>try to read moby dick. >quit after 3 paragraphs. >try to read brothers karamazov. >quit after 20 pages

>try to read moby dick
>quit after 3 paragraphs
>try to read brothers karamazov
>quit after 20 pages

recommend me something less boring and more straightforward

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  1. 1 month ago
    Anonymous
  2. 1 month ago
    Anonymous

    Ugly love - colleen hoover

  3. 1 month ago
    Anonymous

    read these kinos

    • 1 month ago
      Anonymous

      The Phantom Tollbooth is unironically nuclear giga-kino

      • 1 month ago
        Anonymous

        Can you elaborate?

    • 4 weeks ago
      Anonymous

      should add the lord of the rings and harry potter. they're good kid books

    • 4 weeks ago
      Anonymous

      >no the neverending story

  4. 1 month ago
    Anonymous

    The Death of Ivan Ilyich
    Pride and Prejudice
    Notes from the Underground

  5. 1 month ago
    Anonymous

    Instead of Quit, try Put down and Come back to it later a book

  6. 1 month ago
    Anonymous

    Ježeva Kućica

  7. 1 month ago
    Anonymous

    Sherlock Holmes unironically

  8. 1 month ago
    Anonymous

    >moby dick
    >boring
    ???
    it's fun from the first page onward.

    • 1 month ago
      Anonymous

      what are you talking about, it's a fricking snorefest

      • 1 month ago
        Anonymous

        delusional

        Out of all the classics you could have called fun, you picked Moby “here’s 50 pages of inane bullshit about whales” Dick fun lol.
        You haven’t read Moby Dick.

        You are all completely wrong, it's the least boring book ever written. Even the whale autism is great. You just have to find the voice, it's legitimately hilarious and profound and all sorts of contradictory things from chapter to chapter and all at once.

        I didn't read Moby Dick until I was out of college because everyone told me it was all boring descriptions of rigging for 100s of pages. The 19th century produced an avalanche of tedious novels, but Moby Dick is nothing like that at all. It's a phenomenal story, the characters are unforgettable, the writing is inspired, and it continually changes direction and tone and focus without ever seeming disjointed, just rich and surprising and inventive. It's not a meme, it's a great read and a great re-read.

        • 4 weeks ago
          Anonymous

          It's one of my favorite books, but I can still acknowledge that some parts of the book are dry on a first read. A preliminary understanding of the entire story, and its characters, is necessary to enjoy the portions that appear meaningless. Of course, one may argue that pleasure lies in making unrelated interpretations of passages, but most readers prefer some degree of cohesion.

        • 4 weeks ago
          Anonymous

          I just finished reading it for the first time and loved it, it has humor and emotion and everything you said, but it definitely could have used an edit. You don't need that many encyclopedia entries on whales, and if you do want to touch on the anatomy of a whale, do it briefly and poetically, not academically just because the narrator used to be a school teacher.

    • 1 month ago
      Anonymous

      delusional

      • 1 month ago
        Anonymous

        what are you talking about, it's a fricking snorefest

        The frick? I can understand it if you are talking about the whale-pedia chapters (Which are fun in their own way but I can understand why people call them boring), but the start isn't even close to being boring.

    • 1 month ago
      Anonymous

      Out of all the classics you could have called fun, you picked Moby “here’s 50 pages of inane bullshit about whales” Dick fun lol.
      You haven’t read Moby Dick.

    • 1 month ago
      Anonymous

      skipped the whale autism intro, did you anon?

  9. 1 month ago
    Anonymous

    Ok guys I found something to read hear me out:
    The Martian

  10. 1 month ago
    Anonymouṡ
  11. 1 month ago
    Anonymous

    Stop reading classics.

  12. 1 month ago
    Anonymous
  13. 1 month ago
    Anonymous

    Annie Ernaux is pretty straight forward.
    Short stories by Chekhov.

  14. 1 month ago
    Anonymous

    Finnegans Wake

  15. 1 month ago
    Anonymous

    Don't read a book unless you feel interested in reading it. The experience is much better when you have actual curiosity about some question that the book might be able to answer and the pages practically flip themselves.

    Avoid all the IQfycore pseud shit (at least in the beginning) and jump into /sffg/ or find what's currently popular and read the descriptions and pick something that catches your eye. Chances are you'll enjoy something with an actual plot more than some existential homosexuals gay musings, unless you're in the mood or stage of life where you feel the need to read that kind of stuff. If you can't get into it after a certain number of pages, drop it and pick up something else. The book is either not for you or you're not ready for it yet, so don't waste time forcing yourself to plough through it just to tick off a checkbox.

  16. 1 month ago
    Anonymous

    the war of the worlds

  17. 1 month ago
    Anonymous

    I cannot even begin to fathom what it must be like to live as someone who gets filtered by Moby Dick. Any recs to fix that?

  18. 1 month ago
    Anonymous

    Literature is a humiliation ritual

  19. 1 month ago
    Anonymous

    Wuthering Heights

  20. 1 month ago
    Anonymous

    Gravity's Rainbow

  21. 1 month ago
    Anonymous

    Read Balzac, Dickens, or Walter Scott. Most of the great Japanese novels are easy reads.

  22. 1 month ago
    Anonymous

    Tiktok rotted brain. Read count of monte cristo. If that's impossible then just stick to tiktok, because reading is not for you

    • 1 month ago
      Anonymous

      >if you don't like [SPECIFIC SELECTION OF BOOKS I THINK HAVE MERIT] then reading isn't for you!
      moronic pseud

    • 1 month ago
      Anonymous

      Count of Monte Christo is boring and for teenagers.

  23. 1 month ago
    Anonymous

    try harder moron

  24. 1 month ago
    Anonymous

    >recommend me something less boring and more straightforward
    Anton Chekhov's short stories.

