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Which Books Have You Started But Never Finished
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I'm currently reading No One Round Here Reads Tolstoy (Mark Hodkinson's memoirs of a working class reader) and the author mentions reading Thomas Hardy's works successfully, but being unable to get through Thackeray's Vanity Fair .
I've been there with both those experiences. It got me to thinking of the few other books Which I've never been able to stick through to the end. These are :-
◊ War and Peace (but managed Anna Karenina) - also managed Dostoevsky's
Crime & Punishment
◊ Vanity Fair
◊ Far From the Madding Crowd (but managed Jude the Obscure)
◊ Middlemarch (but managed Scenes of Clerical Life)
I've added books in brackets which I've coped with, in order to show it's not necessarily the author/genre causing my reader's block.
So, let's be hearing similar "blocks", i.e. books you started but never reached the end. Hopefully it will be an interesting and entertaining thread on Aber's literary tastes.
P.S. 50 Shades of Grey was another, but that's understandable it was so appallingly written.
I've been there with both those experiences. It got me to thinking of the few other books Which I've never been able to stick through to the end. These are :-
◊ War and Peace (but managed Anna Karenina) - also managed Dostoevsky's
Crime & Punishment
◊ Vanity Fair
◊ Far From the Madding Crowd (but managed Jude the Obscure)
◊ Middlemarch (but managed Scenes of Clerical Life)
I've added books in brackets which I've coped with, in order to show it's not necessarily the author/genre causing my reader's block.
So, let's be hearing similar "blocks", i.e. books you started but never reached the end. Hopefully it will be an interesting and entertaining thread on Aber's literary tastes.
P.S. 50 Shades of Grey was another, but that's understandable it was so appallingly written.
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No best answer has yet been selected by Canary42. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ."A Game of Thrones" - oh, I tried. Not been able to see the TV series either, though I think I might be able to follow all the names a little better there.
"The Eye of the World" - 1st in the "Wheel of Time" (Robert Jordan) series. Again, I seem to remember too many names, too much description, not enough dialogue. I may go back to try again. I've watched the new series on Prime & thoroughly enjoyed it.
"The Eye of the World" - 1st in the "Wheel of Time" (Robert Jordan) series. Again, I seem to remember too many names, too much description, not enough dialogue. I may go back to try again. I've watched the new series on Prime & thoroughly enjoyed it.
LIK, i read all of the Song Of Fire And Ice (GOT) books. A friend of mine leant them to me, after he had read each one. He also enthused about the series and i was able to watch the initial series of GOT before i read the first book, so i found it quite easy to follow. Had i not seen the series, i may have had some trouble getting into it.
Just an addendum to explain the title of the book in the OP. It comes from an anecdote in the book of when the author was a lad. He was quite keen on looking round second hand bookshops and was visiting one in a working class area run by a grumpy old man who was a member of the kids are bound to be up to no good brigade. The lad had a list of "must reads" that a serious-reader friend had given him to look out for him, and it included some Tolstoy. When grumpy demanded to see the list he came out with that wonderful phrase "Nobody Round Here Reads Tolstoy".
I don't read fiction any more, but in my early days I once worked for two years without a break, then told my boss I needed a holiday, bought War and Peace and read it while I stayed with a friend (taking some time off to help him reroof). It was just after the TV series with Anthony Hopkins; if that hadn't inspired me I mightn't have done it.
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