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The first one that I DNFed was because I picked it up against my better judgement. It was christmas time it was a christmas romance and had been on my shelf for years so didn't want it there till next Christmas. It was so badly developed and insta-lovely (the characters told each other they were in love 25 pages after they first met!!!) though I couldn't bare it and so DNFed my first book in about a decade.
The second one was Villette. That was well written but just the wrong time in my life to be reading it. My mum had died a few months previously and I was already struggling so reading about a character who was (view spoiler) caused me so much stress each time I went to pick it up that in the end I had to DNF it for my own piece of mind.
The third was Worm. It was an ok read but at 6000 pages long wasn't good enough for me to justify all the time I would have spent on it.

There are a few books I sampled using ebook resources and those I will not count. But just looking at this year I have read 76 texts, that includes some short stories, and there are really only two books that I deliberately put aside and said I am not going to finish these. They are both great books. I want to finish them someday: The Pillars of the Earth and Crime and Punishment. So that is 1:35 ratio this year.


Lud-in-the-Mist by Hope Mirrlees, after reading more than half the book. I lost interest in the plot and the characters, but apparently the ending was the best part. Oh, well!
Howl's Moving Castle by Diana Wynne Jones, after two chapters.
In this case it was a the lacklustre style of writing and the annoying sister.
The author seemed to be going for a fairy tale style that just didn't work.
I generally abandon two or three a year, sometimes more, sometimes less.


I loved Milkman, but I enjoyed it from the beginning. If you’re not liking it at the halfway point, I don’t think your feelings will change by the end.

I'm thinking of reading this, penned it for later in the year but might be next now, got distracted by Homer, so good to know.
I'm not very good at leaving books unfinished, it's still a work in progress

I found that I was DNFing more books when I was just not honest with myself about what kind of books I liked reading, and also which authors I enjoyed. Now I'm much less likely to pick something up by an author if I didn't enjoy the last thing I read by that person.
I've found that group reads are a great way to find new authors and books that I might not have otherwise tried, but occasionally I'll have to DNF one of those also.

I loved Milkman, but I enjo..."
Ha, I just saw this reply. Thank you for your feedback, Pink.


Since I chose the book—Hild by Nicola Griffith—I was in charge of leading the discussion. It was several years ago, so all I remember is talking about why I gave up: the author switching between old English and modern contractions being the one I remember (editors, wherefore art thou?). The piece was historical fiction, and won a Nebula Award. But I couldn’t get past this contradiction.
Has this ever been a problem for anyone else?

The only book I DNF'd this year was some YA book I grabbed from the library on a whim. I don't remember the title, only that it was a sequel to a book I hadn't read, either. I returned it after a couple pages of the main character's love interest smirking and being rude to her. By and large, I hate YA romances, so I usually avoid them on principle.
According to my reviews, the only other "DNF" book I have is a cookbook, because I didn't have the time to make a vast majority of the recipes in it.
Patty wrote: "It was several years ago, so all I remember is talking about why I gave up: the author switching between old English and modern contractions being the one I remember (editors, wherefore art thou?)."
Huh, I didn't notice that. I finished Hild only a month ago (after being on my Currently Reading list for two and a half years). That was a difficult book to read, I don't blame anyone for DNFing it.

it's mainly long books that I call time on - even if they're quite well written and have some good aspects, I find myself thinking whether I can be bothered reading lots more of the same...
shorter books I usually grit my teeth and skim through to the end (and then slag them off in a review!)

but so far this year only 1 (out of 60)
maybe I am becoming more tolerant in my old age!
To my shame I must say that The Divine Comedy is in my DNF pile as is The Pillars of the Earth. I have the physical books on the shelf waiting. I was so excited about them. Perhaps I will still get to them.
Books mentioned in this topic
The Pillars of the Earth (other topics)The Divine Comedy: Inferno - Purgatorio - Paradiso (other topics)
The Epic Crush of Genie Lo (other topics)
Milkman (other topics)
Twilight (other topics)
More...
Authors mentioned in this topic
Hope Mirrlees (other topics)Diana Wynne Jones (other topics)
What is roughly your DNF-ratio? How many book do you finish for each you DNF? My ratio is around 1:40 based on the last 6 years.
I am not counting books I mean to finish some day but havn’t touched for years.