Discover new books on Goodreads
Meet your next favorite book
MOST BORING BOOK EVER!
These books are really boring!
Vina
641 books
293 friends
293 friends
Ricki
4096 books
1475 friends
1475 friends
Emily
1421 books
20 friends
20 friends
April
1335 books
182 friends
182 friends
Sam Still Reading
1558 books
267 friends
267 friends
Shannon
807 books
75 friends
75 friends
Barbara
4023 books
52 friends
52 friends
Megan
74 books
0 friends
0 friends
More voters…
Comments Showing 1-44 of 44 (44 new)
date
newest »
message 1:
by
Leo
(new)
Sep 27, 2012 07:59AM
reply
|
flag
*
To me a boring book must fall into *at places it literally put me to sleep* category, or at the very least, they are books that i had to force myself on with.
Trudging through a difficult book can be boring. A payoff of some sort is necessary. Boring is just a waste of one's life, whereas difficult can bore me, but somehow enriches understanding, so the reading will be forced. I've forgotten most of the boring books I've read, but never the difficult ones.
Good point, though i would hardly call Middlemarch difficult rather than that G.E. said what she said in too many words, if you know what i mean, there was lots that both she and Tolstoy could have cut out of their tomes, and the novels would have been the better, not the worse for it.
Now, to me, Gravity's Rainbow and Woolf's The Waves are difficult in the sense that they are dense, and confusing in some respects because you have to try and figure out what they are alluding to, and/or how the events stick together, but i wouldn't have thought of putting them on the boring book list. :)
I think i would also put the Benjy part of Faulkner's The Sound and the Fury in the 'difficult ' category, because it is so confusing regarding the temporal aspects. Maybe we should check and see if there's a difficult to read list, or start one. :)
The reason i went out looking for a 'boring' book list, is because i was looking for books that would be helpful in putting a person to sleep. So yeah, with boring i mean 'yawn' boring...
Books that have put me to sleep and remain unfinished:
Look Homeward, Angel
The Pilgrim's Progress
The Anatomy of Melancholy
You really-really hate this book Traveller :-)
My top pick was Hegel's Philosophy of Right... I'm willing to go Manny a mano against anyone who thinks it's more interesting than Atlas Shrugged. They can read Hegel and I'll read Rand, and we'll see who nods off first. Heck, I'll offer two to one.
You really-really hate this book Traveller :-)"
I promise you i found it boring, Nilesh, which is part of why i hate it so much. Maybe it has a lot to do with my expectation though. I had delayed reading the book for a long time, because i thought it was going to be really, you know, - dark stuff. ..but in the end it was all about a callous teenage girl who managed to be boring even in spite of.. well, having to take part in Teh Hunger Games.
..and it's not the story itself, but the way it is told that i found yawnsome.
The way the 3rd person present tense was handled, was not only pedestrian and clunky, but it also took away all doubt that the narrator would indeed survive the story, since here she is, telling the story, and if she died, the story would end, but you know it still carries on through two sequels...
Timing plays a part. I'd discussed Rand's philosophy ad nauseum and knew folks determined to live by it before reading Atlas Shrugged, so my view was all events developed as propaganda rather than story = boring. Having not read Hegel, I might find it interesting enough to wade through, out of curiosity.
After someone else voted for Atlas Shrugged, i also voted for it, because i agree that the tone is so offputting that it's actually a kind of force-read by the end.
From what i've seen of Hegel's The Doctrine of Being, that might give your Hegel a go, Manny. Here is a small excerpt:
"They are not reciprocally sublated--the one does not sublate the other externally--but each sublates itself in itself and is in its own self the opposite of itself"
and so on.
But, i guess your Hegel might be boringer. (I know that's not really a word)
The question is: Do i really want to read both of them, in quick succession, in order to find out?
I agree that Lestat and Anne Rice is not boring, whatever else they may be.
Although i love many children's books, i do find some of them boring, because they're written in too much of a simple tone, without any humor to sweeten the deal. I can read Dr Seuss, because it's funny..or Roald Dahl's books, which often seem to be directed at adults as much as children - take for instance his brilliant Fantastical Mr Fox.
..but when a book deals with a topic as dark as children killing children, (1)i want to see it handled with more...skill than i found in THG. Kids tend to be very uncritical readers indeed. Look at the stuff they read - Wolverine, Batman..- wait - actually i find Batman a lot less boring than Teh HG.
..but yeah, ok - Diary of a Wimpy Kid then. I mean, they (younger kids) find things like picking your nose and farting amusing. At my age, i'm afraid i don't anymore, and i know Teh HG is aimed at a young audience, but - like i said; the theme is dark, and - see (1) again.
I'm willing to bet that Hegel will win hands-down :D
..but the question is: Who is going to read these to give us a verdict?
