Reacting to Your Unpopular Book Opinions || Books with Emily Fox

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  • čas přidán 7. 09. 2020
  • You gave me your most unpopular book opinions... here's my reaction to them!
    Not a 5 star book but... • Not a 5 star book but....
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Komentáře • 546

  • @BookswithEmilyFox
    @BookswithEmilyFox  Před 3 lety +67

    This is a long one!!
    Leave any other UNPOPULAR BOOK OPINIONS because there were enough for PART 2!

    • @dianaleander8140
      @dianaleander8140 Před 3 lety +8

      I HATE hardcovers, they are so bulky and overrated!

    • @lauramolina3337
      @lauramolina3337 Před 3 lety +32

      When every character is like 17 and somehow everyone has already found the love of their life? at 17? why? this really annoys me. Why everyone is in a relationship?

    • @dianaleander8140
      @dianaleander8140 Před 3 lety +7

      @@lauramolina3337 YES and then they act like no 17 year old would. The author just write that the character is 17 so that the young audience can relate, it's a cheap trick if you ask me

    • @cristinapetcu9491
      @cristinapetcu9491 Před 3 lety +8

      Not enough books with less perfect complexion and body. Mainly beautiful protagonists

    • @unprofessionalcritic3107
      @unprofessionalcritic3107 Před 3 lety +7

      @@cristinapetcu9491 oooh Sarah J Maas comes to mind. She makes a clear point of making every single character look like slender, gorgeous supermodels with shiny hair.

  • @lauramolina3337
    @lauramolina3337 Před 3 lety +536

    When every character is like 17 and somehow everyone has already found the love of their life? at 17? why? this really annoys me.

    • @caroliinalopes
      @caroliinalopes Před 3 lety +44

      I agree so much!! So often YA books set in highschool show characters being madly in love and perfect pairs and staying together forever and... it's reaaally not that common or realistic

    • @Marie45610
      @Marie45610 Před 3 lety +22

      It *can* happen, but it's not as common as YA makes it.

    • @lauramolina3337
      @lauramolina3337 Před 3 lety +11

      Marie of course, that’s what I meant by “every character”, if it was one every once in a while, then it’s fine, but what annoys me it’s when Every main character is 17 and everyone it’s in a relationship and everyone has already found the love of their life, I think THAT is sooo unrealistic.

    • @a.b.2405
      @a.b.2405 Před 3 lety +15

      Exactly! A lot of my friends and I didn’t even get into relationships until college. This trope is definitely annoying and unrealistic.

    • @Europa1749
      @Europa1749 Před 3 lety +8

      @@caroliinalopes The couples I knew that dated in high school and got married are all divorced now.

  • @Juli6SS
    @Juli6SS Před 3 lety +293

    Totally agree about contemporary. I read for escapism, so there's no reason for me to read about real life when I try so hard to escape it😅

    • @that_crow_gamer
      @that_crow_gamer Před 3 lety +4

      This!

    • @FrankieOlive91
      @FrankieOlive91 Před 3 lety +12

      I like to escape to a different country & different culture. Not necessarily a different world.

    • @useformiscuseformisc380
      @useformiscuseformisc380 Před 3 lety +1

      Same!

    • @thebakedpriestess
      @thebakedpriestess Před 3 lety +5

      Same, that's why I always read fantasy.

    • @AKookieForYou
      @AKookieForYou Před 3 lety +6

      That's how I feel about a lot of slice of life/literary fiction stories, too similar to mundane life, with no added spice, and I always end up bored. Most of the contemporary I read is romance oriented, which for me, is escapism. I don't have a lot of romantic experience, but I love stories of love.

  • @amandaleeformby2826
    @amandaleeformby2826 Před 3 lety +211

    I get so frustrated when someone says they, “only read nonfiction.” It has always been in the context of looking down at other genres... never just a simple expression of preference. I think it actually put me off reading nonfiction for a long time.

    • @lorenasstainededges1719
      @lorenasstainededges1719 Před 3 lety +9

      I broke it off with someone because they only read non fiction and I only read fiction (same with film / tv preferences) and we literally had nothing to talk about. My shortest and dullest "relationship" ever 😅

    • @that_crow_gamer
      @that_crow_gamer Před 3 lety +11

      I don't think it's always the case. I guess it's like the difference between being vegan and telling everyone you're vegan lol. My husband reads rarely and when he does it's usually about history. But it doesn't reflect on his personality and doesn't make a difference in our relationship. (Plus he lets me gush about all the books I'm reading so maybe he's secondhand reading them through me hahaha)

    • @Readitandeat
      @Readitandeat Před 3 lety +9

      I know there are always jerks who make non-fiction snobby, but as a non-fiction booktuber I promise most of us love all books, we just love non-fiction! I'm insanely curious about the world so I read a lot of non-fiction to learn (ex. history of pizza, memoirs about chefs). I think non-fiction books can be lyrical and be full of great stories as well. I hope you give it a chance :)

    • @amandaleeformby2826
      @amandaleeformby2826 Před 3 lety +5

      @@Readitandeat Sorry, I didn't mean, in turn, to offend nonfiction lovers; I've read quite a bit of nonfiction at this point in my life and really do enjoy it. It has just been my experience that when someone made a point to say they only read nonfiction, it was done in a condescending way. I know people who do prefer the genre, but they don't imply that it is superior.

    • @uptown3636
      @uptown3636 Před 3 lety +6

      Nonfiction is wonderful, and it teaches us about the world in ways that fiction never could. BUT, fiction offers unique insights of its own. I forget who said it, but novels are empathy machines, forcing us to assume the perspectives of imaginary people as they confront challenges we will never face. When you read nonfiction, you learn information. When you read a novel, you live another life for a few days. When people say (condescendingly) they "only read nonfiction" they eschew the experiential knowledge fiction offers for the literal, contextual knowledge nonfiction affords them. Both are important.

  • @dahakhamoontouched4133
    @dahakhamoontouched4133 Před 3 lety +85

    "I only read nonfiction" These are the same kind of people who say "I only watch documentaries."

  • @that_crow_gamer
    @that_crow_gamer Před 3 lety +181

    Potentially unpopular opinion: I judge books by their covers. Some of my favorite books I picked up just because they have pretty covers, knowing nothing about them.

    • @patienceholmes841
      @patienceholmes841 Před 3 lety +21

      Same. The thing I kinda figure is that you can’t pick every book off the shelf one by one. You find a pretty cover/spine, check the blurb and then you’re good to go. Covers can also be pretty indicative of what’s inside. Like you know exactly what the books gonna be if it’s got a girl in a semi see through dress clinging to a guy with shoulder length hair on a balcony/stairs 😂

    • @katietatey
      @katietatey Před 3 lety +10

      I bought House of Leaves because the spine of the book is beautiful and it was an amazing book that I will never forget. The cover of Cloud Atlas is one of my favorite covers, but I didn't like the book much. I kept it anyway because of the beautiful cover art. And sometimes I spend a LONG time looking for a particular cover /edition just based on looks alone. :)

    • @jacksonwrightmusic6805
      @jacksonwrightmusic6805 Před 3 lety +13

      There's definitely some smart marketing behind several cover designs that actually can portray the vibe of the story. I don't necessarily judge books by their covers but I do pick up covers that I like more often than ones that don't speak to me.

