Some books actually never made it to rating stage, as a member may have decided it was so odious that the book was closed, and never reopened!
While most of our reads fall squarely in the 5-8 category and often in the realm of forgetableness, the following books rank in the Book Club's Hall of Yuck. I'm not putting in links or pictures, as I wouldn't want you to be tempted to go and read these, or anything.
Tropic of Cancer by Henry Miller. We thought we were being tres chic selecting this as our 5th selection (way back when). We'd all heard about this book - a classic, raunchy, under the table kind of reading. I had visions of sitting in a darkish coffee shop, french cigarette dangling out of my pouty red lips, throwing my blond curls over my shoulder, as I look coyly over my book at the steamy man across the way. Visions that, for many obvious reasons, didn't pan out. Instead, yuck! Misogynistic and bizarre. What was this dude thinking and why did so many people like this book? Of couse, there are those out there who will say that we Book Clubbers are too simple minded and naive to really appreciate Henry Miller. So?
The Five People You Meet in Heaven by Mitch Albom. I loved Morrie. I enjoyed my Tuesdays with him and I cried when he died. That was a great story. But this one isn't. We tended to think that this was the author/publisher's attempt to ride the golden coattails of a blockbuster bestseller. Eeeeewwww. I wish the publishing industry would stop doing that. Just let great stories be great and don't make the author try to outdo him/herself. I felt kind of embarrassed for Mitch when I read this one.
Slow Man by Jim Coetzee. I believe the whole Book Club was under 5 for this book, but I hated this one so much that I rated it a minus 10. None of us have read anything else by him, but I understand this guy's a respected and well published author. I also understand he's a little weird. The book sure is. I can't really even remember the story - the plot is completely usurped by the power of my distaste.
The Road by Cormac McCarthy. Perhaps she can comment more fully, but my recollection is that her experience as a parent colored her enjoyment, or lack of it, for these books. She spoke vehemently that she thought Beck was making up her supernatural experiences with her unborn child. She was really mad at 'ol Martha.
Dale is the mother of two wonderful boys who were right around the same age as the little boy in The Road, so she found herself relating too much to the idea of having to protect your children from terror and disgusting things creeping out of the woods.
I liked both those books. I love the way Martha writes (I read her so often in O Magazine that she and I are on first name terms) and I thought The Road was terrible, but compelling. Don't think I'll see the movie though. The images I made up in my very own imagination are enough - I don't need others (even if Viggo is involved).
That's one of the great things about Book Club. We can disagree heartily and vociferously, and still be great friends. We don't all like the same stuff, right?





