• Hegar
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      431 month ago

      When I was an undergraduate, a friend of mine wrote a book review of the bible for the student newspaper.

      The opening sentence was: “Not since Naked Lunch has such a boring book been saved by the constant barrage of sadomasochistic homosexual pornography.”

    • @Marthirial
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      71 month ago

      Yep. Bible. Pretentious, boring and way too much first - person stuff.

    • @whotookkarl
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      41 month ago

      I wonder how many just check out when they get to the list of begats

      • @[email protected]
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        31 month ago

        the begats ain’t so bad, it’s only a couple short bits in the first book, as i recall, which is otherwise one of the best books that i read, with lots of relatively interesting short stories. the worst part in the early first books that i read in their entirety would have to be in exodus, where god spends ages going on and on to moses about the precise details of his dream tent. it feels like it goes on for a hundred pages, and then, a few chapters later, he does it all again.

  • @[email protected]
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    341 month ago

    I don’t know if this counts, but when I was about 13I was very excited to find an enormous book in my favorite genre at the time, Battlefield Earth by L. Ron Hubbard.

    It was the first book I ever put down in disgust without finishing. In the almost half-century since then, there are under a dozen that I haven’t finished. Shows you just how bad it is.

    • @spittingimage
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      61 month ago

      I read all of Mission Earth. All 12(?) volumes. I couldn’t possibly say why - I hated it.

      • @kat_angstrom
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        51 month ago

        I would love to hear more about this. Those books are SO long

        • @spittingimage
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          51 month ago

          Well, I think I figured out by book nine that it was never going to get any better, but by that point there were only three books to go and they weren’t exactly difficult reads. Maybe I was hate-reading. “Will you continue failing to meet my expectations L. Ron Hubbard, you miserable cunt? I bet you will.”

          And I have a tendency to think that any satire is brilliant and biting and I’m just not worldly enough to get it.

    • @[email protected]
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      41 month ago

      As a young teen scifi nerd I enjoyed the world, and tech he built in that book. I read the 600+ pages pretty quick. I think I was too young to critique it as a literary work.
      The movie was absolute garbage.

    • @[email protected]
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      31 month ago

      I tried reading his “Mission Earth” series. I did not finish the series; I managed about two and a half books before I realized that I wasn’t obligated to finish it just because I’d started.

    • @BoxOfFeet
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      21 month ago

      Oh man, I really enjoyed Battlefield Earth. And the movie. What turned you off?

      • @[email protected]
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        31 month ago

        Even as a 13-year-old, I could see gaping holes in the plot and inconsistencies. The aliens were hardly alien.

        Even more so, I could see that the writing was clumsy and the dialogue was stilted. I could see how the writer was developing the story, and so I was not pulled into it at all. I was actually thinking to myself that I could write something like this. And I was 13!

        I haven’t seen the movie, but from the sounds of it many of the problems with the book are also on screen.

    • @Zacpod
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      51 month ago

      Tried a few times and can never get past the first few chapters.

      • @[email protected]
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        21 month ago

        LOL. Try the Quran, it has the same characters and same stories but written in a way that makes much more natural reading

        • @Zacpod
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          71 month ago

          Thanks, but no thanks. :)

  • @[email protected]
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    261 month ago

    I haven’t read the entire book, but I’ve read like 10 pages of Fifty Shades of Grey when my then-girlfriend was reading it. Besides the story and subject matter, the writing itself is horrible.

    • Truffle
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      41 month ago

      Never read it, just some parts here and there because a girlfriend was reading it and it was hilarious LOL The descriptions are supposed to be sexy or alluring or god knows what but they are so cringey! It took me a bit to understand that my friend was reading it seriously.

  • @[email protected]
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    231 month ago

    Left Behind. I’m probably a huge idiot for not realizing for the entire thing without knowing before hand what the context was, but I read it with the idea that it was some kind of apocalyptic sci-fi, and then only in the very last few pages of the book did it finally hit me in the face that it was religious doomsday bullshit. I do have to compliment it for the storytelling and world setting, but holy shit was I disappointed with the end direction 🤦

    • KingJalopy
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      111 month ago

      You should see the movie. It stars nic cage and he did it as a favor to a friend. It’s fucking awful. funny thing though, my story is identical to yours. Had no idea until it was too late lol.

    • 🐍🩶🐢
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      21 month ago

      I didn’t finish the last couple books, but I did enjoy it fully knowing the subject matter was about Revelations. I mostly read it as a kid and re-read for a bit as an adult. I did not grow up in a religious household. There was a point though where the books went a little too off the rails, and I gave up.

    • @Tyfud
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      41 month ago

      That is, still, to this day, the only book I could not finish.

