Topic: I can't finish novels anymore ... is it just me?!

I've just threw (Janet TP household style!) the seventh novel across my living room after I've managed to get to page 80ish.

SEVEN NOVELS! IN A ROW!!!! INCLUDING MY FAVOURITE ROMANCE AUTHOR OF ALL TIME! No further than page 100 MAX .... And I've NEVER left any books unfinished before in my life!

These days, my time is really really precious and I can't stand books where the words aren't flying off the pages. So it's not so much a case of finding nits or "reviewing" the writing (I think), it's a case of me getting bored. Easily. Quickly. It feels as if the story goes on and on and on, yet nothing is happening, nothing is moving forward and any forward movement is little/tiny/minuscule. And then the book flies without wings or a parachute to halt it's trajectory to a fast approaching wall.

I'm really worried now. Is it me suffering from TNBW "pox" or is it the books I've been reading? Because if it's not me, it means I will have a lot of difficulty finding good (or what I deem good) novels and I have been struggling with that for quite a while now!

If it's me or TNBW, is there a cure?!

*end of rant*

Re: I can't finish novels anymore ... is it just me?!

Maybe it's that you're becoming aware of the shortcomings of many of today's authors. I can't stand "formula" writing, As much as I hate to say it, MANY romance authors write by formula. A + B = C. BORING. Therefore, it is up to us and the new wave of writers to give our readers something bigger and better.

I'm going to PM you a few books to read. If you don't like them, tell me I'm nuts.

Re: I can't finish novels anymore ... is it just me?!

KHippolite wrote:

Page 80?

If the book hasn't married me by page 10, I'm out.

Baby-steps K! I used to FINISH every.single.novel.
But I'm thinking at this rate, even page 10 might be a stretch one of these days!

Re: I can't finish novels anymore ... is it just me?!

Janet Taylor-Perry wrote:

Maybe it's that you're becoming aware of the shortcomings of many of today's authors. I can't stand "formula" writing, As much as I hate to say it, MANY romance authors write by formula. A + B = C. BORING. Therefore, it is up to us and the new wave of writers to give our readers something bigger and better.

I'm going to PM you a few books to read. If you don't like them, tell me I'm nuts.

I'm considering to venture back to my second preference again ... crime/mystery! It's that bad! smile

I'll look for that PM - and if I like them, I'll share them with everyone ... smile Thanks!!!

This is also my biggest fear, that readers and writers will not be able to finish my books ... At least I can say in all honestly I'm trying my best to keep readers engaged and can only hope I get it right!

Re: I can't finish novels anymore ... is it just me?!

I'm with KHippolite. I've never had any patience with books that don't grab me from the get go, though I usually allow up to 3 chapters before deciding whether or not to toss the novel.

Even so, I do run into the occasionally novel that starts out well and then suddenly takes a dive half ways through, or (even worse for me) totally cops out at the end. Maybe you're just having a run of bad luck, or maybe you are becoming a more critical reader as a result of fine-tuning your "editor's eye" on tNBW. Either, I wouldn't worry about it. Time spent reading a bad novel is time wasted, imho. Life's too short for that. Hopefully, you'll find something you can sink into and enjoy again soon.

Re: I can't finish novels anymore ... is it just me?!

Karin Rita Gastreich wrote:

I'm with KHippolite. I've never had any patience with books that don't grab me from the get go, though I usually allow up to 3 chapters before deciding whether or not to toss the novel.

Even so, I do run into the occasionally novel that starts out well and then suddenly takes a dive half ways through, or (even worse for me) totally cops out at the end. Maybe you're just having a run of bad luck, or maybe you are becoming a more critical reader as a result of fine-tuning your "editor's eye" on tNBW. Either, I wouldn't worry about it. Time spent reading a bad novel is time wasted, imho. Life's too short for that. Hopefully, you'll find something you can sink into and enjoy again soon.