  25. 1 month ago
    Anonymous

    The Poseidon Adventure
    Make Room! Make Room!
    The Hellbound Heart

  26. 1 month ago
    Anonymous

    Read brothers karamazov again, it gets good. You just need the attention span of a normal pre-internet human. 20 pages is pathetic

  27. 1 month ago
    Anonymous

    The Catcher in the Rye

  28. 1 month ago
    Anonymous

    The Discworld Novels

  29. 1 month ago
    Anonymous
    • 1 month ago
      Anonymous

      OP here. I've already read this dozens of times.

  30. 1 month ago
    Anonymous

    Moby Dick is dry but Brothers K is awesome

    • 4 weeks ago
      sage

      If you are alluding to Dostoevsky’s worst novels, then, indeed, I dislike intensely The Brothers Karamazov and the ghastly crime and Punishment rigamarole. No, I do not object to soul-searching and self-revelation, but in those books the soul, and the sins, and the sentimentality, and the journalese, hardly warrant the tedious and muddled search. Dostoyevsky’s lack of taste, his monotonous dealings with persons suffering with pre-Freudian complexes, the way he has of wallowing in the tragic misadventures of human dignity – all this is difficult to admire. I do not like this trick his characters have of ”sinning their way to Jesus” or, as a Russian author, Ivan Bunin, put it more bluntly, ”spilling Jesus all over the place." Crime and Punishment’s plot did not seem as incredibly banal in 1866 when the book was written as it does now when noble prostitutes are apt to be received a little cynically by experienced readers. Dostoyevsky never really got over the influence which the European mystery novel and the sentimental novel made upon him. The sentimental influence implied that kind of conflict he liked—placing virtuous people in pathetic situations and then extracting from these situations the last ounce of pathos. Non-Russian readers do not realize two things: that not all Russians love Dostoevsky as much as Americans do, and that most of those Russians who do, venerate him as a mystic and not as an artist. He was a prophet, a claptrap journalist and a slapdash comedian. I admit that some of his scenes, some of his tremendous farcical rows are extraordinarily amusing. But his sensitive murderers and soulful prostitutes are not to be endured for one moment—by this reader anyway. Dostoyevsky seems to have been chosen by the destiny of Russian letters to become Russia’s greatest playwright, but he took the wrong turning and wrote novels.

  31. 1 month ago
    Anonymous

    I liked moby dick a lot but if I reread it I will skip most of the whaling lectures

  32. 1 month ago
    Anonymous

    Why do you feel the need to read these particular books? Just read what you like, it's not a job.

  33. 1 month ago
    Anonymous

    Saga of the Seven Suns series. Kevin J. Anderson is about a direct of an author as you can get

  34. 1 month ago
    Anonymous

    not OP but I havent read a full novel since highschool 10 years ago, Ive read some short sotries since then and I want to get into the habit of reading but I feel exhausted by the time I get 14 pages deep into something, its a real struggle. would love to find captivating literature from within the last couple decades or maybe 90's.

    • 1 month ago
      Anonymous

      >exhausted after 14 pages
      You do know you can stop reading for the day and read 14 pages the next day, right? Hell, 14 pages could be week's worth of reading back during the serialization era.

    • 4 weeks ago
      Anonymous

      >I havent read a full novel since highschool 10 years ago
      classic IQfy

    • 4 weeks ago
      Anonymous

      Start by reading something simple and fun, like John Green, Stephen King, whatever is on the best seller list currently and happens to have an interesting description. Swallow your pride and read something for "young adults". You're exhausted because you're reading something difficult that's above your reading level and that you probably aren't even interested in.

  35. 1 month ago
    Anonymous

    >Rendezvous With Rama
    >At the Mountains of Madness
    >Ringworld

  36. 1 month ago
    Anonymous

    Cat in the Hat

  37. 1 month ago
    Anonymous

    You have to read what sparks a genuine interest. Not just pick whatever book you've seen suggested on IQfy
    A random book can spark that intense interest, but often you have to seek out writing that sparks that interest.
    If you find a story bores, stop reading it

  38. 4 weeks ago
    Anonymous

    Household Tales by the Grimm brothers (the original versions if you can find them). Some of them are short and weird

  39. 4 weeks ago
    Anonymous

    Read books with great prose, because it helps maintain reading interest, and those that are short (<250 pages). Some recommendations:

    1. The Great Gatsby
    2. The Waves by Virginia Woolf
    3.The Tartar Steppe by Dino Buzzati

  40. 4 weeks ago
    Anonymous

    Neuromancer

  41. 4 weeks ago
    Anonymous

    The whale autism is world building.
    If the whale autism was replaced with “magical creature” autism no one would be complaining.

    • 4 weeks ago
      Anonymous

      >If the whale autism was replaced with “magical creature” autism no one would be complaining.
      I would. "Worldbuilding" is plebspeak for "author doesn't know how to trim the fat."

  42. 4 weeks ago
    Anonymous

    I'd recommend following Dostoevsky's literary career in chronological order, at least partially. Start with his smaller Novella's like the The Double or The Gambler and if you enjoy those go to Crime and Punishment.
    If after that you aren't a Dostoevsky fan don't bother with The Brothers, because that's Peak Dostoevsky, it was the last novel he wrote and is his "greatest work" in so far it is the crystallization of a his entire lifes literary journey.
    I don't particularly care for Dostoevsky's writing but I'm really interested in him as a man and sort of see him as the only modern literary mind that genuinely didn't have his head shoved up his own ass which gives his writing a real genuineness to them that I really don't see in any of the other great literary authors of the 19th century.
    It's humility, I think. Dostoevsky was a great author because that's who he was not who he was trying to be. He was the guy.

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