      Got about 2/3rds of the way through it and violently set it down. I love books too much to set it on fire, but I wanted to. It was the worst pile of shit I’ve ever read in my life. Completely divorced from reality.

      And she died penniless and depending on the support of the same social services that she demonized in her book to convince people that capitalist leaders are paragons of humanity and the rest of us are just peons.

  • themeatbridge
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    231 month ago

    I was far too young to read Animal Farm. I thought it was going to be like Charlotte’s Web. I did not have any of the historical or political context for the metaphor. It just made me angry.

  • @durfenstein
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    211 month ago

    Ready Player One

    The cringe is massive with that one.

    • @OriginalUsername7
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      71 month ago

      The entire thing is the author wanking himself silly over his knowledge of pop culture references from his childhood. Some of it reads like it was written by a 14 year old who isn’t all that into books.

      The bit about the gaming suit that wanks the user off but also means you’re exercising so you get fit from wearing it was honestly one of the cringiest things I’ve ever read. If I thought the author was capable of the level of self reflection required, I’d have thought writing that part of the book was him acknowledging that the book is literally a work of literary masturbation.

      It should have received the same response as The Room; a bad book only made into a cult classic by the people laughing at it.

      • UKFilmNerd
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        21 month ago

        I enjoyed Ready Player One at the time even though some of it was just ridiculous. Re-enacting Ferris Buellers Day Off for example.

        Armada, Cline’s next book was awful. So many references on every page, I stopped reading. I remember a line that was something like, “my mum wouldn’t let me past, like Gandelf in the mines of Moria.” Sheesh! Let it go!

        I fully read Ready Player Two but the guy has no story telling abilities. Every time the main character encounters a problem, e.g. I need a level 49 sword to get past this problem, but there’s no way to get one, it was always solved with the same solution, “oh, I own the game and all Admins have level 1000 swords because we do!”

        I think I reached my limit when he managed to shove in a Shaun of the Dead reference just because he mentioned a cricket bat!

  • @[email protected]
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    181 month ago

    The Silmarillion.
    Probably the only book I excitedly pushed myself to read, but just couldn’t.

    • Sylveon
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      151 month ago

      The Silmarillion is one of my favourite books, but I totally get this. Unless you’re really into Tolkien’s world as well as this style of book it’s not a fun read.

    • @[email protected]
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      111 month ago

      That was actually my favorite Tolkien book. He was a terrible fiction writer with an excellent story to tell… but when he was writing non-fiction style in the Silmarillion he was really in his element… and/or the posthumous editing was top notch.

    • bizarroland
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      41 month ago

      I had the same experience with the two towers. I can’t watch the movie of the two towers. And I can’t make it more than 60 or 70 pages into the book before my brain gives up and says they’ve been walking through the fucking Hills and talking to the trees for 30 pages this is some bullshit.

      Maybe I’m cutting myself short by not pushing through but I just literally cannot build up the energy it takes to push through this wall of infinite text.

  • @proudblond
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    1 month ago

    Wizard’s First Rule by Terry BrooksGoodkind. I suffered through the whole thing because I was young enough that I thought that’s what you should do when you’ve started a book, but I was also old enough to know that it was very bad. I’ve heard many people say they read it as teens and loved it, but I assure you, it does not hold up.

    • @[email protected]
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      121 month ago

      I don’t know if it’s the absolute worst I ever read but the parts I read were pretty bad. At some point I was like “What kinda Ayn Rand bullshit is this?” and quit reading. It turns out that he was a Ayn Rand make-super-improbable-and-convoluted-examples-in-my-fictional-fantasy-world-to-justify-terrible-political-views school of writing type guy.

      • @proudblond
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        71 month ago

        It’s probably not the worst for me either but it’s easily the first thing I think of. Really left a bad taste I guess.

    • @theywilleatthestars
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      111 month ago

      In the later books they accidentally open a portal to the part of the world where there are communists and for a while afterwards Richard finds himself unable to eat cheese as penance for all the communists he’s killing but then he realizes that communists are so evil it’s ok to kill them so he can eat cheese again

    • @Drivebyhaiku
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      81 month ago

      I read a bunch of those books because my roommate was in love with them. It established an idea of a writing flaw in my mind that I called “The Heirachy of Cool”. Basically the guy practically has an established character list of who is the coolest. Whichever character in any given scene is at the top of the hierarchy is mythically awesome. They have their shit together, they are functionally correct in their reasoning, they lead armies, they pull off grand maneuvers, they escape danger whatever…

      But anyone below them in the Heirachy turn into complete morons who serve as foils to make the people above them seem more awesome whenever they share page time together. These characters seem to have accute amnesia about stuff that canonically happened very recently (in previous books) so they can complicate things for the hierarchy above, they usually make poor decisions due to crisises of faith in people above them in the hierarchy… But because that hierarchy is infallible it’s predictable. Less cool never is proven right over more cool.