There is something to learn from reading bad novels, but I can't read it to "The End" no more, so I'll just pick up on the lessons I can get up to that stage. smile And hey, reading 70-100 pages is proof that at least I have really tried to give them some chance! wink

What I can also add - it's nothing compared to the number of books I returned to the shelf after reading the first few pages - something I've never done before either. I used to base my reading decision on the back page blurb only. I'm turning into one of my nightmares ... a critic! LOL

Re: I can't finish novels anymore ... is it just me?!

janet reid wrote:
Karin Rita Gastreich wrote:

I'm with KHippolite. I've never had any patience with books that don't grab me from the get go, though I usually allow up to 3 chapters before deciding whether or not to toss the novel.

Even so, I do run into the occasionally novel that starts out well and then suddenly takes a dive half ways through, or (even worse for me) totally cops out at the end. Maybe you're just having a run of bad luck, or maybe you are becoming a more critical reader as a result of fine-tuning your "editor's eye" on tNBW. Either, I wouldn't worry about it. Time spent reading a bad novel is time wasted, imho. Life's too short for that. Hopefully, you'll find something you can sink into and enjoy again soon.

There is something to learn from reading bad novels, but I can't read it to "The End" no more, so I'll just pick up on the lessons I can get up to that stage. smile And hey, reading 70-100 pages is proof that at least I have really tried to give them some chance! wink

What I can also add - it's nothing compared to the number of books I returned to the shelf after reading the first few pages - something I've never done before either. I used to base my reading decision on the back page blurb only. I'm turning into one of my nightmares ... a critic! LOL

We can learn how to make ours better!

Re: I can't finish novels anymore ... is it just me?!

Janet, it's the same principle at play as when you choose a car you like ...and suddenly you start noticing them all over the road. You learn just enough about something to suddenly take notice. It takes a while to adjust too. You may never stop seeing the flaws, but sooner or later you'll learn to adjust your perception enough to read past them for enjoyment sake.

Re: I can't finish novels anymore ... is it just me?!

Linda Lee wrote:

Janet, it's the same principle at play as when you choose a car you like ...and suddenly you start noticing them all over the road. You learn just enough about something to suddenly take notice. It takes a while to adjust too. You may never stop seeing the flaws, but sooner or later you'll learn to adjust your perception enough to read past them for enjoyment sake.

Or I'm just getting cranky-er as I'm getting older?! smile

I'm definitely going to try Janet TP's suggestions with an open-mind. She's given me enough for the rest of this year and probably most of next year too, so don't hold your breath for any recommendations soon. The only reason I've been able to "read" this many books lately is because I haven't been finishing them!

Re: I can't finish novels anymore ... is it just me?!

I still enjoy reading. I am constantly nosed into a book. I selectively pick them, mostly by the jacket blurb, but favorite authors comes into play too. I rarely toss a book, though, for any reason. Maybe it's because I'm chintzy. I have noticed, however, that I now read with an editor's eye and can see some glaring mistakes at times. I owe this entirely to having joined this site. I don't like electronic books, mainly because of my eyes.

~Tom

Re: I can't finish novels anymore ... is it just me?!

dagnee wrote:

Janet R...
Try

Girl On The Train by Paula Hawkins

I could not put it down.

And I am getting the same way about books...I don't know if it's because I've developed an overly critical eye sussing out mistakes on the site or because I've read so much over the past 61 years that make me toss a book if it doesn't grab my attention and keep it.

Probably a combination of the two.

dags smile

Thanks Dags, will add that one to the list!

