In what grade were you when they gave it to you? Goddess, they had us read that garbage in 9th grade, and it insulted even the dumb kids in the class. And to make it worse, after that we had to read a medical thriller called "Toxin" by Robin Cook, which was far, far more difficult and horrifically depressing to boot.TheDarkEricDraven said:Not that I can think of. I-WAIT!
Fucking Freak the Mighty. Seriously. I was given that for a school project and I have NEVER been more insulted. It. Is. So. Awful.
Hmm, I made it through the book simply because I was out of town and it's all I had with me (in the days of ye old hardcopy), but I got pretty tired of the repetitive erotica and the predictability of the plot. However, I was very much impressed with the world building and that always stuck with me. I might get around to checking out the rest of the series at some point since I'd never really heard anyone defend the series in such a fashion.Thomas Guy said:My god really? Kushiels Dart is without a doubt my favorite book and series ever written. She is my Tolkien. She builds worlds so much better than any person I have ever read. If you ever want to give it a try, go for the second trilogy in the set with Phedre's godson Imriel. I am defending this book to my last dying breath.TheBrett said:I don't blame you. The first half of the Fellowship of the Ring is torture: slow-paced and boring. It's even worse if you saw the movie before reading the book, since the movie has much better pacing.DJDarque said:I will probably catch a lot of shit for this, but Lord of the Rings.
I don't know if I would call it "bad", but I put down Kushiel's Dart about 150 pages in. I found it very slow and dull, and Jacquelyn Carey is prone to flowery prose that is very annoying at times.
But I do agree about Fellowship. I had a guy tell me how the books changed his life blah blah blah and after watching the movie, this was the most disappointing book ever.
the dude himself is batshit insane and wrote complete bullshit.toothofymir said:Battlefield Earth by Ron L. Hubbard
Without a doubt, the worst piece of professionally written (i.e. actually written by an adult author) literature I have ever read.
Oh yeah
AND STAY AWAY FROM THE MOVIE!!!
Is your teacher genuinely called Mrs Firestone? If so, that's pretty awesome.drzoidbergmd said:One book was a romance novel that I was reading for shits and giggles called "The Viking Takes A Knight." Stopped a hundred pages from the end and got angry. The one with a better story was a textbook I had to read for a sociology class. It was about the "teen sex crisis," and was written by a pair of Christian Fundamentalist writers in 1988. I finished the first half, then threw the book across the room in rage. Went into class the next day and had a conversation kind of like this:
Me: Mrs. Firestone, I'm sorry, but fuck this book. I have no intention of ever finishing it, because if I do, I will murder someone in this room.
Firestone: Yeah, I sort of figured that would be your reaction to this.
Me: Seriously?
Firestone: Yes.
I read SoT books all one after the other, I bought them when they were all out. I think I did like them, but I was physically and mentally exhausted after reading them. I'm not a patient man, well... I'm not a man but anywho, I cannot start reading any book if I know there will be more than two sequels. I simply cannot wait unnecessarily long to have the ending. I read Harry Potter books once they were all published, same with SoT. Plus, the first book of SoT series came out when I was 12 (my god it took forever to finish the series) and I wasn't so into reading at that age.trouble_gum said:They're not.
I quite enjoyed 'Wizards First Rule,' and the SoT series up to about...'Temple of The Winds.' They're not bad in a sort of sub-David Eddings kind of way. However, Goodkind gets massively, massively bogged down with Emperor Jagang, and when you consider how quickly the conflict versus Darken Rahl was resolved, Jagang coems in as the major antagonist and is still there five wearying books later as Richard and Kahlan angst for their country (both literally and figuratively). So, the later books most assuredly do not, get better. They just get longer and spend more time moralizing. Seriously, when you introduce an antagonist in Book Two and you're still dealing with him ten books later, after spending only one book to deal with the original prime villain...eh, you're just spinning things out. 'Faith of the Fallen' is, essentially, an entire novel devoted to Richard building a statue.
The Sword of Truth series is a lot like most Western PC RPGs. There's a main quest out there, but the heroes would far rather fanny about on a whole mess of side-quests.
Yup. She's 4'10", speaks fluent German, and is pretty routinely sarcastic with my whole class.OhJohnNo said:Is your teacher genuinely called Mrs Firestone? If so, that's pretty awesome.drzoidbergmd said:One book was a romance novel that I was reading for shits and giggles called "The Viking Takes A Knight." Stopped a hundred pages from the end and got angry. The one with a better story was a textbook I had to read for a sociology class. It was about the "teen sex crisis," and was written by a pair of Christian Fundamentalist writers in 1988. I finished the first half, then threw the book across the room in rage. Went into class the next day and had a conversation kind of like this:
Me: Mrs. Firestone, I'm sorry, but fuck this book. I have no intention of ever finishing it, because if I do, I will murder someone in this room.
Firestone: Yeah, I sort of figured that would be your reaction to this.
Me: Seriously?
Firestone: Yes.