      … Until that same character is suddenly alone and they go from being mid of the hierarchy to the top and all of a sudden they have iron wills and super competence…

      Once I caught onto that pattern it became intolerable to continue.

      • @[email protected]
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        51 month ago

        Remember when Richard defeated the evils of socialism without his magic by pulling himself up by his bootstraps really really hard by (without practice or training) carving a really really good statue and all the lazy worthless slacker librulls were like dang, I love capitalism now, and then everyone looked directly into the metaphorical camera and said “Communism: Don’t let it happen to you”?

        • @Drivebyhaiku
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          41 month ago

          To be honest no… Because I think I violently expunged it from my memory and mind as my brain probably interpreted it as some kind of threat to my cells.

        • @Hasherm0n
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          31 month ago

          That was the beginning of the end for me. I think by the time I got to that part the series had already been going downhill but I remember that being a really sharp turning point.

          I tried to press on a little further. The introduction of the straw man nation with the innocent child king who’s only existence was to be blown the fuck out by the brilliance of objectivism is when I finally decided I just couldn’t go on.

        • @theywilleatthestars
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          31 month ago

          Funniest part of that was that Terry Goodkind clearly did not know anything about socialist realism

    • Tar_Alcaran
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      71 month ago

      On a somewhat lower pedestal: Eragon. What a hugely derivative poorly written piece of crap. I’ve run D&D campaigns with better dialogue and pacing than that.

      • @proudblond
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        41 month ago

        Oh yes I agree! And I’m a huge dragon fan, so it was extremely disappointing. That one I gave up on after maybe 50 pages. I couldn’t get past the prose. So I didn’t even get to the heavily recycled tropes, but I did see the movie once and they were plenty obvious from that.

    • @theywilleatthestars
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      51 month ago

      What I remember most vividly from that series is how absolutely bone-chilling everything about the Confessors were. You could absolutely have a really cool and interesting fantasy series in which they’re the main villains, but Terry Goodkind’s political views just wouldn’t allow it.

      • @FitzTheBastard
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        21 month ago

        Or even just digging into their internal struggles due to the inherent loneliness that their powers creates. Instead we got a wierd post period sex blowjob to Richard role playing as his brother or something stupid that I can’t remember

      • @proudblond
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        21 month ago

        Ack thank you, I mix them up even though I’ve never read Brooks, who seems to be better loved.

        • @[email protected]
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          41 month ago

          I’d rate them about the same, personally. Though Brooks is at least just derivative and juvenile; Goodkind gets increasingly self indulgent.

    • Lightor
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      31 month ago

      Damn I legit liked this book, one of my top series. I just enjoyed the magic system, the antagonists, and the over the top nature. I might just have bad taste though lol.

      • @[email protected]
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        41 month ago

        Me too, friend.
        After ruminating on it though, everything I liked was just lifted from better works.
        Leatherclad red-themed group of women who enjoy causing pain and are able to negate men’s magic? Red ajah.
        What other examples are there?

        • Lightor
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          31 month ago

          I for sure see the links between SoT and Wheel of Time. I started seeing a lot of things lifted after reading both. But I still find myself liking both for different reasons. I dunno, I’ve accepted that I do like some things that are generally viewed as “bad” and I’ve come to terms with it haha.

            • Lightor
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              31 month ago

              Maybe. But I think it matters of entertainment it’s not as evil as that. Sure engaging with bad media might fuel them to repeat that behavior, but IMO if it harms no one it’s not an issue. Like for example I’ve read the SoT series a few times and I’m not a Marxist or what have you.

              • @[email protected]
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                21 month ago

                Ahh I think you’ve misunderstood.
                He’s a raging, obnoxious capitalist who thinks poor people are poor because they don’t try.

                • Lightor
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                  31 month ago

                  Haha that’s how much I missed it I guess. Well I do appreciate you clarifying that, I never got a good, concise answer about what people we’re hating on it for.

  • @Sanctus
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    171 month ago

    I can’t really remember of all time, but recently I started reading Dune: Messiah, and I had to stop reading it was so bad. I might be in the minority but the tonal shifts, changes in character attitudes, and jumping right into these assassination plots, all of it just came out weird and misplaced. Definitely did not slap with even 1/4th the power of Dune.