    • @ChristinaNicole
      @ChristinaNicole Před 3 lety +3

      I do the same thing! If the cover doesn’t look interesting to me. I also judge based on the title. Title and cover has to be somewhat interesting for me to even read the synopsis.

    • @erildaselaj7337
      @erildaselaj7337 Před 3 lety +5

      Your not alone 60% of readers buy books by the covers, even though majority of them will never accept it.

  • @ceebee1461
    @ceebee1461 Před 3 lety +100

    I think lots of popular booktubers put too much focus on number of books read rather than trying to read ‘better’ books. I’d much prefer to only read 2 books per month that are incredible and stay with me for life rather than read 10 of the same type of book each month. Quality over quantity for me any day.

    • @lauramolina3337
      @lauramolina3337 Před 3 lety +12

      I think everyone should read what they want, however, what I find annoying is when they start only reading short easy reads just with the goal of reading more books, not because they think they will love and stop reading books they may love because it will take them longer because of the page count / they difficulty of the writing.

    • @aimun5255
      @aimun5255 Před 3 lety +11

      I read a lot of books a months tbh but it's more bc there's just so many good books I want to read, I ditch books easily when I don't vibe with them (reasons why my goodreads rating is pretty high) so I find it sad when I see a video full of books someone read when they just hate most of them like sis why you doin this to yourself, book numbers aren't that important

    • @valentineboudaud1887
      @valentineboudaud1887 Před 3 lety +5

      I agree even though people read whatever they want, I much prefer reading big books that sticks with me for a long time, and I don't like to finish one, pick another one right after, I need to process and I don't want to forget what I read by reading something else, idk if that makes sense

    • @ajmatt574
      @ajmatt574 Před 3 lety +2

      Cee Bee Read ‘better’ books? You don’t exactly go into a book knowing you’re gonna read a ‘better’ book than the previous one. You have to read books to know if they’re ‘better’ or not; so calling out booktubers for reading a lot of the same books over reading less doesn’t exactly hold up, does it?

    • @ceebee1461
      @ceebee1461 Před 3 lety +3

      @@ajmatt574 I wasn’t quite sure how to word my comment hence the use of ‘better’. I think there’s a push on some channels to read quantity over quality thats all. If someone’s into only easy reads for them then thats their choice. Whatever makes them happy. It’s just that personally I prefer to read more widely and challenge myself with the books I pick up, rather than reading the same sort of book on repeat. Obviously some of the books I read end up being 1 star for me but at least I’m trying to venture out of my confort zone by not exclusively reading ya and thrillers for example. No shade intended but that’s what some people do, which isn’t my jam.

  • @unprofessionalcritic3107
    @unprofessionalcritic3107 Před 3 lety +109

    Well, I see people complaining all the time about the characters in freaking GONE GIRL not being likable, so go figure.
    I mean, that book wouldn't even exist if the characters were likable!

  • @RachelRamirezCaroline
    @RachelRamirezCaroline Před 3 lety +81

    An unpopular book opinion that I hear a lot is that once you “age out” of a certain age group that you can’t enjoy reading them anymore. For example, as a female in their late 20s, I was told by someone in a book club forum that I couldn’t read children’s literature, middle grade, or YA because I can’t properly appreciate it. Good writing can be appreciated what ever age you are.

    • @Yohannai
      @Yohannai Před 3 lety +2

      Oh this was something I struggled with for a long time. I love all sorts of books for all ages, but I never grew out of reading middle grade and YA, which worried my parents. They're fun books! The younger they are, typically the more lighthearted they tend to be and the less romance with weird messages you tend to find (excluding YA which made me horrified at the idea of romance for a very long time till I actually found enough good instances of it in books to realize its doesn't have to be that weird and unnatural). I love reading fantasy and there's just more of it with more than just epics when you read for younger groups as well.
      Long story short, it took me till I went to a friend's house and saw that their mother owned a bunch of my favorite series for me to realize that its okay to read what you like without feeling guilty for not reading "higher".

    • @valemedina4473
      @valemedina4473 Před 2 lety +1

      Sounds like the same people to tell you to stop listening to kpop only because you arent a 10 to 20 years old. And honnestly, yuck

    • @carolinesconcertvids860
      @carolinesconcertvids860 Před 2 lety

      I was about 22 when I stopped reading and unhauled all the YA books I owned. Not because I thought I outgrew them, I just got fed up with a lot of the instalove and things like that in the books I was reading and adult books drew me in. But that's just me. I don't look down on adults who read YA and middle grade. We all have different tastes and can read and enjoy what we want to read, without being judged

  • @madalyn6230
    @madalyn6230 Před 3 lety +237

    i sort of agree and disagree with the judging older books by today's standards. i think we definitely should read literature from the past and admire the writing and discuss the important themes relating to the societal climate of the time. however, i also think its important to talk about the more problematic aspects of these books and WHY they would no longer be acceptable in a text in the present day! you can absolutely consume and even admire a "problematic" piece of art or fiction, as long as you take the time to educate yourself on its possible harmful aspects

    • @Booksaremysolace
      @Booksaremysolace Před 3 lety +3

      mads g I agree! I once had to read a book in my AP Lit class with anti-semitism in it, and it was acknowledged in the beginning, but the teacher never discussed it afterwards. And I remember feeling so uncomfortable - being Jewish myself - while everyone seemingly looked the other way.

    • @Victoria-cm7yh
      @Victoria-cm7yh Před 3 lety +9

      Agreed! As the classic cliche goes: "those who do not learn from history are doomed to repeat it."

    • @uptown3636
      @uptown3636 Před 3 lety +12

      I, too, find the notion of judging older books somewhat problematic. It is important to acknowledge that moral philosophy is not monolithic now, nor was it at any point in the past. Different people make moral judgements differently, and I find I am best served by seeking to understand how and why they make those judgements. In most cases, I do not choose to adopt their reasoning, but it still enriches my life to understand their moral stance. This is true in the present, and it is true about how I view older fiction. Reading works that I find morally challenging strengthens my convictions rather than weakens them.
      Except for Ayn Rand. She was a psychopath. Let's all avoid that dumpster fire.

    • @arialydia8095
      @arialydia8095 Před 3 lety +3

      Yes I agree! We can still read and enjoy the old books but acknowledge their prejudice. I read a lot of Agatha Christie and there's a lot of out-dated views and racism in them

    • @Booksaremysolace
      @Booksaremysolace Před 3 lety +2

      uptown3636 What’s wrong with Ayn Rand? (Not accusatory - just genuinely curious; I don’t know much about her)

  • @amonicareads4125
    @amonicareads4125 Před 3 lety +119

    i like to crack the spine of my books wins as the most unpopular one

    • @SolitudeDayys
      @SolitudeDayys Před 3 lety +13

      i feel accomplished every time i look at my shelf lined with cracked spines lmao

    • @negativenuss
      @negativenuss Před 3 lety +3

      I respect you but I just know that I would burn your house down if I ever got to see that 😂

    • @emilek3168
      @emilek3168 Před 3 lety +6

      I honestly think that cracked spines look aesthetic😅 And it's WAY more comfortable to read this way (though I obviously keep others' books pristine)

    • @yannetyay8094
      @yannetyay8094 Před 3 lety

      @@negativenuss same LMAOOO

    • @CodexPotter
      @CodexPotter Před 3 lety +2

      I crack them before I even start reading them so I don't have to worry about it while reading

  • @ninjasonic8921
    @ninjasonic8921 Před 3 lety +55

    I get why people on booktube don't understand people who don't like reading. But tbh, some people just won't ever get into reading and that's okay??? I am getting bored watching movies and series, not because the movies are bad, but because I just get bored? So I prefer reading. Other people may feel different. To each what he prefers, right?
    Just let people enjoy things🤷

  • @Morfeusm
    @Morfeusm Před 3 lety +63

    Unpopular opinion: Many bookubers read what they read just because of traffic the book/series will generate and if they weren’t on CZcams they would read at least some different books.

