Worst Book You've Read for School

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DarkHourPrince

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May 12, 2010
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To Kill a Mockingbird (8th grade)
Lord of the Flies (9th grade)
Into the Wild (12th grade)

Especially Lord of the Flies. Was it REALLY necessary to have THAT MUCH DETAIL!? Okay! The tree is green and shiny in the sun! I GET IT can we move on now?!
 

Keepitclean

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Sep 16, 2009
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Lockie Leonard - Tim Winton (year 9)
I have had to read way too many Tim Winton books in my time. I can't understand why he is so popular.

And I have also found that any book that I have to read for english gets ruined for me. Even if I like the book beforehand. English just ruins things.

EDIT: Or Black Hawk Down. I fucking hate that book. The text is just so thick.
 

Daipire

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Oct 25, 2009
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Journey To The River Sea.

It's just SO crap...

I'm so happy I never actually read all of it.
 

thepj

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Aug 15, 2009
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Animal Farm, it's not that it was a bad book but my teachers obsessive over anaysis of it made me hate it AND put us about three weeks behind all the other classes!!!!!!
 

alittlepepper

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Feb 14, 2010
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I'd have to say anything that ever came from the pen of Dickens. You can not find a man more capable of using so many words to say nothing. His books (and the movies based on them) were agony to sit through and experience. Especially since we did it every single year. >_<
 

AvsJoe

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May 28, 2009
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The Motherfucking Mayor of Motherfucking Caster-*****.

Nothing else comes close to that novel. I mean, how can you enjoy reading a book that regularly sidetracks from the story to discuss the architecture of a building or the history of a minor character's family tree. Many books do this in one way or another but none were anywhere nears as bad as this one. God-DAMN I hated this novel!

It goes without saying that I flunked that section of my class.
 

icyneesan

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Feb 28, 2010
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EVERYTHING - We never read books together as a class in my elementary school so I could pick the cool ones that seemed interesting to me, but in high school they forced us to read such dull books that I don't quite understand how they became famous. I've become so distraught from all the books they forced us to read that I can't even remember them.

I've purged them from my mind.
 

Marter

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Oct 27, 2009
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Tdc2182 said:
Marter said:
Probably "All Quiet on the Western Front", this year.

I really did not enjoy that book.
Did you not enjoy it because it was a little to graphic and viseral, or because it was dull?
Because it was quite boring to read. I just didn't enjoy how much boring material there was in it.
 

thepj

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Aug 15, 2009
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Romblen said:
There's also the poetry we had to read. It always sucked. We would read some short boring poem, then a few of the kids in the class would go on and on and on about what the poem could mean.
urgh i know what you mean, we had to do world war one poetry at the start of this year, i swear appart from about our 50th leason on animal farm (not a bad book in itself but our teacher insisted on going over it 30 bazzilion times) that was one of the most boring terms ever.
 

thepj

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Aug 15, 2009
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OmegaXzors said:
I honestly was mature about reading the books we were required to throughout school. None of them were terrible but some of them were boring as fuck.

I'd say the biggest over hyped piece of shit I had to read three times in my life would be Romeo and Juliet. It's the worst Shakespeare play (in my opinion). I have all his work in a giant, super well made book. I don't like this story. Sucks ass.

i must agree with you, it's basicly a book about a man of unspecified age (although i'd proably say in his twenties) trying to have sex with a thirteen year old girl because he saw her when he crashed a party and thought she looked good. now imagine if shakespeare had writen that play today.....
 
May 28, 2009
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captainfluoxetine said:
Errrmmm, I'd have to say a lot of the poetry compilations.

I dislike poetry, to me its pretentious drivel that anyone could bash out. Its not even proper literature.

Gimmi a nice meaty novel.
Huzzah! I share your views.

I wish I could resurrect Sylvia Plath just so I can kill her myself.

I hate pretentious metaphors, which is what most poetry seems to consist of.

I suppose a book I quite dislike is now To Kill a Mockingbird. I originally liked it when I read it before the curriculum decided it was time to depress some children, being a person of wide-ranging tastes - then came the analysis. My God, that cold, dialectical analysis - it goes on, and on, and on, and on, each apparently-supreme synthesis being given another twenty or so antitheses until all the students could be declared clinically dead.

Luckily Harper Lee hates the book as well because of all the attention and the fact she can't ever publish something that could surpass it - from what I hear she spends most of her time a virtual recluse.

They never mention author disillusionment do they?

Then again, schools wheel out "Death of the Author" analysis to such an extent that the fact of the author's existence and the idea that they possibly have their own ideas on their own book is negligible at best.

This is why I implore all the budding authors that seem to be on this site, when prompted, not to launch into a diatribe on all of the messages you wished to put across (for it will be ignored in favour of the obvious religious symbolism that can be gleaned from "Little Jimmy was mad."), but to simply say: "I wanted to write a book with explosions and bitchez in. I did just that."
 

Sigel

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Jul 6, 2009
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Catcher in the Rye
Grapes of Wrath
Animal Farm
Lord of the Flies
-_-

Edit-After some deep thought, I would seriously rather chew off my left pinkie finger than ever read any of these books again.
 

AmayaOnnaOtaku

The Babe with the Power
Mar 11, 2010
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dragonslayer32 said:
the bible. i am religious, i believe in god, but the bible contradicts itself all the way through. maybe just one person should have wrote it. also, when is the bible 2 coming out? i wanna hear about joan of arc and ghandi.
Yea I had to read and memorize (?!?) The King James Version in high school. Then they wonder why I am an atheist now.
 

Tomster595

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Aug 1, 2009
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theginger said:
Tomster595 said:
Rasputin1 said:
Eugh... What's the name of that book.. It's a movie aswell..GRawg!

Ah! Stormbreaker! Man that book was bad...
Maybe its cause I was younger when I read it, but I love that book. haha, however, the movie was an atrocity.
I can't describe how much I agree with you, the character development in the film was non-existant. I have similar feelings about Eragon, though most people i know didn't even like the book.
Yea, I feel the same about Eragon
 

Keith_F

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Mar 3, 2010
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Lord Mountbatten Reborn said:
This is why I implore all the budding authors that seem to be on this site, when prompted, not to launch into a diatribe on all of the messages you wished to put across (for it will be ignored in favour of the obvious religious symbolism that can be gleaned from "Little Jimmy was mad."), but to simply say: "I wanted to write a book with explosions and bitchez in. I did just that."
So because determining authorial intent is impossible and misinterpretations are inevitable, writers should abandon their efforts to express something meaningful and simply resign themselves to producing superficial schlock? Just trying to clarify.
 

Amberella

Super Sailor Moon
Jan 23, 2010
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In my English class in High School we had to read 5 books by the end of the year, because we were going to base our finals on the books we read. I was in a higher English class which is why I had to do this. This was also my 10th grade English Class. ((Flippin' hated it!))

The books I had to read were:
1. "Fahrenheit 451" by Ray Bradbury
2. "The Catcher in the Rye" by J.D Salinger
3. "Brave New World" by Aldous Huxley
4. "Animal Farm" by George Orwell
5. "1984" by George Orwell

Not to mention there was a book of poetry we had to read as well and write why the author wrote it, what do you think inspired the author to write it....etc. There were a total of 35 poems in that book.

Ended up getting a 'C' in that class. xD I was never so grateful for a 'C' in my life.

But the book I didn't like the most was "The Cather in the Rye".