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#151 |
Guru
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Join Date: Sep 2011
Location: American living in Australia
Device: Kobo Libra Colour, Kindle Fire, Kindle Pwhite (Don't use Nook anymore)
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I very happily abandon books I'm not enjoying. I loved Catch-22, but didn't like LOTR, and hated 50 Shades, which I abandoned after about 12 pages. I abandon a great number of books. There are too many books in the world for me to keep reading one I'm not enjoying.
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#152 |
Well Read
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Karma: 2425880
Join Date: Feb 2011
Location: Far North
Device: KK 3G, K4B, Nook HD+, Galaxy S3
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Proust
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#153 |
Force-Aware Elf
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Join Date: Feb 2014
Location: Valinor
Device: Kindle 4 w/SO
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As far as being unable to finish LoTR, some things are fine to skim through, such as Bombadil's house, Frodo and Sam in Mordor, Songs... if you skim this you can finish the books at least.
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#154 |
MR Drone
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Karma: 15612282
Join Date: Oct 2007
Location: DRONEZONE
Device: PB360+, Huawei MP5, Libra H20
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LOTR definitely one of the biggest Yawns ever. I read the series several times when I was a teen and they were fine...but I tried once or twice later in life and prefer death by a thousand cuts instead...
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#155 |
Grand Sorcerer
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Karma: 34000001
Join Date: Mar 2008
Device: KPW1, KA1
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Is 1402 cuts fine too?
In that case, I'll bring death to you by cutting you once with every page of a paper LotR book ![]() |
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#156 |
Wizard
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Join Date: Aug 2007
Location: US
Device: Nook Simple Touch, Kobo Glo HD, Kobo Clara HD, Kindle 4
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Atlas Shrugged and Jonathan Strange and Mr. Norrell are two of my DNF. Atlas Shrugged because everyone was so stupid or so evil, I didn't even make it to Galt's speech. Maybe it's because I didn't read it as a teenager. I read The Fountainhead in my 20s and it was OK, but in perusing it several decades later, I can see that Rand seems to only write caricatures, either noble creators or evil parasites.
I got about a third of the way into Jonathan Strange, but it didn't feel like it was going anywhere interesting to me. I may try again some day since I own it, but probably not. I had problems reading David Brin's Earth, but it was one where I was able to pick it up a year or two later and read it all the way through. |
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#157 |
Wizard
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Join Date: Mar 2011
Location: Pennsylvania
Device: T1 Red, Kindle Fire, Kindle PW, PW2, Nook HD+, Kobo Mini, Aura HD
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As a teen in school, I could not finish A Tale of Two Cities. I thought it was the most boring book I had read at the time. However, with age and more life experience, I pick it up again a few years ago and loved it. I could not believe it was the same book.
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#158 |
eBook Enthusiast
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Join Date: Nov 2006
Location: UK
Device: Kindle Oasis 2, iPad Pro 10.5", iPhone 6
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Dickens certainly isn't a children's author. I think you need to be an adult to appreciate his wit and satire.
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#159 |
Grand Sorcerer
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I think literature and classics are soured for many people, when they have to read stuff like Homer, Chaucer, Shakespeare and Dickens between 15 and 18 year old. Most are just not interested in it at that age. I'm more of an advocate to let them read what they want. OK, they'll have less classic education, but there's a bigger chance they'll become readers. They'll grow into the classics over time.
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#160 | |
Tech Writer
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Join Date: Feb 2007
Location: Philadelphia, PA
Device: Palm TX, Nook Color, Nook Simple Touch, Vizio Tablet, Nexus 10
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Quote:
On the other hand, because they're serials, you can probably read a few chapters and then come back in a month, and be none the worse off. Lastly, a lot of Dickens' literary merit is not in his stories themselves, but rather in the way that his stories capture the era in which he lived. I kind of wonder if 50 years from now, kids will complain about having to read Stephen King's The Stand for the same reason. |
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#161 | |
Bookmaker & Cat Slave
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Location: Phoenix, AZ
Device: K2, iPad, KFire, PPW, Voyage, NookColor. 2 Droid, Oasis, Boox Note2
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Quote:
I'm all for letting twitlets read "Twilight" or whatever, to engage a reader's interest, but a teen's disinclination to read isn't going to be cured by giving him comic books at that age--that should have been addressed many years earlier. A kid should be reading pretty avidly by the time s/he's 8 or so, I'd say, and fluidly. There's no reason a teenage brain can't process Dickens or any of the other classics. Many of us who suffered at the hands of private schools (Catholic or other) managed to live through Chaucer (not "modernized"), et al, and ended up the better for it. I'd concur that most classics (Homer, Chaucer, Dickens, et al) aren't for "kids," but most reasonably-educated teens of 16-18 can CERTAINLY read and process those, and should. Increasingly moving toward easier reading material isn't helping them. Just my opinion, and worth what you've paid for it, but given that the average SAT scores have plummeted over the past half-century into figures that are un-freaking-believable, I think that the facts speak for themselves. Hitch |
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#162 | |
Grand Sorcerer
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Join Date: Oct 2010
Device: Kindle Fire, Kindle Paperwhite, AGPTek Bluetooth Clip
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Quote:
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#163 | |
eBook Enthusiast
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Join Date: Nov 2006
Location: UK
Device: Kindle Oasis 2, iPad Pro 10.5", iPhone 6
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Quote:
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#164 |
Award-Winning Participant
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Location: NJ, USA
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Hitch is saying that reading those kinds of classics builds discipline of thought.
Katsunami is saying they require discipline of thought going in. To me, it sounds like Hitch is from the "no-pain-no-gain lift heavy weight until you are strong" gym, while Kat is of the "play sports you love, ride your bike, go backpacking and eventually you'll be strong enough to lift heavy weights" gym. I have no data on this, but it's interesting. For myself: never read the denser classics when I was young, never had that kind of discipline, yet I did well enough on the SATs to join Mensa, and loved Logic and Language in college. From my single data point, and my life experience I tend to side with Kat in general. |
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#165 |
Guru
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Join Date: Jul 2010
Device: Scribe,Kindle Oasis 3, iPad Pro 11,15 Pro Max,iPad mini 7,colorsoft
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Unfortunately I finished 50 shades of grey
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