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Quizzes & Puzzles1 min ago
For me it was A Man Called Ove by Frederik Backman. I dragged myself through the first half and then admitted defeat. Were the author's following books any better?
What bestseller have you given up on?
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.I love Frederik Backman, although, his writing is quite stylised and has its' own particular rhythm.
I can't think of any bestsellers which defeated me although I must remember why so many books (by authors I have never heard of) are available at 99p. My Abandoned collection on my Kindle is quite large..... 🙄
This was our last book club read, and the review is this evening, ( will let you know the comments!). For myself I managed all of it but thought the ending was rushed and could have done with more padding out. I found it far fetched that the neighbour, who was eight months pregnant, started to learn to drive.
Should I give Mr Backman another go...considering it was his first book that I gave up on? I just didn't care for the title character.
I despair every morning when I open the Daily Deals...and the monthly ones. Who are these authors? Oh, and the endless cheesy romance novels...🤔😝
I think I read the first few paragraphs of 50 Shades when someone posted it on here. No...no...and No.
My book reading group at Waterstones read Our Hideous Progeny by C E McGill last month.
‘Our Hideous Progeny’ by C.E. McGill is a historical, gothic horror. 1850, London, Mary is the great niece of Victor Frankenstein and she’s determined to become an eminent scientist.
The group gave a unanimous thumbs down, so far fetched and drawn out.
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