Worst Novel ever?

Cyurus
Worst Novel ever?
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Joined: Oct 12, 2005
Location: Regina, Saskatchewan, Canada
Posts: 19
Posted on:
Nov 27, 2007 - 02 07

Just wondering what people would say if I asked them what the worst cowboy-style story was that they've ever read. . . And while we're at it what was the worst story that you've ever read (that comes to mind)?

I have ideas of the beginnings of a parody novel in these last days. . . :-)
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"Mankind proposed that it was intellectually far superior to dolphins because it had discovered, science and religion, and had evolved to build great technologies such as science and the atomic bomb. The dolphins stated they were intellectually superi

deejaybunny12
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Joined: Oct 28, 2007
Location: USA
Posts: 145
Posted on:
Nov 29, 2007 - 04 46

ERAGONERAGONERAGONERAGON nad "Jumping the Nail"
I never read any cowboy stories besides Hank the Cowdog, but I love those books :D

LoreleiLeigh

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Joined: Nov 20, 2007
Location: Vancouver, BC
Posts: 1
Posted on:
Dec 2, 2007 - 04 24

I never could get through "Pride and Prejudice" and "Paradise Lost" sucked too.

Nightfoot
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Location: California
Posts: 54
Posted on:
Dec 3, 2007 - 21 54

I second Eragon =D I'd also liek to "The Heart is a Lonely Hunter" Gah! I had to read it in English, and I swear it has no plot beyond a bunch of people angsting about their lives. There was no rising action, no falling action, when vaguely interesitng things happened the author solved them with the simplest, most boring solution and nothing had repercussions. It was awful. And don't even get me started on Eragon - that rant could very easily be my entire 50k words.

RockinWriter

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Joined: Oct 2, 2007
Location: NJ
Posts: 192
Posted on:
Dec 5, 2007 - 11 20

There was one book they made us read in school... I forgot the title but it was about these two guys who were in the desert and one makes the other go and get stranded w/o any clothes, food, or water, and then tries to kill him. That's the summary, really, in one sentence. I hated that book. Well-written, I guess, but I didn't like the overall summary. It's disgusting. That didn't stop me from reading ahead, though. :P
I don't remember any others, though, except one that I don't remember the title of or the plot - all I remember is that the cover had a girl trying to shoot a basketball for some team - she was wearing a jersey.
And Oliver Twist, too. I couldn't get through that. It was so not one of those gripping I'll-be-there-in-a-...I'll-be-there-soon! stories. More like, for me anyway, the kind where your mind goes and notices how much longer you have to go until the book is done.

edgewritermom
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Joined: Oct 16, 2007
Location: eastern Tennessee
Posts: 190
Posted on:
Dec 5, 2007 - 11 54

RockinWriter wrote:
There was one book they made us read in school... I forgot the title but it was about these two guys who were in the desert and one makes the other go and get stranded w/o any clothes, food, or water, and then tries to kill him. That's the summary, really, in one sentence. I hated that book. Well-written, I guess, but I didn't like the overall summary. It's disgusting. That didn't stop me from reading ahead, though. :P

My daughter had to read that same book in high school (and no, I don't recall the title either). In fact, I'm puzzled as to why most literature she and her brothers were given in high school was on such negative themes. I looked through the book of short stories she was given, and found, if I remember right, only ONE story that was a little amusing and didn't deal with death (suicide, murder, freak accident) or some aspect of abnormal psychology or soured relationships. It's true that life has its serious problems, but a healthy dose of the ability to laugh has been documented as helping people deal with such problems. Too bad high schoolers aren't required to read more good comedy literature.

Kids' literature probably doesn't count here in this forum...but I hated "Little Lord Fauntleroy" when I read it recently for the first time, out of sheer curiosity and because it is called a classic. Apparently the author's son, on whom she based the MC, hated it too, and spent his life trying to live down the image she portrayed.

"If a teacher is just a frustrated actor, is an actor also a frustrated teacher?"

J.B._Drake

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Joined: May 8, 2007
Location: Norfolk, Virgina
Posts: 157
Posted on:
Dec 6, 2007 - 18 24

I third Eragon. I haven't read the sequel but I hear it was worse than the first.

peacemakern
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Joined: Oct 2, 2007
Location: Oslo, Norway
Posts: 74
Posted on:
Dec 8, 2007 - 11 58

I can't STAND Jane Austen! All my friends keep telling me how wonderful she writes, but I think it's just... pointless crap that no one needs to read.

LittleGreyDragon

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Joined: Nov 15, 2006
Location: Trigylad or Keldane
Posts: 126
Posted on:
Dec 11, 2007 - 16 15

Eragon was pretty bad, but I found it vaguely interesting despite its predictability and poor writing and so forth.

I think Eldest and Our Town tie as the worst stories I've ever read. I couldn't even force myself to finish Eldest. Unfortunately, I had to read Our Town for school so I couldn't stop. :p

I am Tasha
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Location: on the long path
Posts: 1478
Posted on:
Dec 14, 2007 - 14 33

Eragon and the Elric Saga by MIchael Moorcock , IMO.

