Skip to main content

When Do You Just Give Up On a Book?

Up until last December, I almost never DNFed books. It pretty much only ever happened when I had to return a book to the library before I finished it and just never bothered to get it again. So really, I'd never decided to DNF a book - it just happened. And then Dash & Lily's Book of Dares happened.

I wanted to like this book. I really like David Levithan, and the concept sounded really fun and interesting. But by the time I was about 20 pages in, I knew that this was not workign for me. I managed to push through for another 100 pages or so, mostly because I literally had nothing else to read, but at that point, I just knew that I didn't want to finish the book.

Since then, I've DNFed 3 books. THREE whole books. That's almost as many as I'd ever DNFed before in my entire life. And after I thought about it for a while, I figured out that the books I DNF fall into 2 categories:

1) I really dislike the book and I can't bear to read it any longer.

Books in this category:
Why not continue? I know that there are people who don't DNF books because they want to see whether they get better. Sometimes, I do this, too - I'm not really enjoying the book, but there's potential for improvement, and I want to give it a fair chance. But once in a while, I find books like these where I frankly couldn't care less if it improves, because even one more unimproved chapter is too much.

2) I'm bored and I can't think of anything that might happen that might interest me.

Books in this category:
Why not continue? Both of my recent books in this category have been pretty long, which hasn't helped matters. If I'm a few hundred pages into a book and I don't care about what's happening, and there's another few hundred pages to go, there are times that I just don't want to push through anymore when I could be doing something else.

Both categories boil down to the fact that I have other potentially better things to read.

I think that the last time my TBR was a reasonable length was seven years ago. I've already accepted that even if I ever do get through it, I'll be about 90 years old. But when I'm reading a book that I'm not enjoying for one of the above reasons and I don't care whether it gets better...why not move on? For all I know, the next book on my list could be a new favorite, and why would I want to put that off?

Do you DNF books? Which ones? When, and how often? What's behind your decision? Did I miss any reasons? Tell me in the comments!

Comments

  1. Oh my gosh, I struggle with this too! Your categories pretty much sum it up for me, but I sometimes set down books temporarily and never find the motivation to continue. There's just kind of a stigma to DNF, right?

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Yeah, that happens too! That was how Outlander started out for me - I set it down with the idea that I'd take a small break with another book and then go back to it, and then that never happened. And there's SUCH a stigma. Sometimes it seems like it's worse than a completed 1-star!

      Delete

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

My Top Ten Books of 2016

Top Ten Tuesday is a weekly f eature at The Broke and the Bookish . This week's theme: top ten books of 2016. A little less than a year ago, I started my blog by making a post of my top 10 favorite books of 2015 . And now here we are again! I've come so far in blogging , and it 's really amazing to be creating the same kind of post as my fi rst one again - but I'l l save the nostalgia for my blogo versary post later this week. Last year, all of the books on my list were also on my all-time favorites list. I didn't quite read ten all-time favorites this year, so I added a couple of five-star but not-quite-favorite books to this post. I also didn't include any rereads on this list - I reread quite a few favorite books this year, and that wouldn't be fair to the rest! But anyway, here are my ten favorite books that I read in 2016. 10. THUD! by Terry Pratchett (Discworld #34) I don't think it would really be a list of my favorite books from a ye...

Thoughts on Required Reading

This blog post is brought to you by Pride and Prejudice and my AP Lit class. I've been thinking a lot about required reading, probably because I'm having to do so much of it. School comes with many types of required reading. Today, I won't be talking about reading excerpts from textbooks on various subjects, because I think everyone agrees that unless the subject is of particular interest, those readings are boring at best and painful at worst. Instead, I'm talking about being required to read entire works of literature (or, less often, nonfiction). During winter break this year, I was required to read Jane Austen's Pride and Prejudice . I thought that this would be one of my easiest assignments ever. I LOVE that book. I read it for fun two summers ago and could barely put it down! I was expecting wonderful days curled up on the couch with a mug of hot chocolate, enjoying the chance to revisit one of my favorite novels while still being productive. Best of all...

10 Books That Will Make You Laugh

I like when books make me feel things, and I know that a lot of readers agree with me. It's why we aggressively recommend the books that have turned us into sobbing messes. However, I think as a whole, we think of feeling things while reading as feeling sad or angry or frustrated. Why don't we put a little more focus on the books that make us happy? I was very glad to see that this week's Top Ten Tuesday (a weekly feature at The Broke and the Bookish ) was top 10 books that will make you laugh. So take a break from the tearjerkers, sit back, and relax. (You'll laugh till you collapse! This is what happens to me now that Animaniacs i s on Netflix. ) 1. The Name of the Star by Maureen Johnson (Shades of London #1) - Maureen Johnson is one of the funniest YA authors I know of. I don't think I've ever read a book by her that hasn't made me laugh. This one just happens to be the one I read the most recently. I'll admit that this doesn't reall...