corra wrote:(You bought a copy? I'm not recommending it. I'm saying I liked it.) 
Seeing as you are recommending it so highly, I will hold you personally responsible for my enjoyment of this pulp. 
Yes, I made a purchase and it should be there at the home, like a dead goldfish or a sick puppy, waiting for me when I return from work this evening.
Or, should I say, "Yep, I've gone and got me it."
From a small bunch of reader reviews that I've read (Amazon UK and Goodreads), there are several that, like you, state they began reading and were less than enamoured with the initial experience but grew to like it very much and by the end were very pleased that they'd stuck with it. The book seems to have a certain charm that is perhaps not immediately felt.
I've based my opinions upon the first few pages, I've never read beyond. If you recall I started to talk about 'the Martian' within the 'Literary Openings' thread on the discussion forum. My opinions are from that exercise and I stand by them; I am less than impressed with the 'Martian' as a literary opening. This was a direct result of me standing in the bookstore at a London railway terminus and reading the intro chapter. On the basis of my feeling for the book after that quick peek, I decided in that moment that the book was not for me. To be honest, I'd expected more and relayed my experience in that other thread.
That doesn't mean to say that the book doesn't blossom into something much better than the opening would suggest. In fact, I'm convinced that it does; as I say, I trust your judgement upon literature other than 'Tess of the d'Urbervilles,' without question.
Also, I feel that I should read the entire novel before I express another opinion because the discussion has opened up beyond the perceived quality (or not) of the intro and has widened into opinions based upon the structure and sum of the entire novel. In truth, Vern's premise for this discussion was based upon an entire novel and the reader's perseverance with a story they were not liking too much; and I weighed in with an opinion about an intro section and that without having read more than four or five pages.
Plus, I feel that I owe it to the author to at least buy a copy of his work if I'm going to discuss its merits or publically share my critique upon it.
That said, you remain entirety responsible for my enjoyment (or not) of said story.