    • @BookswithEmilyFox
      @BookswithEmilyFox  Před 3 lety +36

      "Many bookubers read what they read just because of traffic the book/series will generate " Not untrue but it doesn't have to be a bad thing. It's not like booktube generates that much money so personally even when people mention that they think people lie to get subs/sponsorships... I don't think it matters that much lol It's also usually very obvious!
      "they would read at least some different books" I think all of us are influenced by what we're seeing on here to be fair! I read plenty of books I wouldn't have read otherwise. Some I love... some I don't haha

    • @aomoussynonymous8712
      @aomoussynonymous8712 Před 3 lety

      @@BookswithEmilyFox Mam, I've just started reading Witching Hour by Anne Rice. I wanted to read a book about witch covens with important male witches in it. So this and Deborah Harkness' Witches trilogy were the recommendations I got according to what I asked in a Goodreads group. Is the Witching Hour worth reading because I don't wish to D.N.F. this giant book halfway ? The only book that I did not finish till this day is The Alchemist by Paulo Coelho.

  • @Juli6SS
    @Juli6SS Před 3 lety +71

    Yeah... I don't really trust people who give everything 5 stars. Same with reactors on YT. It's good to be optimistic, but when person likes everything it just feel like they're scared to offend some part of their audience so they pretend to love everything.

    • @teresaharris-travelbybooks5564
      @teresaharris-travelbybooks5564 Před 3 lety +2

      That's an engraved attitude about every area of life. If a person is not wholeheartedly enthusiastic about EVERYTHING; someone is going to think you're not a good person, not a team player, etc. Personally, I hate that paradigm.

    • @bookworm_and_tea
      @bookworm_and_tea Před 3 lety +3

      But on the other side, some people genuinely enjoy pretty much everything and aren't picky about their books. It is highly possible that they are genuine amd honest and love all the stories they read. :)

  • @cristinapetcu9491
    @cristinapetcu9491 Před 3 lety +64

    I LOVE your bangs girl!!! Keep them if you like them too:)))

  • @rachaelhmack
    @rachaelhmack Před 3 lety +56

    My brother-in-law is a nonfiction snob and makes fun of my husband and me for reading "books with dragons." 🙄😂

    • @Readitandeat
      @Readitandeat Před 3 lety +15

      I promise as a non-fiction booktuber, we're not all jerkfaces lol. Both my sisters are ravenous fantasy readers and I read non-fiction. To each their own! I just want people to read :)

    • @stephanielemieux5319
      @stephanielemieux5319 Před 3 lety +12

      Really?? Wow, and here I am thinking that our imagination and capability to create worlds and tell stories is one of the greatest things humanity has to offer 😁

    • @sanjanavuppala6238
      @sanjanavuppala6238 Před 3 lety +13

      I always feel asking those kinda people if they see movies or series, because that would be highly hypocritical of them to do so. I had a classmate that was a huge anime buff but judged people who read fiction, like whyyyy. I do not understand how this is a superiority complex 😑

    • @Lemonade_Stand_
      @Lemonade_Stand_ Před 3 lety +2

      I read both. I read a lot of true crime related books but i also like throwing in fictional books in there too. Non fiction can get boring or too heavy after a while. I personally think it's nice to switch it up but you do you. Read what makes you happy.

  • @chocolateteapot328
    @chocolateteapot328 Před 3 lety +60

    I had a weird phase where I'd deliberately crack the spin on trilogies. Book one got cracked once, two twice and, the third three times. I don't know why

    • @BookswithEmilyFox
      @BookswithEmilyFox  Před 3 lety +37

      This... hurts to read lol

    • @chocolateteapot328
      @chocolateteapot328 Před 3 lety +9

      @@BookswithEmilyFox Don't worry I've cured myself but I lent a book to mom recently and the first thing she did was crack the spine, I had kept it pristine. So now I understand your pain, she also fell asleep on the book and bent it 😭😭

    • @elenaj6134
      @elenaj6134 Před 3 lety +4

      This made me laugh but also wince.

    • @davelewis8270
      @davelewis8270 Před 3 lety

      This sounds like ocd

  • @Magicme79
    @Magicme79 Před 3 lety +41

    Person: “mistborn is boring AF.”
    Me : “BURN THE WITCH!”

  • @nenerson1195
    @nenerson1195 Před 3 lety +17

    Who hates redemption arcs? Have you not read good redemption arcs? Oof. I tend to love them. I get when the villain/antagonist are redeemed just before they sacrifice themselves or when they fall in love with the hero/heroine because *gag* but I've seen it done really well. But even better than redemption arcs? Temptation arcs. Count of Monte Crisco---yES.

  • @sometimessunday6171
    @sometimessunday6171 Před 3 lety +78

    Pretty much all of the books on my goodreads are 3, 4, or 5 stars because I have the unpopular opinion/skill of being easily able to DNF a book. I started a separate shelf on goodreads just for my yearly DNFs.
    If I'm not enjoying the writing or story or the execution of the idea, and I don't feel like pushing though? DNF.
    I think people need to get over their fear of DNF-ing books, especially on booktube, because it always feels like they read a book they aren't enjoying just because of their fear of missing out or keeping up with the crowd.
    Apparently my unpopular opinion is that people should DNF books more!

    • @viennabooks741
      @viennabooks741 Před 3 lety +3

      sometimessunday totally true, I was identifying with the mentioned person in the video that only gives high ratings but after reading your comment this totally makes sense since I dnf many books after a view chapters. This also explains why I read my least favourite books in settings that forced me to finish it like school or a book club.

    • @MsWillowbayOrelse
      @MsWillowbayOrelse Před 3 lety

      I give dnfs 1 star on goodreads. Since I think a book that is so bad I dnf it gets 1 star.

    • @viennabooks741
      @viennabooks741 Před 3 lety +5

      I don‘t want to judge the pages I have not read. I have had reads that I DNF and picked back up again years later turn out to be 5 star books for me. (Doesn‘t happen often but since it does in my case I would not judge the unknown)

  • @alfme
    @alfme Před 3 lety +28

    About the not all classics are good, well, I totally agree that some might be boring for some ppl, or that they don't reflect current values. However, they are classics for a reason, and I feel like ppl don't understand how a book enters the literature canon. There is a criteria used by ppl who spend their lives studying them, and it varies according to time and culture. So, yeah it's totally valid to question why a book is so praised by the critics, but you should at least research it? Idk

  • @sofiaestelaramirezlopez1946

    This was a really fun videos! My unpopular opinion is: a lot of people misplace many books in the “magical realism” genre. I’m probably salty af because I’m latina and magical realism was born in Latin America, so I’ve read plenty of them and mostly all books that in Booktube are classified as magical realism are not. Maybe it’s a way to not answer for shitty magical systems, but true magical realism is when unusual or “magical” stuff is viewed as completely normal in the real world. Therefore, any fantasy world is not in the genre. Good examples are One hundred years of solitude, by García Marquez and like water for chocolate by Laura Esquivel.