I've really been thinking and trying to analyse the reason behind gently putting the latest one to the side. These are the best ones I could find:

(1) It focuses only on the relationship - girl falls into river (too stupid to live moment to be honest, so I should've known by page 3 this wasn't go to end well - K is wise beyond his years! smile ) and boy rescues her and that's the last time anything really happened
(2) Nothing about them meeting afterwards flowed or felt "natural" ie it was too forced - this indicates to me lazy writing ie it was too hard for the author to put in the effort to show these two were meant to be in each other's lives
(3) It's a historical novel which takes place just after the American Civil War which I know very little about and should've been exciting to have as the background, but the research "worked into" the story is too much/overwhelming and I skipped half pages at places because I wasn't looking for a history lesson ... [the author mentioned all the research she had done in a dusty section of her local library on her recognition page ... maybe I should've known on page i already?!]
(4) The writing is pretty good and the concept, albeit probably a bit of a cliche (a Southerner moves north and falls in love with -too dumb to live- heroine that hails from the north - great friction/tension), can still be pulled off, but it still needs to have something else/more to carry its weight - North meets South by itself isn't ever going to be enough to make the novel work ...

Added to (2), the whole "inciting incident" was also a bit hard to believe. She returned home two days earlier from a visit, but didn't tell anyone and walked from the train station home which from what I could gather was a fair distance. So why not tell your dad so that he can come and pick you up? Oh, of course, *slaps myself over the head*, then she wouldn't take a short cut over the frozen river despite thinking the ice is too thin to save a few minutes/yards walking to the bridge (quick change of mind from someone who was just a day before willing to walk MILES to her home for the stupidest reason ever - to apologise for fighting with her boyfriend about a fight she didn't start) just a bit further up the river and the hero won't hear her call for help and they wouldn't spend two days together in his cabin with no one none the wiser and then they can go on and on about their "secret" for the next 90 pages while SFA happens otherwise. *end of muddled rant*

Reason one is very flimsy, because I've read Tom's "You Only Love Twice" and loved it although it's purely relationship driven (I can really recommend you lot should read it while you can "for free"!). So I think it's not so much that it focuses on the relationship only, but maybe more that the author didn't pull it off like Tom did for example. But I also know I prefer my romance novels to have a secondary plot in general, so I guess if it doesn't, it needs to be done exceptionally well or else it's going to go flying and Mike (our newest member around) will have to sharpen his skills to avoid missiles around here!

So at least it's not a complete waste of time as I'm learning how not to write historical fiction from a reader's perspective and witnessing the reason "rules" exist - I knew before reading this book that (3) is a BIG no-no. (2) is really common sense ie never underestimate your readers!

How not to overestimate your readers is a topic for another day! smile

Re: I can't finish novels anymore ... is it just me?!

Tom Oldman wrote:

I still enjoy reading. I am constantly nosed into a book. I selectively pick them, mostly by the jacket blurb, but favorite authors comes into play too. I rarely toss a book, though, for any reason. Maybe it's because I'm chintzy. I have noticed, however, that I now read with an editor's eye and can see some glaring mistakes at times. I owe this entirely to having joined this site. I don't like electronic books, mainly because of my eyes.

~Tom

I'm really running out of books to read, so I'm pretty desperate and are giving books I'd never otherwise would've looked at, a chance. But yes, being more selective and reading fewer books, but finish reading them, is a better way to go.

I work mostly on computers at work, so I also prefer the paper version. *high fives Tom*

Re: I can't finish novels anymore ... is it just me?!

There is no cure, BUT I've found that paying into Kindle Unlimited (KU) I can read without guilt of having paid for horrible books. The way Amazon set up the payment to the authors is percentage based (they only get paid for the pages read). I love this! Hopefully it will force writers to create quality work. Since I bought into KU, I've started hundreds of books that I've turned back in after only reading the first chapter (some made it to chapter 3 before I was disgruntled). I've also found some fabulous authors and read all their books. Since joining KU, I'm hooked and wont read any books that don't participate. The funny thing is that I can tolerate grammar issues easier than I can idiocy. It really ticks me off when the hero/heroine is too stupid to live - makes me want to kill them off. There is a huge self published listing of authors whoes work is not worth reading past the first chapter and it gives self published authors a bad rap.