Donate SIGN UP

Overated book

Avatar Image
lissyl78 | 23:30 Thu 13th Oct 2005 | Arts & Literature
26 Answers

Just wondered if any of you have been disappointed with a well-known classic or been recommended a book that you really didn't like.

Mine would be Rebecca by Daphne Du Maurier - it's written well but couldn't help but see it as a murder mystery version of Jane Eyre!

What books have you discovered to be really overated? Just curious! x

Gravatar

Answers

21 to 26 of 26rss feed

First Previous 1 2

Best Answer

No best answer has yet been selected by lissyl78. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.

For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.
Never really been disappointed with any particular book although some have taken a lot longer to read than others. LeMarchand, it took me a while to finish The Lovely Bones but I wouldn't say it primarily appeals to women. Lissyl, funnily enough I was thinking about reading Rebecca next so now I definitely will to see whether I agree or not. Although having said that, I haven't read Jane Eyre either! The murder mystery appeals to me more.
Personally I didn't like Wuthering Heights. I had no sympathy for ANY of the characters, and I think that sympathy with at least one of the characters of a book is essential. Having said that though I LOVE Pride and Prejudice, Great Expectations and Lord of the Rings, so I suppose we all enjoy different things.
I absolutely love Wuthering Heights!! I'm doing my higher English just now and have chosen it as my specialist study.
I cannot seem to get past the first couple of chapters of "One Flew Over The Cuckoo's Nest" dull, dull, dull  also "Lord of the flies" I just don't get.
Saying that the first 4 times I tried to read "Dune" I couldn't get past first few pages and now I must have read it dozens of times, it's my favourite book
Piper_Ak I love Douglas Adams, but I think the last Hitchhicker one, mostly harmless, was pretty bad.  I've got (and love) "Long Dark Tea-Time of The Soul, and Holistic Detective Agency

Oddly enough I finished Rebecca in the bath last night (!!?) and thoroughly enjoyed it. My expectations weren�t excessively high except for the fact that I found Jamaica Inn to be my kind of thing and wanted to try another DdM and I wasn�t disappointed. Mrs GS has tried to get into Rebecca several times without success, but I have told her it is worthwhile. To add to other messages I also flit between Wuthering Heights and Tess of the Durbevilles as my favourite books, we even named our daughter Kathy (yes, I know it should be a C but we preferred her initials to start with a K) because we both like WH so much.

As a librarian I understand the emotions that go with books and so I always try to convince others that there aren�t good and bad books, only those that you like and those that you don�t. Publishers don�t publish books that they don�t think will sell. Having said that, in my hypocritically-perfect world there would be no room for James Joyce who I find to be a literary example of arty snobbishness, read and enjoyed by people who want nothing more than to say �oh yes, I�m a great fan of Joyce blah blah blah�. Yes, that was meant to be provocative, I�m quite happy to receive a backlash�..

Question Author

I completely agree with the 'no good books or bad books' - that's why I asked the question. Think it's fascinating how people's tastes differ. I, too, LOVE Tess and Wuthering Heights but not Rebecca!

That's for all your comments guys x

It's amazing - I absolutely loved Rebecca; I was practically holding my breath as I turned the pages towards the end, it was so tense.

I love Jane Eyre too, but I really didn't see the appeal of Jean Rhys' Wide Sargasso Sea, about the first Mrs Rochester. People on my MA course kept raving about it but quite honestly I thought it was boring!

21 to 26 of 26rss feed

First Previous 1 2

Do you know the answer?

Overated book

Answer Question >>

Related Questions

Sorry, we can't find any related questions. Try using the search bar at the top of the page to search for some keywords, or choose a topic and submit your own question.