    • @lauramolina3337
      @lauramolina3337 Před 3 lety +5

      Yeah, exactly, that’s why it’s called “realism”, because it’s also realistic, it’s located in the real world. And also, when they recommend “magical realism” books, and they say it’s magical realism because it’s “weird”, I’m like, that’s not magical realism, it’s just a weird book!

  • @xoHAUTEGLiTTERS
    @xoHAUTEGLiTTERS Před 3 lety +133

    Saying Stephen King is overrated is the most shocking and bravest thing you’ve ever said 😂

    • @nerdieone1
      @nerdieone1 Před 3 lety +19

      He kinda is tho...

    • @SuavisTea
      @SuavisTea Před 3 lety +13

      It is personal opinion. I love him ❤📚

    • @uptown3636
      @uptown3636 Před 3 lety +8

      The best 30% of King's work is very special. Misery, The Shining, Pet Sematary, and Full Dark No Stars live up to the hype. He's a great storyteller who does good work with characters. His prose is effective, but it can be a little cloying at times. His best books couple a great idea with a few wonderful characters. His worst books are so bad that they should be thrown into the boiler at the Overlook hotel (looking at you, Dreamcatcher and From a Buick 8).

    • @shubhamtiwari9472
      @shubhamtiwari9472 Před 3 lety +2

      @@uptown3636 misery was the first king book i tried to read.... And I'm really sorry to say it got dnf

    • @uptown3636
      @uptown3636 Před 3 lety

      Shubham Tiwari, sorry to hear that. It was also my first King novel, and I was captivated from the start. The only thing that annoyed me was the Scheherazade motif-it was ham-fisted and generally unpleasant. Otherwise, the book was a (rather twisted) delight.

  • @VeryPrettyFace
    @VeryPrettyFace Před 3 lety +9

    Your bangs look fantastic!
    I also get frustrated when people hate on "unlikeable characters" (interestingly enough, most of the time it's the female ones that bother them even though there are plenty unlikeable male ones too, hmmm...). I honestly never realised that being able to like a main character is such a big deal for people lol

  • @saafewolf69
    @saafewolf69 Před 3 lety +26

    I agree that most BookTubers I've found are into fantasy, YA , or romance, and I can understand it's because of promotions, I wish someone could tell me of a BT'er that talks about thrillers/mysteries or harder SF.

    • @lauramolina3337
      @lauramolina3337 Před 3 lety +2

      Mara from Books like whoa reads from alll different genres, but she’s definitely a fan of mysteries. She looooves Agatha Christie and closed circle mysterys!

    • @Morfeusm
      @Morfeusm Před 3 lety +3

      Better Than Food for more difficult literature, if you dare 😅

    • @clara4412
      @clara4412 Před 3 lety +7

      Paperbackdreams reads and reviews a lot of horrors/thrillers! I personally find her really chaotic and funny, too :)

    • @Lemonade_Stand_
      @Lemonade_Stand_ Před 3 lety +2

      Noelle Gallagher reads a lot of thrillers

  • @magglett
    @magglett Před 3 lety +26

    I love mass market paper backs tbh, they're nice to hold because my hands are small! Not to mention they are way cheaper lol. And I think some booktubers should definitely utilize libraries more if they have the option. I hate when I'm watching a video and they say they can't read a book because they can't find it in a store (obviously this is fine if they don't have access to a library, but I feel like most people I hear this from would have access to a library 🤷‍♀️)
    And I think we should make it more common to count book length by word count because it feels more accurate than page count

    • @teodoratihan7675
      @teodoratihan7675 Před 3 lety +4

      Totally agree with the word count thing

    • @amaresuify
      @amaresuify Před 3 lety +4

      Word count is just a more accurate measure of length too. The difference between a paperback page count and a hardcover page count can be significant.

    • @horrorghoul
      @horrorghoul Před 3 lety

      I say this all the time I miss those books too!

    • @valentineboudaud1887
      @valentineboudaud1887 Před 3 lety +1

      In France mass market paperbacks are super popular and I really love them, practicle, cheap and not that ugly !

  • @AdrianneChristineBooks
    @AdrianneChristineBooks Před 3 lety +34

    I’m so lucky that my sister reads and we read similar books. Idk what I would do without her!

  • @erank58
    @erank58 Před 3 lety +9

    I totally relate to the "unhealthy relationships in YA" comment, and I'm so glad this came up...I always felt like I was the only one who thought that! I do think it's gotten much better over the past few years though, as we're seeing much more diversity in YA publishing specifically--though I still say we have ways to go!

  • @zahraaal-hilo7013
    @zahraaal-hilo7013 Před 3 lety +20

    Jane Eyre is my favorite classic ever 🙁💔

    • @BookswithEmilyFox
      @BookswithEmilyFox  Před 3 lety +8

      I don't think it's a "bad" book but it's definitely not a romantic one to me and I thought I would enjoy it more than I did!

    • @zahraaal-hilo7013
      @zahraaal-hilo7013 Před 3 lety +5

      BookswithEmilyFox OMG I can’t believe you replied! 😍
      Totally agree with you. I don’t think of it as a romance but I love the writing and Jane as a character is my favorite!

  • @FrankieOlive91
    @FrankieOlive91 Před 3 lety +14

    My unpopular opinion is that against my own better judgment, I love Mr. Rochester. He’s a prickly ass & I think he’s just a great flawed character. 😆

    • @katietatey
      @katietatey Před 3 lety +1

      Read Wide Sargasso Sea for another look at him.

    • @FrankieOlive91
      @FrankieOlive91 Před 3 lety +1

      katietatey I’ve read it.

  • @carahamelie
    @carahamelie Před 3 lety +40

    My unpopular opinion: Based on evolutionary psychology... The "problematic" relationships in YA novels are just exaggerated scenarios that feed our natural instincts as a species... that’s why they are so popular....I think they are really important to the development of young people and the time they are at in life....(Think twilight for example). I also think that these relationships don't cause unhealthy relationships to form.. these relationships would form with or without these relationships in books based on the personality/trauma of the people that enter them... not because they read them as a child. I could give an entire ted talk on this topic.

  • @rachelj4238
    @rachelj4238 Před 3 lety +8

    Six of Crows was the most disorienting book I've ever read! Every time I would get into the romance/conflict the fact that they were TEENAGERS just boggled my mind and completely took me out of the story. Like we have grown as women simping over Kaz. He is a child in a grown-up suit. Vincent Adultman with trauma.

    • @jonathan5069
      @jonathan5069 Před 3 lety +8

      I am a certified SoC fan but I totally agree about the age thing. Those characters were NOT teenagers lmao, idc what the book itself says 🤣

  • @hamandeggs23
    @hamandeggs23 Před 3 lety +32

    I LOVE REDEMPTION ARCS. ONLY IF THEY ARE GOOD THOUGH SCREW SEVERUS SNAPE.

