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01 October 2013

Top Ten Tuesday #17: Book Turn-offs

Top Ten Tuesday is a meme created by The Broke and The Bookish. Each week the girls at B&B think up a fun theme, and participating bloggers post their favorite 10 books in that category. This week's theme is

Top Ten Book Turn-offs
I like TTT, but I am not a big fan of the negative posts. :(

1.Teen partying. Call me a goody-goody or say I was sheltered or my parents were strict, but I never attended crazy blow-outs until I went to college. Teen alcoholism is rampant, and although it's important to show reality in books, this is areality I don't want to read about since my own was so vastly different. Princesses of Iowa by M. Molly Backes made me want to hurl. It was the book that really made me studiously avoid party-heavy novels. However, there are exceptions. Speechless by Hannah Harrington is a novel all about the nasty after-effects of one party, and I loved it.

2. Smut. There are occasions when I want to read a steamy romance, but those are few and far between. When I do read one, it's for adults. I'll pass on teen smut. It's like those years when I crushed on Taylor Lautner before he was legal: I just feel dirty. Pass!

3. Religion. Let me clarify. I am not against religion in books. In fact, I wish more young adult novels expressed some kind of religion because adolescence is a natural time to question all aspects in life, including religion. That being said, I don't want to read novels that are preachy. I know who I am and what I believe. I don't mind reading about the explicit details of a religion, but not in a novel. Also, I don't like religion is also often mentioned in ya to diss, shame, or put down that religion. I am, in fact, a Christian, but I am of a particular denomination that is somewhat polarizing in its public persona. That is, a lot of people like to make very hurtful jokes or comments for a quick and cheap laugh. STOP DOING THAT TO RELIGIONS THAT AREN'T YOURS, GUYS. Miranda Kenneally's novels, particularly Stealing Parker and Things I Can't Forget are great examples of religion done right!

4. Incest. I'll admit. I'm guilty of making incest a bit of a joke. In my family, we often kid about incest being the game the whole family can play when we're hugging hello or goodbye. In reality, I think incest is horrific and awful. No, I have never read V.C. Andrews. I'm just not really interested.

5. Surprise! Long-lost or previously unknown relatives! Guys, I am SO. SICK. of this trope. STAHP PLZ. I don't care if it's an unknown family member who you discover a la that one season of Big Brother or if it's a parent thought dead like Star Wars. Find something more original because the whole "I am your father" bit is tired.

6. The virgin & the man-whore. There is a certain well-known, NYT-bestselling author whose books I recently wrote off, and it's because ALL of her female protagonists were virgins who managed to tame that elusive beast, the man-whore. Well, that's not the only reason, but it was the primary reason why I stopped enjoying her writing after about the fifth novel. They were so formulaic and recycled. Not every girl is a virgin, and not every guy is a complete playboy. Sure, authors, I know you need to be true to the characters and their stories, but if those stories all sound the same, it's not good, and I'm not interested.

7. Poor grammar. This is really directed at copy-editors and (sorry, guys) self-published authors. to the self-pubs: Have somebody read over your work BEFORE you hit that submit button. You are putting your name on something that can be huge for you. Congratulations! However, if it's not edited in any way, you'll lose readers. Do yourself a solid and find a friend, a relative, a librarian, a college English major, SOMEONE to read it over for you. If you are a copy-editor: it is literally your job to double check the grammar and spelling. I know it's tough reading through manuscript after manuscript and looking for the tiniest details, but again, that's your job. Do it well!

That's all I can think of. I'm usually fairly open-minded when it comes to books. There's very little that I'm willing to completely write off. Are there any specific turn-offs you have with books? Have a TTT? Share in the comments!

12 comments:

  1. I love how our thoughts are so similar! (: This was an easy and hard week for me. Sometimes being so particular even while I'm open minded sucks. Some lines you just don't cross. Ugh.

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    1. I guess I prefer the lists that are about specific titles. These broad questions require significantly more thinking.

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  2. I have to agree with all of these! Poor grammar and bad editing really detract from a book and drive me crazy! #2 made me laugh, hard! :)

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    1. Glad I can entertain! Honestly, a book can be interesting and unique, but if you have poor editing, poor grammar, spelling errors...well, I'm gonna hate it no matter what. Absolutely the ONLY exception to this rule is if I'm reading an uncorrected proof. That's IT.

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  3. I agree with all of them, especially poor editing. They drive me up the wall! And for number 3 as well. I would just rather not deal with religion.

    ~Sophia @ Bookwyrming Thoughts

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    1. Yeah, religion is really tough. I want to see a few more authors attempt to include it, but I know that's really tough to do. It's so personal that it makes it really offensive if you get it wrong. I don't want the preaching, but the exploration could make for some interesting fiction.

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  4. Yes. Totally agree with ALL of these.

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  5. 2,4,5,6, and 7 are most definitely high up on my list.

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  6. Religion is one of my big no-nos. I can't handle it. A lot of times it just ends up being preachy which is a huge turnoff. Agree with most :)

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    1. Agreed! I don't read novels to be preached to!

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