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Deborah J. Ross ([personal profile] deborahjross) wrote2009-08-12 12:16 pm

Why readers stop reading...

Check out Nathan Bransford's blog on why (and at what point) readers give up on a book. It's fascinating -- and instructive to us writers.

The people posting fall into several categories. Some, a minority I think, are compulsive finishers. Others are either so critical or so stressed for time, they give a book only a few pages, a chapter at most, to hook them. Most seem to be somewhere in between -- they'll hang in there for 30-100 pages.

Many commented that if a book has been recommended (or they've enjoyed other books by the same author), they will give it more time. Others mentioned specific turn-offs, ranging from content (I just put down a book which combined glorification of the military, a dystopic world, and killing a dog, all in the first chapter -- I would probably read on if it were only one, not all 3) to prose technique (telling not showing, weird tenses).

The single most cited reason for giving up on a book? "IT'S BORING." Granted, one reader's "boring" is another reader's "brilliant," but I am struck by how many bloggers used the same word.

When and why do you give up on a book? What makes a book boring to you?

[identity profile] janni.livejournal.com 2009-08-12 09:10 pm (UTC)(link)
The first thing for me is the prose. If the prose clunks in the first paragraph, I'll put it down unless I've heard good things about the book from others.

There's also a point around 100 pages where I'll often realize I'm just not that interested, but I'll often (not always) push past that. But I'm only very rarely glad that I did.

[identity profile] deborahjross.livejournal.com 2009-08-12 10:46 pm (UTC)(link)
Then there are the books whose prose is positively noxious. Damaging to a writer's mentality, especially when enhanced by the authority of print. I can't read Dan Brown, no matter how others rave about his story telling. His prose is so bad and in all the wrong ways, that if I read any amount of it, it starts worming its way into my own prose. Ack, it sprains my mind!