  • @ikosh1
    @ikosh1 Před 3 lety +7

    It would be nice to see a French themed TBR, where you have French books or translations in French that you have read/want to read and do the whole video in French. That would be nice. 😊😊

  • @craftybookdragon684
    @craftybookdragon684 Před 3 lety +8

    I read Twilight as a teenager and loved them. The movies were ok. I tried to reread Twilight as an adult and thought it was horrible.

  • @jessicaborin5526
    @jessicaborin5526 Před 3 lety +20

    I thought Aristotle and Dante.. would be a nice story about how gay and straight boys can be friends and still be loving and affectionate toward each other. So I was disappointed by the ending

  • @meropa
    @meropa Před 3 lety +3

    The Winner's Curse is one of my favourite series and I agree - the angst and drama in the second book was top notch

  • @ceebee1461
    @ceebee1461 Před 3 lety +9

    Oooff only 700+ page books are big books. I think 500+ is a big book. Getting close to a 1000 pages is huge.

  • @StormReads
    @StormReads Před 3 lety +7

    I think you shouldn't read a classic if you can't handle the era it was written in and know your not going to like it because it has things in it you don't agree with, it's like me reading sci-fi when I know I am not a fan of science driven books. 😃
    I think booktube has evolved over the last few years and we are seeing more readers of every! I have found so many new horror booktuber and its great!

  • @PumpkinMozie
    @PumpkinMozie Před 3 lety

    you should totally post the video of you reading 1 star reviews of your favorite books!

  • @Juli6SS
    @Juli6SS Před 3 lety +16

    Both my parents read a lot, but our taste is totally different most of times, and it's kinda sad because we can't really discuss the same book. But onece my dad was telling me how bad the book he was reading is. And the plot sounded familiar so I asked for the name, and it turned out to be Throne of Glass🤣 Like, dad, why the F do you get ya romance/fantasy book and then complain about it?!? He seriously should start to read annotations before reading something 😆😆😆

  • @andrearobyn3701
    @andrearobyn3701 Před 3 lety

    Jane Eyre is a favourite book and I fell in love when I read it last year, and still the way you talked about it gave me a good laugh! :)

  • @TheJoker096
    @TheJoker096 Před 3 lety +45

    On classics I feel like we should remember that most of the popular and widely known classics were written just for fun and that there weren't meant as a lesson for the generations to come. Of course some were but I think that most writers have been writing for the same reasons authors write now so there is no point in humiliating people for not enjoying classics when we weren't the primer target for this books and the fact that generations before us thought them good, doesn't mean much, there were a lot of shit that those generations thought were good ideas including genocides and segregation and a lot of other questionable stuff. I believe that the main point of reading is enjoyment and if educating yourself be it through classics or nonfiction brings you joy then great for you but not everyone have to read like this

    • @oriannamatos2760
      @oriannamatos2760 Před 3 lety +6

      Exactly. Classics starts as regular books, and they become "classics" for several reasons, and we don't have to love/hate them because "it's a classic" (I mean, The Mona Lisa is this well known piece just because it was stealed a lot of times; it's not the only piece in history with a great painting technique...). Classic books are books, period. It's interesting knowing why they are classics, but mocking people who don't read them it's as awful as mocking people for read them (yes, reading classics is not pretentious, is reading. Classic is not even a genre).

    • @TheJoker096
      @TheJoker096 Před 3 lety +1

      @@oriannamatos2760 Yes, I completely agree!

    • @Morfeusm
      @Morfeusm Před 3 lety +3

      Yes putting things and books on pedestal is exactly what was wrong with Middle Ages 😅 Books are book. If you want to be educated on ancient culture and literature it’s ok, if you want to read solely YA it’s ok. Not everyone reads for the same reasons and likes same things. It’s good classics are there it’s great people protect history. Some of my favorite books are classics. But reading should be fun. If someone reads books that require PhD in theology, literature and philosophy to understand one sentence it’s their idea of fun.
      Many books in history were written as fun.
      Many books today are elevated for wrong reasons.
      Read what you want. Reading some Shakespeare can be fun. But it’s totally ok if all you ever read was Twilight.

    • @TheJoker096
      @TheJoker096 Před 3 lety +2

      @@Morfeusm Yes! There is a book for everyone in this world be it a classic or a modern novel

    • @kjan917
      @kjan917 Před 3 lety +3

      I think, especially in the case of sci-fi and fantasy, it’s a kind of gatekeeping. Basically indicating that you aren’t a “true fan” if you haven’t read “the classics” of the genre. Which of course is nonsense, because of what you said. Wells, Asimov, Lewis, Tolkien, and Bradbury were all popular novelists of their day and any of us have just as much a right to not be interested in their writing as anyone publishing today.

  • @musictraveller3598
    @musictraveller3598 Před 3 lety

    I read the winner's curse series because of you Emily and it was sooooo
    Good .I loved it !

  • @oonam3519
    @oonam3519 Před 3 lety +11

    The too fast relationship one got me thinking, is there any (ya) books where the main character is already dating in the beginning of the first book? And they are still together at the end of the series?

    • @lorenasstainededges1719
      @lorenasstainededges1719 Před 3 lety +2

      Your question really made me go through everything I've ever read and all I can say is.... Mrs and Mr Weasley are still together lol. I think maybe in Illuminae, but if you read that book it's kinda sort of true, but not really? God this is a good one, why have I never paid attention to this? #pleasewriterealrelationships 🙌

    • @a.b.2405
      @a.b.2405 Před 3 lety +2

      We can’t have nice things.

    • @ADADEL1
      @ADADEL1 Před 3 lety

      Yes. One series that I grew up with is called the Cleric Quintet and it has that. Parts of it are really tear jerking also.

  • @professordekarios
    @professordekarios Před 3 lety +8

    i wish i could like unlikeable characters but if i don't care about them i spend the whole book hoping they mysteriously die and then i get sad when they don't 😂

    • @sabrina.lnd95
      @sabrina.lnd95 Před 3 lety

      I mean, that's also a way to read a book 😂😂

  • @niclarice
    @niclarice Před 3 lety +5

    I sooo agree with hating on unnecessary romance/love scenes in books. I semi-enjoyed the Court of Thorns and Roses, but the love scenes were too excessive. Couldn't help but think throughout the series that it would have been WAY better without the excess smut. It was just too much...