BoyGenius 1991
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Location: Brownsville Texas, at the Mexican border
Posts: 332
Posted on:
Jan 31, 2008 - 18 14

RockinWriter wrote:
There was one book they made us read in school... I forgot the title but it was about these two guys who were in the desert and one makes the other go and get stranded w/o any clothes, food, or water, and then tries to kill him. That's the summary, really, in one sentence. I hated that book. Well-written, I guess, but I didn't like the overall summary. It's disgusting. That didn't stop me from reading ahead, though. :P
I don't remember any others, though, except one that I don't remember the title of or the plot - all I remember is that the cover had a girl trying to shoot a basketball for some team - she was wearing a jersey.
And Oliver Twist, too. I couldn't get through that. It was so not one of those gripping I'll-be-there-in-a-...I'll-be-there-soon! stories. More like, for me anyway, the kind where your mind goes and notices how much longer you have to go until the book is done.

the book you are referring to is "deathwatch" I read about it in "500 great books for teens" and its blurb there made it sound much, much more interesting than it actually was. I wouldn't describe it as "disgusting" but it really didn't have much of a plot or any conflict. it said madec "built up an impressive legal defense against ben in his abscence" which is, if you read the book, a load of crap. madec's downfall is in such a mundane and totally ridiculous way too that there's no "ha, villain! take that" action going on. kinda disappointing, but by no means the worst book I have ever read.

BoyGenius 1991
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Location: Brownsville Texas, at the Mexican border
Posts: 332
Posted on:
Jan 31, 2008 - 18 20

"a room with a view" by e.m. forrester

without a doubt, the worst book I have ever read. I can't even recap it. arg

a close second is "call of the wild" by jack london. who'dve thought a book written by a dog could be so boring?

the third is "number the stars" by lois lowry. dull, predictable and totally pointless. I liked "the giver" and was bored to death by this book

that's all I can really think of for now.

thatollie

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Joined: Oct 25, 2007
Posts: 180
Posted on:
Feb 22, 2008 - 19 32

No one's mentioned "The Da Vinci Code."
Pointless, predictable, worst still, it's a complete rewrite of his first book, [every corresponding action in the same place as well.]

Moonwing_Ice

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Joined: Nov 18, 2006
Location: In My Room
Posts: 52
Posted on:
Feb 27, 2008 - 20 06

I never really liked "Eldest" because it had sickening amount of purple prose, the characters remained flat and two dimensional *cough*Eragon*couch* and it just did not catch my interest in its plot, which was really dumb anyway.

lolalinda
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Joined: Oct 14, 2007
Location: Austria
Posts: 35
Posted on:
Mar 1, 2008 - 06 05

Riven Rock by T.C. Boyle is the shittiest book I've ever read. (or tried to read, I never actually finished it... I started like 4 times because after a year or so I always think ... wait it can't have been THAT bad... but it always is) Boring like hell...

asilalenore7

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Joined: Oct 22, 2007
Location: Tasmania
Posts: 95
Posted on:
Mar 3, 2008 - 03 24

Twisted Clay by ex-Mayor of Katoomba Blue Mountains, Frank Walford. It features a young girl who has killed her dad with a hatchet, buried him, and digs him up at night to change the bandages. Written 1933. Yuk! asilalenore7

rcr311
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Joined: Oct 21, 2007
Location: Central Texas
Posts: 40
Posted on:
Apr 17, 2008 - 16 33

I'm quite surprised that no one's mentioned A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man. I mean, it was well written, I'm sure... but I read the whole thing and I STILL don't know what it's about. If I'd had my way I would never have seen that book in my life.

Elena_Pashkr

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Joined: Apr 17, 2008
Location: Redoubtable Shanties, Malapert, Aaagkhuwe
Posts: 3
Posted on:
Apr 17, 2008 - 18 28

"How To Eat Fried Worms". In elementary school in Louisiana, Rainy-Day-Recess was a common thing. Some teacher got the brilliant idea to make us read this book for a whole week, since it was too raining to go outside. I ended up reading it 3 times that week, because the teachers wouldn't let me go do anything else.

k.r.johnsonGlowing Halo
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Joined: Oct 27, 2007
Location: Edinburgh, Scotland
Posts: 41
Posted on:
May 10, 2008 - 15 28

At junior school they made us read The Water Babies, by Charles Kingsley, and Coral Island, by R M Ballantyne. Either of these nauseating piles of poo could walk off with the gold medal for Worst Novel unchallenged.

daeviant
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Joined: Oct 22, 2007
Location: Chicago, IL
Posts: 152
Posted on:
May 12, 2008 - 10 27

I know people are going to jump all over me for this... While many of his stories are very good, most of HP Lovecraft's stories are painful to read.
It's ironic, becuase a lot of what I write is inspired by Lovecraft.

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