    • @j4k3
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      171 month ago

      Herbert didn’t want to continue Dune and was pressured to write a follow up. It was an era when most science fiction was still published in periodicals. The first half of Messiah are the results that were then compiled into the start. It is like a really shitty draft. Everyone experiences the same thing. I put it down for quite a while too. If you can make it to the second half, it will become one you can’t put down, like the first. It does setup well for what is to come. After I got back into Messiah, I read all the way to the end of the entire series, even the Brian Herbert/Kevin Anderson stuff. Those last two are not like Frank’s writings, but are their own thing and still more readable than the first half of Messiah. IMO the first half of Messiah is a great example of what happens when Art takes a back seat to an anxious banking type mentality. Bankers make terrible artists and advisors.

      GEoD is IMO the best book in the series as it eviscerates many cultural norms and deep assumptions like fascist altruism, eternal boredom, the coexistence of misogyny and feminism, manipulation that is both brutal and kind, and if an alien can be human. It even infers the question of potential delusional prescience in my opinion. It will make you think about the motivation of leaders and what you may endure because of their vision of a future.

      • @Sanctus
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        91 month ago

        Hell yeah this is great to hear, thank you. I’ll have to open it back up and try again. Then its time to read the Foundation.

        • @j4k3
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          61 month ago

          The two prequels to foundation are awesome, don’t miss them.

        • @[email protected]
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          Don’t read the prequels by Brin and Bear, they are not only awful but also steer the lore into really dumb place which i’m pretty sure was not intended by Asimov. Though to be honest the two prequels by Asimov are also much worse than the main series.

      • @cowfodder
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        51 month ago

        I mean, none of that is true, and Herbert stated he had parts of Messiah and Children written before Dune was even finished.

        In the forward to Heretics of Dune: “Parts of Dune Messiah and Children of Dune were written before Dune was completed. They fleshed out more in the writing, but the essential story remained intact.

        • @j4k3
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          71 month ago

          A sequel to Dune (1965), it was originally serialized in Galaxy magazine in 1969, and then published by Putnam the same year.

          https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dune_Messiah

          I forget where the rushed admission and poor quality was blamed on the periodical and premature release, but am certain that is somewhere out there.

          • @cowfodder
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            Parts of the serialized story were fleshed out and became Dune.

      • ditty
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        31 month ago

        I read the first four dune books this year and I think they all suffer from the same problem, that is they have interesting characters, original lore, great world building, but nothing interesting happens until the very ending of the book. They all felt like a slog to get through to me.

  • @frigidaphelion
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    161 month ago

    The bible. Set aside any religious connotations and just look at it as a piece of literature: it’s terrible.

  • @Drivebyhaiku
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    161 month ago

    “The Cat Who Walked through Walls” by Robert Heinlein…

    Now Heinlein is usually kind of obnoxiously sexist so having a book that opens with what appears to be an actual female character with not just more personality than a playboy magazine centerfold, but what seems like big dick energy action heroesque swagger felt FRESH. Strong start as you get this hyper competent husband and wife team quiping their way through adventures in the backwoods hillbilly country of Earth’s moon with their pet bonsai tree to stop a nefarious plot with some promised dimensional McGuffin.

    Book stalls out in the middle as they end up in like… A swinger commune. They introduce a huge number of characters all at once alongside this whole poly romantic political dynamic and start mulling over the planning stage of what seems like a complicated heist plot. Feels a lot like a sex party version of the Council of Elrond with each of these characters having complex individual dramas they are in the middle of resolving…

    Aaaand smash cut. None of those characters mattered. We are with the protagonist, the heist plan failed spectacularly off stage and we are now in his final dying moments where we realized that cool wife / super spy set him up to fail like a chump at this very moment for… reasons? I dunno, Bitches amirite?

    First time I ever finished a book and threw it angrily into the nearest wall.

    • @[email protected]
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      151 month ago

      I feel that a lot with Heinlein. Starts good with an interesting premise, becomes weirdly sexual, and the ending leaves you wondering whether the premise even mattered.

      • Vanth
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        51 month ago

        The Moon Is A Harsh Mistress is one of my fave books in the genre if I just ignore 1/3 of it.

  • jwiggler
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    131 month ago

    The Alchemist and Song of Achilles are some popular books that I thought were mediocre. Probably not the worst book I’ve ever read though.

    That probably goes to Sean Hannity’s Conservative Victory that my grandma gave me when I was 12.

    True slop. Fuck Sean Hannity.

    • JackbyDev
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      21 month ago

      I enjoyed The Alchemist and The Zahir at the time, but in hindsight I think The Zahir was an elaborate cuckold fantasy. I think if I reread it I’d remember the rest of it but that’s what it feels like thinking back over a decade later.

      • jwiggler
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        31 month ago

        I didn’t read the Zahir but I felt like The Alchemist was a shallow Siddhartha-wannabe when I read it. I couldn’t help but think it was trying too hard to be profound