  • @Erdnussbuttertoast
    @Erdnussbuttertoast Před 3 lety +6

    on love triangles: I agree, most of the time they're not done well - with Twilight, for example, I was totally shocked that there were people out there who were Team Jacob, to me it was always crystal clear that Bella is (& will always be) with Edward, Jacob was just a kid she's friends with who happened to have a crush on her but she didn't have any interest in him at all. Same with The Mortal Instruments (though that was even weirder because Clary does date Simon for almost an entire book). Though I gotta say, The Infernal Devices series (also by Cassandra Clare) actually did the love triangle really well - I genuinely liked both people and both possibilities for coupling to the point where even though I had a clear favorite (Will), during scenes with the other love interest I genuinely wanted them to come to fruition as well

    • @mariamimran3787
      @mariamimran3787 Před 3 lety +1

      Im currently reading infernal devices and im loving it!! So far i prefer jem tho🤭

    • @brittanyhager8027
      @brittanyhager8027 Před 3 lety +1

      I agree with you that in Twilight it was crystal clear that Bella was always going to want Edward... but, when Jacob came in the picture, you start to see how Bella's life would be a little more realistic in a sense if she were to choose Jacob... she could have children, wouldn't have to abandon her family, etc. I believe that was why some people were team Jacob. Just my opinion

    • @the.enchantresss
      @the.enchantresss Před 3 lety

      I absolutely LOVE the infernal devices and the love triangle is so well done there. (Jem is my favourite tho 🤭)

  • @littlebookbin
    @littlebookbin Před 3 lety +9

    IM SO HERE FOR THIS

  • @Readitandeat
    @Readitandeat Před 3 lety +4

    [Reads primarily non-fiction]
    It CAN be lyrical and amazing and wonderful!
    BUT fiction is also great too!
    I do wish we had more non-fiction specialists on Booktube but I LOVE finding people who do :)
    Really fun video

  • @Tsunotarouu
    @Tsunotarouu Před 3 lety +5

    I try to buy all my books used unless I'm super pumped for a release. I would love to use my library but i have no urgency to read them for some reason...😅

  • @everyonelovesdee
    @everyonelovesdee Před 3 lety +6

    If you think Jane Eyre and Mr Rochester is a problematic relationship or have issues with them, I'd love to hear your thought on Heathcliff and Catherine from Wuthering Heights

  • @keihui85
    @keihui85 Před 3 lety

    Yes please to more 3 stars books recommendation! I’m kinda tired of the same books on many videos recs i got from youtube..

  • @rishitachakraborty9783
    @rishitachakraborty9783 Před 3 lety +4

    I'm so shocked when you name dropped Jane Eyre as I literally just finished reading it for the first time right now, and feel exactly the same! I felt extremely guilty, thinking I didn't like a classic work when there were clearly too many things wrong with the romance. Glad I'm not alone!

  • @Nataliecj
    @Nataliecj Před 3 lety +18

    I'm the one who said Mistborn was boring lolololol, I was waiting for this 😂😂 I'm actually currently reading Elantris and I'm really enjoying it, which I feel is another unpopular Sanderson opinion. I see a lot of his fans saying Elantris is the worst one and only hardcore fans should read it for completion's sake but I like it a lot! It's good! He needs to learn how to write female characters and stop having characters endlessly hand-wringing over religion because oh how I don't care, but I've come to expect that from Sanderson so I'll put up with it. I stand by what I said about Mistborn though, I literally couldn't finish The Hero of Ages because I was so bored.
    I often see this discussion that book reviewers who give everything 5 stars aren't trustworthy, but honestly, what reviewer are they talking about? I'm subscribed to a lot of reviewers and I've never seen anyone rate everything highly. Maybe it's something that happened in the early days of Booktube but I was around back then and I still can't recall anyone who gives every book they read 5 stars.
    I know it's an old joke but every time I see Emily in the background it makes me laugh 😂

    • @unprofessionalcritic3107
      @unprofessionalcritic3107 Před 3 lety +7

      I agree with you on both of these.

    • @salmaa.6363
      @salmaa.6363 Před 3 lety +8

      I read Mistborn and it was not anything special to me tbh. I will not continue with the series.

    • @ajmatt574
      @ajmatt574 Před 3 lety +4

      I can’t get through the Final Empire, so I admire the fact that you got to the 3rd one. I look at that series and I wonder all the time how people just fawn over it. I don’t particularly like Vin-there’s just so much about her that is unlikable and contradictory in my eyes.

    • @Nora-fq8lp
      @Nora-fq8lp Před 3 lety +1

      I liked Mistborn but it's definitely not my favourite by Sanderson. My favourite by him is the Stormlight Archive Series and I also really loved Skyward. I also don't really understand the hate towards Elantris, I liked it haha

    • @oldkingspook
      @oldkingspook Před 2 lety +1

      I loved Elantris and finished it within a week but Mistborn was too much of an investment for me. Chronic pain sometimes decides whether or not I finish a book and Mistborn ended up in my dnf because of it. Maybe another time.

  • @thebookstamp9976
    @thebookstamp9976 Před 3 lety +3

    I do think Catching Fire is the best in the Hunger Games trilogy.

  • @lilacsandobsidian
    @lilacsandobsidian Před 3 lety +3

    I completely agree about the big series with the lead who didn't want kids who ended up having them, seemingly begrudgingly. I assume we are talking abt the same one, but this pisses me off so much, when people end up matched and it's just not realistic. It's OK to end up alone!!!

  • @dianaleander8140
    @dianaleander8140 Před 3 lety +13

    I love how heated Emily was in big parts of this video

  • @ostrichreads7715
    @ostrichreads7715 Před 3 lety

    I actually read Warbreaker because of you last year & it made it to my top books of the year! (Or my life, actually..)
    Gonna go with Elantris or Mistborn next ^^

  • @moev29
    @moev29 Před 3 lety +15

    Oh right out of the gates huh? lol. I’ve been with my boyfriend 8.5 years and I’m like 73% sure he’s actually illiterate lmao

  • @idokken
    @idokken Před 3 lety +8

    The Well of Ascension is my favourite Mistborn book!! Sazed is everything

    • @Morfeusm
      @Morfeusm Před 3 lety

      How did you like the ending for Hero of Ages?

    • @idokken
      @idokken Před 3 lety

      @@Morfeusm I mean... it was epic, I will give it that

    • @jonathan5069
      @jonathan5069 Před 3 lety +3

      THANK YOU!! I think The Well of Ascension is still my favourite Sanderson book, period

    • @Morfeusm
      @Morfeusm Před 3 lety +1

      @@idokken very diplomatic answer 😂

  • @bushrafatima174
    @bushrafatima174 Před 3 lety +7

    I hate Mass Market paperbacks they look and feels like bricks and their spines break so easily like the book breaks in half

    • @SoraAoi95
      @SoraAoi95 Před 3 lety +1

      I hate that they crack and that they're uncomfortable but I do like that they look like a brick specifically lol especially when they're as heavy as a brick

  • @Ana-im4dz
    @Ana-im4dz Před 3 lety

    You are so calming and smooth

  • @nonfictionfeminist
    @nonfictionfeminist Před 3 lety

    Just finished Fifth Season and loved it! Outside of having to look up the terminology, I really didn't see what confused people about it. Also, the relationship was so good, coming from someone who hates relationships in my books.

  • @emilyreads5207
    @emilyreads5207 Před 2 lety

    I’m with you on books looking new. I have read some books several times and they still look brand new. The person who bent your book putting it in the bag- I might have asked to replace that book! I also get so upset with myself when I accidentally drop a book and then the cover bends. Nooo. And, before I loan out a book, I first ask them how they treat books. That determines if I will loan my books to them. I had one friend who very kindly bought a new hardback to replace a book I loaned her that she accidentally spilled water on. She is someone I would loan books to again. Because you get it!

  • @user-xh6dl7zx5r
    @user-xh6dl7zx5r Před 3 lety +5

    Reading has been my quarantine escape ESPECIALLY fantasy genre. Definitely agree on the escapism. Ugggghh A Wizard of Earthsea. It was so very painful. I finished it only because I had a very good friend who begged me to read it and my love for my friend was the only thing that kept me reading it.

