November 2024
    M T W T F S S
     123
    45678910
    11121314151617
    18192021222324
    252627282930  

    Recently I read a book named Kill All Normie written by Angela Nagle. Writing was not a problem, I kind of like the way they wrote but I can see their bias about the subject from a thousand miles away. You can have bias that also is not a problem but people who are reading should be able to figure that out, if they do then in my opinion you are a bad writer.
    I just wanted to go to their home and ask them to stop writing. It was really hard to finish the book. I am a really good reader and I have never faced a problem like that before so it surprised me a lot. I wanted to know what book or books made you really angry.

    by RoxanaSaith

    3 Comments

    1. Ah, I totally feel you on the biased books front. It can ruin the book enjoyment tremendously. If we are speaking about books that induced anger, “[A Million Little Pieces](https://wydgetlabs.com/?red=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.amazon.com%2Fdp%2F0307276902%3F%26psc%3D1%26linkCode%3Dll1%26tag%3Damznwydget-20%26th%3D1%26language%3Den_US)” by James Frey definitely tops my list. The way he fabricated a memoir, well, that was something. Thankfully, his deceit was eventually exposed.

      On the other hand, “[My Sister’s Keeper](https://wydgetlabs.com/?red=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.amazon.com%2Fdp%2F143915726X%3F%26psc%3D1%26linkCode%3Dll1%26tag%3Damznwydget-20%26th%3D1%26language%3Den_US)” by Jodi Picoult might strike a chord. It’s a beautifully written novel, but the plot and the ending… man, they can grind one’s gears! All just a perspective though.

    2. PrincipleInfamous451 on

      A Little Friend for starting the plot with a murder and making me think the book was going to be about solving the murder, and making me waste hours of my life that I will never get back just to have a downer ending that still leaves the murder unsolved

    3. ApparentlyIronic on

      *Radium Girls* – Kate Moore, *Killers of the Flower Moon* – David Grann, and *Exposure* – Robert Bilott all made me incredibly angry, but not at the author.

      They’re all nonfiction about some groups of people being incredibly unfairly treated to the point of deformity, pain and death for long periods of time without their tormentor being brought to justice. The latter two both have movies (I haven’t seen Killer Moon yet, but the movie for Exposure, called Dark Waters, was really good and a pretty accurate depiction of the book)

    Leave A Reply