Bestsellers --I can't understand why

ConversazioniAwful Lit.

Iscriviti a LibraryThing per pubblicare un messaggio.

Bestsellers --I can't understand why

Questa conversazione è attualmente segnalata come "addormentata"—l'ultimo messaggio è più vecchio di 90 giorni. Puoi rianimarla postando una risposta.

1Shopoholic Primo messaggio
Ago 23, 2007, 2:41 am

I bought Anita Shreve's book Wedding in December because I loved the cover art, and I'm a sucker for anything wedding related. What I found was a book with more mood than plot. Do people really enjoy reading about the kind of dishes used, more than finding out what these dishes have to do with the character? It was like a novel based on interior design rather than storyline. I can't believe so many people would want to read it--I guess they just didn't notice it wasn't about much?

2jor2436
Ago 24, 2007, 12:28 am

im interested to see if other people agree with you because this is currently on my to read list.
thanks for the heads up.

3vivienbrenda
Ago 24, 2007, 7:52 am

Not too long ago I bought "On Beauty" by Zadie Smith based on the breathless adoring reviews plastered over the first few pages of the book. Although I finished it, I've mentally listed it as the best worst book I ever read. Well written with nicely shaded characters, NOTHING EVER HAPPENED. Page after page after page the story crawled along so slowly, I could actually hear my hair growing.

So what's wrong with me? Or the reviewers? How could something so right go so wrong?

4Morphidae
Ago 24, 2007, 7:59 am

I gave up about page 100 of On Beauty because nothing happened. Yawner.

5littlegeek
Ago 24, 2007, 11:07 am

On Beauty definitely sucked. I didn't finish it. White Teeth was so good, though, that Sadie has been allowed to write two crappy books since and still float by with reviewers.

Oh, the water guy is here....sigh...talk about beauty....

6Morphidae
Ago 24, 2007, 12:12 pm

We had a UPS guy when I was a teenager that I had a major crush on. Black hair, blue eyes and built like a brick...

Anyway.

7Welfycat
Ago 25, 2007, 5:59 pm

City of Bones by Cassandra Clare

A more horrible book I have not read!
Really, the characterization is terrible, the plot predictable, the writing atrocious.

That lady should be forbidden from using metaphors and similes for the rest of her life.

And yet, it's on the bestsellers list... I don't get it!

8charlotteg
Ago 25, 2007, 6:43 pm

Eh, it is all subjective. Like the old adage, Beauty is in the eye of the beholder.

9pollysmith
Ago 25, 2007, 7:36 pm

I rarely like bestsellers HP excepted. I tend to like books no ones heard of!

10edumke
Set 3, 2009, 5:58 pm

Two words:

Danielle Steel

11marcejewels
Set 19, 2009, 10:28 pm

The Time Travelers Wife - yawn I tried twice and just couldn't get through, I was upset I wasted as much time on it as I did.

12gautherbelle
Set 21, 2009, 4:10 am

Questo messaggio è stato cancellato dall'autore.

13bookwasbetter
Set 22, 2009, 11:30 pm

"Not a fan of magic realism. It seems like cheating because you can make anything be anything." What do you think of The Bible?

14gautherbelle
Set 23, 2009, 12:34 am

Questo messaggio è stato cancellato dall'autore.

15Xenalyte
Dic 29, 2009, 5:09 pm

Anne Rice is bad that way. She'll go on for two pages about the curtains in the parlor, what color they are and their texture and who they smell like and what they mean to some character you've managed to forget because she was so busy describing the curtains, she left out irrelevancies like character development.

16ginnygilmour
Gen 1, 2010, 2:16 pm

Questo messaggio è stato cancellato dall'autore.

17ginnygilmour
Gen 1, 2010, 2:18 pm

Questo messaggio è stato cancellato dall'autore.

18poulsbolibraryguy
Dic 27, 2011, 5:41 pm

I will say I tried to start Ed King by David Guterson, mostly because it won some award for worst sex scenes. Couldn't make it 5 pages. Droning, on and on...

19JimThomson
Modificato: Dic 28, 2011, 12:22 am

>Charlotteg

Let us remember the corollary to that Truism; "Beauty is only skin deep, but Ugliness does all the way to the bone."

20poulsbolibraryguy
Gen 5, 2012, 4:53 pm

And Clive Cussler. Raise the Titanic! was the first book I forced myself to finish. I knew I couldn't really savage it unless I had read it.
Now I'm older, and presumably wiser, and I don't bother finishing bad books.

21groovykinda
Gen 28, 2012, 6:38 pm

I was just reminded on another one I really, really hated: The Horse Whisperer.

22Violeten
Mar 8, 2012, 3:53 pm


Its like how I feel with modern S.K. Is he even trying anymore?

23orsolina
Set 22, 2012, 1:27 am

One of the Higgins Clarks (I don't remember which one) lavishes a lot of print on what characters are wearing (including--ick--the brand names), what they're eating, what they're driving. Does she get paid for the advertising? Or is her mind such a shallow puddle that these things are really important to her?

I took the book back unread and have vowed to stay away from any author named Higgins Clark in the future!