    • @Morfeusm
      @Morfeusm Před 3 lety

      Actually I would say later books are nothing like the first was. But yeah they aren’t for everyone 🤷🏻‍♂️

  • @Marie45610
    @Marie45610 Před 3 lety +2

    Unrelated to this video, but seeing Daughter of Smoke and Bone on your unread shelf makes me slightly nervous but excited for you to read it. Laini Taylor is one of my favorite authors, I'll read anything she writes. But I also know you are a slightly more critical reader than I am, and I don't want you to hate it. 😅

  • @laurenb_101
    @laurenb_101 Před 3 lety

    There are so many points that I agree with - namely breaking book spines (I can’t handle that and people I see do that make me grind my teeth - yeah I’m sad) 😅, my new books remain new-looking after I’ve read them (including paperbacks), I hated Blade Runner film and couldn’t finish the book and yeah 3 stars is not a bad review at all! Great video, Emily - I love how passionate you are! 😊

  • @PetrikLeo
    @PetrikLeo Před 3 lety +4

    "I like to crack the spine of my books" actually hurt me. Ouch. Ouch.

  • @arialydia8095
    @arialydia8095 Před 3 lety

    I really don't like hardbacks so I agree with that one... they take up more space on my shelves and I don't have much space, they don't fit in my handbag easily and I always carry books around. They definitely look pretty when under the cover has patterns but they're not practical for me personally

  • @zoeyl9662
    @zoeyl9662 Před 3 lety +1

    omg the rainbow shelves one! Totally agree. If it's only a few shelves, or a specific series sorted by colour (the penguin English library for example) then I'm totally here for it. But fully rainbow shelves make me gag - why would you separate series and mix genres aaarrghhhh

  • @bookswithike3256
    @bookswithike3256 Před 3 lety +8

    30:28 Six of Crows isn't a heist book though? That's not the purpose of the book, it's just marketing. It's a slow, character-driven, character exploration type book with significant heist elements. It's not about the plot, it's about the characters and how they became who they are.

    • @BookswithEmilyFox
      @BookswithEmilyFox  Před 3 lety +5

      To be fair, 95% of the time I hear someone mention it, they will say it's a heist book!

    • @lyragillespie3511
      @lyragillespie3511 Před 3 lety

      I think it's a heist book because...they didn't just break into the Ice Court for funsies :-)

    • @bookswithike3256
      @bookswithike3256 Před 3 lety +1

      @@lyragillespie3511 It having a heist in it doesn't mean it fits into the heist genre. The plot is the heist, but the purpose of the book is the character study.

  • @ashm4738
    @ashm4738 Před 3 lety +2

    I am 100% with you on Jane Eyre. It's one of the few books I have very strong feelings against (Romeo & Juliet, Snow Falling on Cedars, and The School for Good and Evil are the others).

    • @Morfeusm
      @Morfeusm Před 3 lety

      You know many of these books were revered also because their prose quality. Of course story in them can be bad or not for everyone

  • @michellesmirnova4471
    @michellesmirnova4471 Před 3 lety +12

    Regarding the “books written before 2020” opinion - to me, it’s okay to dislike a book for sexist, homophobic or racist content even if it was written before a time where these things were actually considered sexist, racist or homophobic. However, I don’t think you should blame the author for including things that were perfectly normal at the time. I think it’s natural to get angry when you look at it from a 2020 perspective, and it’s okay to feel offended and dislike it and give it one star, but I see too many people immediately acting as if the author was a hateful scumbag when, in fact, everybody was pretty much a hateful scumbag at the time it was written. Blame the culture, not the people! Be glad that we’ve come so far instead!

    • @jamieson4293
      @jamieson4293 Před 3 lety +1

      This may be somewhat true but I also think people should be critical of how publishing and the literary canon upheld racist/homophobic/sexist texts and therefore their writers well after their time DESPITE the fact there were writers at the time writing in direct opposition to these ideas. For example, To Kill a Mockingbird/Harper Lee often gets a pass on racist critiques of her book because 'it was a very racist time and people didn't think of race as we do now it's not Lee's fault' even though Lee's contemporaries were critical of TKAM and there are Black writers whose work isn't nearly as popular from the time who write texts with similar themes. Same with many Victorian texts and sexism, even though there were quite a few female writers and the emergence of first wave feminism. Or Joseph Conrad being excused for his colonial/racist themes in Heart of Darkness even though he was critiqued by his contemporaries. Of course time period plays a part, but when people act like individuals don't play a role in perpetuating ideas in their time period, or potentially even deliberately opposed progressive social discourses it feels a little lacking context to me. some authors are just shitty and the literary canon tries to erase it for the sake of 'genius', idk

    • @michellesmirnova4471
      @michellesmirnova4471 Před 3 lety +1

      Jamieson To me there’s a difference if those progressive ideas aren’t “the norm”. There’s plenty of authors who have always written progressive books, hell there’s books written way before 2020 that cover the same topics we are currently discussing. I don’t think books with for example racist themes should just be disregarded because they were written a certain time, having the discussion is also important, but to me I wouldn’t want to be angry at someone for following what the government, society or otherwise people around them had taught them, feels like blaming a victim to me. If you grow up in a completely homophobic community and time period and never see anything other than that then it doesn’t matter what type of books homosexuals might be writing because nobody of that time ever bothered to explore those books. I don’t think any bad themes should be completely disregarded, but I think it’s a problem to blame people for “not being progressive enough” at a time when the only people who WERE progressive were the people of the groups being oppressed and the other groups weren’t ever exposed to those ideas. I think it’s the same concept as if someone were to grow up in a country or community that’s largely homophobic, I wouldn’t blame them for being homophobic. Yes I would educate them, but I’m not going to act like they should “know better” because they were never exposed to the other side and never knew to look for it. That’s (luckily I should say) incredibly uncommon by today’s standards but you get the point. If you disagree with that tho then that’s perfectly fine!

  • @sarahbecker12345
    @sarahbecker12345 Před 3 lety +5

    I destroy my books when reading them. Spines get cracked, covers get torn, pages get dog eared and I love it. I have no problem with others damaging my books either. I want my books to be well loved and I don’t mind when they look the part.

    • @kyliefitzgerald6984
      @kyliefitzgerald6984 Před 3 lety

      Me too!! My own books are all crazy, I won’t fret if I drop it in the bath, spill coffee, if it gets wet at the lake. I get joy from breaking the spine 🙈 it’s just a mass produced bundle of a paper. Mass produced. It doesn’t matter haha. I would never treat a book I borrow like that though, or rare editions.

  • @SkyeThreepwood
    @SkyeThreepwood Před 3 lety

    Another video where you read 5 star reviews for books you didn´t like would be awesome. It was really entertaining :)

  • @NilaR93
    @NilaR93 Před 3 lety

    Love these videoes, hopefully you have enough unpopular opinions to make more :D I find we usually agree on a lot of points, so I don't even know what my unpopular opinion would be

  • @sav1052
    @sav1052 Před 3 lety +7

    I honestly really agree with His Dark Materials. I'm trying so hard to like it but they're so disjointed.
    Some of the people were so self-righteous and pretentious with their unpopular opinions.

  • @kittyact180
    @kittyact180 Před 3 lety +2

    Hardcover for looks and Paperback for the reading experience!