*sneaks away*
Anyway, the point is, most YA writers, do not write very well. (Of course there are exceptions, that's why I said most, I'm a HUGE HUGE fan of Dahl's short stories aimed at adults, and his children stories aren't all that bad either.) They're simple reads, that don't really deal with a lot, and honestly, you don't even have to think while you read them, which is precisely why they cannot be boring .
I personally think the last book in The Hunger Games trilogy explored some dark themes quite well, the book was very rushed and there were plots but it was realistic. (view spoiler)
Anyway, I just...and this is my opinion, I just think that you're meaning to say you disliked the book, and are calling it boring when it's actually not.
Perhaps i will find the sequels less so, but in any case, i only voted for the first book in the trilogy, and that's the one that i found boring, :)
I'm sorry if you really liked the book, but hey, there are books in this list of boring books that i personally love, and i don't get all sore that other people find them boring. That's just how life is, some people's boring is other people's exciting.
I would hardly say that Roald Dahl deals with 'not a lot'
I think he deals with a great deal in the book i mentioned, for instance, Fantastical Mr Fox.
There's a ton of issues in there.
...and i love Batman- the Batman comic has always been one of my faves, and i will always love him.
What i meant by mentioning those comics was, that kids are attracted to a different kind of literature than adults are, and they will often like literature in which the author exploits certain ...ok, i have to go - will discuss in more depth later, but suffice to say, i didn't mean to down Batman. :P
I think i know where you're coming from, since the theme of the book is not boring. Maybe you read the first book while it was still 'fresher', but by the time i read it, there was already so much controversy about it, that i knew quite a bit about it before i even started; and i think i felt let down compared to what i was expecting..
If i told you a book or film was pretty bad, and you then went in with that expectation, chances are you'll find it not so bad, because you were expecting it to be really bad, see what i mean?
Sigh, maybe i'll just cancel my vote, since i'm probably in a minority re finding it boring...
I too loved at least one book on this list but that doesn't mean someone else wouldn't find it boring.
I do agree that some of the books I hated weren't boring, they just made me mad.
No, no! Your opinion is just as important as anybody else's. Yes, I read the book early on, so I didn't have many expectations about it. The only thing I'd heard was that Meyer (Twilight series) liked it, which really had no affect on my opinion of the book at all. But yes, i get what you mean. I've gone into things people found to be so extra-ordinary that I expected them to be but they only let me down because I expected that much.
You are right there. I feel rather bad that i invited all my friends to vote on it before checking it out properly first.
I should simply have started my own list, that asks for books that are guaranteed to put you to sleep; since that is exactly what i and a few fellow insomniacs are looking for - books that are so... dull, that reading them will put you to sleep if indulged in during a bout of insomnia.
I must beg to differ with you about Catcher in the Rye though... - i didn't see it in the list or else i would definitely have voted for it. I haven't read many books that are quite as snore-inducing.. please, i would like to know why so many people love this book. What's to love? Being privy to the inner world and thought-processes of a teenage boy isn't quite my idea of stimulating, exciting reading, i guess.
I also wondered what Hemingway and Garcia Marquez was doing there- in fact they've listed my favorite Hemingway.... oh well.
There's nothing like a computer manual to put you to sleep Traveller. :)
Traveller wrote: "Yes, I'm actually tempted to put Anna Karenina there, which i found boring in many places, especially at the start; as well as Middlemarch, but that's not to say i thought they were 'bad' books, - ..."
I also found that it got very boring about 3/4 of the way into it. He just rambles on and on like someone who loves the sound of their own voice. thanks for adding it.
I also found that it got very boring about 3/4 of the way into it. He just rambles on and on like someone who loves the sound of their own voice. thanks for adding it.
Victoria wrote: "Let's face it. Reading is subjective. What fascinates one person will bore another to tears. I, for example, have never been able to finish a Jodi Picoult book while some folks adore her. On the ot..."
Very true!
Very true!
I'd have to put The Idiot high up on that list
Books are not boring no book is what's boring to you
You see is exciting to another
I found Christopher Morley's The Haunted Bookstore (1917)
To be amazing yet others hate it claiming it's boring
Wuthering Heights loved it yet hated by many who find it boring
The Great Gatsby I found less then a blast yet it's regarded
By many of the worlds elite writers as being in the Top five books in history so there you go
This list pointless
Yes, and that is because they are NOT boring! Twilight is NOT boring - its scary! James is a terrifying character. Some do not understand what the word boring means.
Books are not boring no book is what's boring to you
You see is exciting to another
I found Christopher Morley's The Haunted Bookstore (1917)
..."
I agree its very pillock.
You really-really hate this book Traveller :-)"
hunger games was really boring..the author's style of writing leaves you wanting more from the plot she is handling...also her writing style lacks imagination.
Anyone can add books to this list.
For more information, read
.