didn’t!
The Shack by William Paul Young. Absolute first-year cod-philosophy, Christian apologetics style, which is one thing - but couched in a prose style so ham-fisted it makes Dan Brown seem like John Steinbeck.
Also I never finished The Silmarillion, which reads like a DM manual
The Bell Jar by Sylvia Plath. Had to grind through it for a book club and I don't think I've ever hated a book so viscerally. I had literally zero emotional connection with the protagonist and absolutely no interest in her life. I wouldn't say it's a bad book, just one about someone who irritates me profoundly. The Catcher in the Rye comes as close second.
A Little Life, Hanya Yanagihara. Most self-indulgent load of t*****e-p**n trash I've read. It's a shame, because the first... third to half? I don't remember exactly now, is extremely well-written; there's *something* about the main character you don't know, and you want to figure it out.
Once you find it out, the book smacks you around the face with it, along with any other awful thing that could happen to a person -- trust me, it probably happens to the protagonist (who, by the way, is not a particularly interesting or loveable character). The end was a relief to me, and to people that know the ending, that probably sounds like an awful thing to say.
I'm still annoyed by this book even years after I read it because I feel cheated. I really enjoyed the first part. I've rarely had a book where I enjoy the first part but want my money back by the end.
Atlas Shrugged. The main characters are self-important sociopaths. The writing is wooden; you can’t relate to anybody in this book. And Ayn Rand’s ideas contributed to the anti-human extreme capitalism that has eaten the U.S.
Rosario is Dead by Majgull Axelsson. If you know you know. There are a lot of truly horrific scenes involving children in that book I wish I'd never read.
Anything by Charles Dickens. Don't get me wrong, the meat of the stories themselves is amazing, but the writing, ugh. He wrote serials for periodicals, he was paid by the word, and OMG is shows. His plots are great, but the writing is wordy and tedious. Take the opening of A Tale of Two Cities. The famous quote that begins It was the best of times, it was the worst of times... That single sentence goes on for over 100 words. Tedious. Boggy. Mind-numbing. Seriously, rent a movie or go see the play.
Tolstoy is difficult, if better written. It's the names. There's just so many of them. Each person will have one name and a couple nicknames, then there's names for horses, dogs, even swords. And the sentences don't usually have those clues that let you know what the names are referring to. So, you can find yourself thinking which chap is this now? and eventually figure out it's this other dude's sword. Worth reading, but keep a list so you know which name goes to what.
Had to read "Of Mice And Men" at school. I get that it's a classic and all, but bleak bleak bleak bleak, good grief.
Steinbeck in general. He's a really good prose writer, but he really is unremittingy grim.
Madame Bovary. I remember little of it except it was the most depressing book I've ever read.
Any of the 19 books Donald Trump claims to have written. Most were done by Ghost riders, and there's very little likelihood of learning anything factual from any of them.
I apologize for the typo in "ghost writers". The print was very faint on my phone, and I haven't figured out how to edit it.
Atonement. Utterly unconvincing as narrated by a female. Boring, long-winded, overly-complicated.
Thus Spoke Zarathustra by Friedrich Nietzsche.
I couldn't get through it. The main character was such a self-righteous a*s that I got annoyed every time I picked it up. The copy I had also included a few pages about Nietzsche himself. He also sounded like a self-righteous a*s. I guess it makes sense to write about what you know.
Friedrixh Nietzsche is the only enormously famous philosopher who has anything like an enjoyable prose style, so this seems odd, though YMMV and whatever