  • @harnahhhh
    @harnahhhh Před 3 lety

    Murderbot is a pretty lighthearted SF series! I’ve only read the first one but it’s so good

  • @DevilNeverKnows
    @DevilNeverKnows Před 3 lety +1

    I have a copy of a wizard of earthsea and I had no idea it was considered a classic. I read maybe a few chapters and then stopped because I wasn't deep into a reading phase

  • @johnpauldagondong2720
    @johnpauldagondong2720 Před 3 lety +2

    well to be fair, Jane Eyre is considered to be Gothic like Rebecca. I didn't like the romance either lol

  • @pepperwings
    @pepperwings Před 3 lety

    I think people recommend Stranger in a Strange Land because--yes, there may be some problematic things, it doesn't dominate the book. BUT it does have those things you mentioned, there are concepts and ideas and behaviors that are really engaging and interesting. I really liked The Moon is a Harsh Mistress--I think there are fewer issues than in Stranger in a Strange Land, but similar large concepts that are quite enjoyable. Friday was a lot of fun, but more because of the adventure than larger concepts (it also was one of his cases against polyamory, and yet it seemed to show how well it worked?)

  • @thissideofmyworld7216
    @thissideofmyworld7216 Před 3 lety

    First of all, love your video! I thank you for being so honest about your opinion and I found you very charismatic :)
    I wanted to "clarify" or start a discussion about what "overrated" means. Sure we can all say a book or an author is overrated because we don´t like his/her work. But is it ok to say that when we are critically analyzing a book and/or and author? I think not. You may not enjoy something since it might not be your taste but it could be contributing a lot to the genre, or using resources really well but it just doesn´t suit people. All of that said, I don´t think people should be ALWAYS thinking in EVERY conversation about what overrated means. But I encourage every person who is being part of a critical discussion on something to differentiate both things: one thing is your taste, another is if it technically works (or not) in many, many and many more different aspects.
    Personally, I love Stephen King´s work. Me liking or not doesn´t make it overrated or not, I don´t think. But that said, we could discuss that he is a master of the genre and storytelling. He had made his way into many people´s hearts with his work (I´m not talking about the marketing here, and how well he sold). Even if I didn´t like anything of his, maybe I should take that into account in my "critical opinion" and then judge if its overrated or not.
    And there is the counterpart: you could have many, many flaws on your "technical" craft as an author, like Harry Potter and so on, but still be doing a hell of a job of getting a beautiful message out there or the consumer just likes it a lot. And I absouletly love Harry Potter, and not just for nostalgia, I love it of the themes it tells, some technical things the author does so well, and I just completly subjectively love it for the way it makes me feel.
    As an artist myself, I feel comfortable saying that every piece of art is flawed in some way or the other: it can be the message that is not told well, the technical stuff just doesn´t work right, etc. And that´s ok, ´cause that´s how life works, nothing is perfect. So I would conclude that the word "overrated" in a critical situation is more damaging than anyhting else, just because it doesn´t really tell you anything. You can critique an author or a book but in the end there will be many conclusions to it: the technical stuff, your personal taste, if it works well with some criteria, if it sells well or not. Overrated is not one of them.
    At least, those are my thoughts. It doesn´t make justice to any author, neither to the work itself nor the reader, that is, in my opinion, the most important factor in the equation. Anyways, if anyone thinks differently, I´d like to hear it :).

  • @morganepronget7578
    @morganepronget7578 Před 3 lety +1

    I'm not a fan of redemption arcs... and then I read the Wounded Kingdome trilogy, by RJ Barker and I LOVED the redemption arc for one of the chracter, I was really surprised to enjoy it!

  • @JayGTheAwkwardBookworm

    I prefer hardcovers, they’re just so pretty. Put I agree with floppy paperbacks

  • @FrankieOlive91
    @FrankieOlive91 Před 3 lety +2

    I love magical realism as a general rule but didn’t think it was a popular opinion because I, personally, don’t know anyone else who actually likes it.

    • @Morfeusm
      @Morfeusm Před 3 lety +3

      I love magical realism!

  • @Jenbebookish
    @Jenbebookish Před 3 lety

    I really want to know what series u were referring to where the girl has kids in the end even tho she didn’t want to?

  • @malloryanderson9098
    @malloryanderson9098 Před 3 lety

    The girl with a pearl earring is a good example of a face on the cover that is well done. Also as I’ve gotten older I’ve started writing more in my books. And underlining. Because I go through so many books I know I’ll need my own version of place markers/memory joggers when I come back to it later and I probably won’t read the whole thing again when I do.

  • @doveknight
    @doveknight Před 3 lety +5

    Aristotles and Dante, bad ? well that fucking hurts, it's one of my favourite books of all times...That's typically the kind of book I love: slice of life, coming of age, contemporary YA, especially those that have LGBTQ+ and/or mental health rep. I guess it all depends on our tastes :)

  • @Dhor16
    @Dhor16 Před 3 lety +2

    28:36 the most accurate description ever, without using words

  • @roxanac5886
    @roxanac5886 Před 3 lety +3

    My biggest problem with classics is that the required reading list in school hasn't changed in probably more than 50 years. At that age people should be exposed to books that are more relevant nowadays and a lot more diverse.

    • @NothingOfNoteToSeeHere
      @NothingOfNoteToSeeHere Před 2 lety

      A big complaint of my home countries school system(s) often is that every state (more like school) does it's own thing. I'm happy that my school had only one real Classic, in general a mixed bag of books, about different today relevant topics. Some very diverse. But in hindsight, I wonder why we only covered one (1) classic. Though, it was THE german Classic and one book was kind of a modern classic, but still, two (2) is kind of low.

  • @claudias5564
    @claudias5564 Před 3 lety +1

    The Long Walk was one of my favorite Stephen King books. King really is a hit or miss to me, so I totally agree.

  • @teresaharris-travelbybooks5564

    I'll try to read almost anything. Recently, I'm loving Neil Schusterman, feeling bored with V.E. Schwab, ok with Sarah J. Maas, LOVED T.J.Klum, rereading Frank Herbert, and I'm racing through The Lady Astronaut Series by Mary Robinette Kowal, and anticipating Tsiasos.

  • @Kira_g4
    @Kira_g4 Před 3 lety +1

    Just found your channel and I love it.

  • @annabrown4156
    @annabrown4156 Před 3 lety +4

    The only redemption arc I really loved was bobos from Beartown by Fredrick backman

  • @hannahollihan
    @hannahollihan Před 3 lety +4

    I hate the term "likable" in terms of characters. It's not useful information. Tell me why the character bothered you. Were they poorly written? Did they have a bad arc? Or did the character just annoy you? Because I love characters that are messy and make mistakes. Do I want to be their friend, probably not, but I want to read about them and watch their growth.

  • @evadevries5031
    @evadevries5031 Před 3 lety +13

    Okay but Eragon did not become powerfull overnight? 😅 The entire story is about him entering the world of magic and starting out being able to do nothing and then having this entire journey where he learns everything over a very long period of time. Like only in the last book is he finally the most powerful.

    • @Moony1568
      @Moony1568 Před 2 lety

      Yeah and that journey was boring as sin.

  • @pinoproxy2828
    @pinoproxy2828 Před 3 lety

    would u read or give your opinion on George RR martin books

  • @virginiamooney4105
    @virginiamooney4105 Před 3 lety +1

    I understand your thoughts on Stranger in a Strange Land, I would recommend checking out Overly Sarcastic Productions' summary of it, its' very good.