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| SFReader Forums > SF Fiction and Art > Right Now I'm Reading.... > when do you stop / give up on a book? | Forum Quick Jump
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    |  Bill Ward Biblioholic

       Date Joined Jul 2006 Total Posts : 1635 | Posted 10/12/2007 2:31 PM (GMT -4) |   | I don't have any hard and fast rules for stopping, more of a 'I know it when I see it.' As I read more, I also put aside unfinished books more often, which is a necessary ruthlessness if I'm to do anything more with my time other than read. Most recently Uncle Tom's Cabin, Fitzgerald's This Side of Paradise, Davidson's Masters of the Maze, Jennifer Government, a couple of books from Abaddon, and Heinlein's The Unpleasant Profession of Jonathan Hoag got the old heave-ho for various reasons, most of which boil down to 'I don't need or want to read this now, maybe not ever.' Sometimes it's a case of seeing it all before, sometimes a case of the author losing my respect for some opinionated nonsense or for plain old bad writing, and sometimes it's just me.
One sure sign that I've lost interest is I start skimming; if I get to the point where I don't feel I'll glean anything by continuing to skim the book (or go back to read it more closely) I put it aside. I'd like to think my days of reading things for completeness sake (for a series, or favorite author) or just to put another entry in my reading log are over. | | Back to Top | | |
 |  H.P. Lovesauce Necronomicondiment

       Date Joined Jul 2007 Total Posts : 575 | Posted 10/12/2007 4:28 PM (GMT -4) |   |
Jeff Stehman said...Come, come, HP, we're all friends here. Name names (or titles in this case).
Google tells me the right-wing screed was Oath of Fealty. I also declined a (re)read of Starship Troopers for a different course.
Some woman in a British gaming magazine praise Mary Gentle. They showed a photo of her wearing a hat, long a symbol of insouciant female hotness. I was powerless.
Orcs is a pretty straightforward story. Not the way Gentle tells it, though. But I was helpless (the hat!), and read Gentle's Rats & Gargoyles. Some 400-plus pages, 150 of those devoted to a single hour of activity. An important hour, sure, but that was too much. No more. Too much write, not enough edit, to heck with the fedora, and the curly, auburn hair, and the pale, freckled skin...
That's when I started reading gaming fiction. | | Back to Top | | |
   |  MysticWino anarchist fringe monkey boddhisatva

       Date Joined May 2007 Total Posts : 1570 | Posted 10/13/2007 12:24 AM (GMT -4) |   | | Depends. If I'm reading it for review, I usually give it enough rope to hang itself from a redwood. If I paid for it, it better pull me in and turn me on. Five pages of dull and I'm gone. If I really Want to like it - usually because of name recognition - I'll give it five minutes in random samples to rebuild my curiosity. A couple things will drive me away quickly: stupid, generic, goofy, or cliche names of persons or places. Bad dialogue, which is to say poorly crafted dialogue (one book I'm reading for a revue right now has the godawefullest stupidass dunderheaded speech impedimism for a civilation supposedly a world away. I'm trying to keep an open mind, but this is probably a deal stopper. Guy probably had fun writing it, but whoever decided to publish it should set me up with his source for narcotropics. . . . Back on topic: My money, I'm impatient and have a shrot attention span; free book for review, I'm dogged and a workhorse about it. In cases like the one above, I'll likely not write the review (I'm 88 pages in now: I was 18 pages in before I knew I hated it).
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   |  anna Neophyte

       Date Joined Apr 2007 Total Posts : 121 | Posted 10/15/2007 12:51 PM (GMT -4) |   | I rarely give up, but instead keep plugging away hoping it will get better. Often it doesn't.
One does come to mind, though I have long forgotten the title. It was on the horror shelf and the cover art was promising. The characters were all those childhood icons such as Santa Claus, the Easter Bunny, the Tooth Fairy and so forth.
I stopped when it became obvious that the book was much too pornographic for my taste. Santa's emissions hardening into candy canes for the little girls to suck, and the Tooth Fairy dispensing nickels from her arse like a fecal fetishist's darkest fantasy just went too far out there for me.
And that was barely 60 pages into a rather thick paperback. I shudder to guess where it went from there....... | | Back to Top | | |
 |  Anthony G Williams Greybeard

       Date Joined Apr 2007 Total Posts : 397 | Posted 10/15/2007 10:22 PM (GMT -4) |   |
Bill Ward said... I don't have any hard and fast rules for stopping, more of a 'I know it when I see it.' As I read more, I also put aside unfinished books more often, which is a necessary ruthlessness if I'm to do anything more with my time other than read. Me too. I used to read everything, but times have changed and life's too short.
With new books, I fail to finish maybe a quarter to a third of them. However, I'm currently going through a phase of re-reading old books which have sat on my shelves for decades; I've mostly forgotten the plots, so I can enjoy them all over again. And I do: the old masters may lack something in characterisation compared with the current fashion, but they compensate with great plots and fast-paced action, which I generally prefer. Also, they are usually so much shorter that it takes little time to read them.
The longer a book is, the more likely I am to bin it if it doesn't grab me fairly quickly.
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          |  S Michael Stablehand
        Date Joined Oct 2007 Total Posts : 6 | Posted 10/19/2007 6:53 PM (GMT -4) |   | | I don't have much patience with stand alone books and/or authors that I haven't read before. I read for entertainment and my basic criteria is if it isn't entertaining me, I quit ... see absolutely no reason to continue to waste my time on something that is not of interest. That's why I don't watch TV ...
With series books and/or authors I've read before and liked, I will push a little more. Some authors turn out to be very "uneven" for me and there will be some books I like well enough to keep on my personal bookshelves and re-read often and other books by the same author will end up going back to the library unfinished.
The same happens with series. All too often I will be enthusiastic over the first book in a series, only to see it going downhill in the 2nd or 3rd book. I find I will tolerate one not-so-great book in a series, but if it seems a steady decline, I will end up giving up.
I have several books on my bookshelves that are the first book in a series ... and I re-read them with considerable enjoyment ... but the books that followed are not.
I'm particularly disappointed with the series that do this ... but have more or less given up on trying to force myself to read an ongoing series simply because the first book was great.
As someone else said ... life is too short ... and the older I get the quicker I find myself giving up on something that I am not enjoying.
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