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All Time Worst Sci-Fi or Fantasy Books


Read the first book and marvel at it's cleverness, innovation, and tight plotting.
Read the second and savor how well it meshes with the first.
Read the third and think it's an okay book.
Read the fourth and recognize the slide into boredom with the concept ...
Read the fifth (and later) and know that you are wishing as much as Piers is that it would just be over, but the contract was for X number of books, each over Y number of words, and by Hades, that's exactly how many you're going to get, even if there has to be a pointless and unfunny essay on process in the back of the book.

I have that series in my permanent collection. I know what you mean. The writing is definitely NOT up to modern standards, so when I revisit the series, it takes me about 1/4 the first book to get back into the mental state necessary to enjoy it again.
But once there, I get lost again in the universe he created.
There's an old saying that a good story can survive bad writing. This is (depending upon your own tastes) one of those things.

I read ONE of LeGuin's books and never picked up another. (Lesson for authors: don't ever let a bad book get published with your name on it.)



I guess most people don't like or care for the political undertone of the book.

Oh I could. I love the series which I've read multiple times at various ages. It gives me starlust.


some of his standalones are interesting. Macroscope for example.

Agreed. David Farland made it onto my "never again" list based on The Runelords: The Sum of All Men alone.

Anne Bishop is also on my "never again" list. Agree with you about the black jewels trilogy.

Friday by Robert A. Heinlein - rape is good
Stranger in a Strange Land by Robert A. Heinlein - women like being treated as sex objects
Starship Troopers by Robert A. Heinlein - war is good
Time Enough for Love by Robert A. Heinlein - incest is good
why is his stuff still in print? (though I'll grant the possibility -- just the possibility -- that his juvenile novels are not vile)

Out of interest: Which book? I've yet to read a truly bad LeGuin book (I've read about half her works so far). I wasn't overwhelmed by The Beginning Place, but would give it 3/5, so it still wouldn't make an All Time Worst-list. Whether you hate her views or not, I think it's a clear difference in stylistic and literary merit between her novels and say Terry Brooks. And I'm not even sure Brooks qualifies for an All Time Worst-list, even if I never liked anything I read by him.
The worst fantasy I had the misfortune to read was by a Swedish author called Eric Leijonhufvud. That's one of the few books I've never managed to finish. Crappy writing, crappy plot, fantastically sexist. Luckily enough I don't think he was ever translated, so most of the world is spared. ;)

I'l second the Runelords condemnation. Great concept, but horrible execution - it read like a really bad role playing game, without the roll of the dice to make it at least halfway interesting. I gave it 2 books, just to see if he'd find his style once the novelty wore off . . . but it just got worse.


The same with me. I spend three hours early one morning read the book, hate it, a waste of time.


Several have said this and I have the entire series unread on a bookshelf. Should I just pack them away and make more room or give them a try?


To be honest though, I used to be an editor before I became a librarian. At one time I got to read through some of the unsolicited submissions of fantasy stories that we recieved. And . . . well, I have to tell you, very little could be as bad as that!! To have a "prehistorical fantasy" where folks said things like "Zounds! What liest over yon hill there?" made me appreciate even such writers as Green, even if I can't read him.
I wish I'd ever gotten to edit some decent fantasy and SF stuff. But we mostly did romance.


Pardon this blog if he's already been mentioned, but David Eddings Belgariad. I think I could have written that one myself. While I was still in high school.

I read the Belgariad in high school... I think it was only my relative inexperience that got me through it. But after I was done I was without any desire to read anything by him again.

Quag Keep:

It's not even a long book. I just couldn't finish it at all. The characters spent all their time wandering in the desert for over half the book. It was awful to me.

To me, Le Guin is a master of Sci-Fi storytelling. Her Fantasy is totally passable and uninspiring (except Wizard of Earthsea . Go figure. But the worst ever is RA Salvatore's Drizzt books. Crap on an epic scale, and I hate it even more because it is so beloved.

I gave up when the goat started behaving like a dog.

The above suggestion of David Eddingsis a good (bad?) one as well. Reading any one of his series is a somewhat mediocre read. Read another series and you'll see him recycle plots and the oh so lame jokes. Read a third and you'll think "wow, didn't I already read this twice?"
I've seen a lot of people here slamming Goodkind (with good reason) but I'd re-read the entire Sword of Truth series twice before picking up a book by Eddings.

I have a sentimental attachment to Quag Keep because of my D&D phase, though I'll readily admit it's not one of Norton's best, but it's Tolstoy compared to the sequel - Return to Quag Keep - note Norton didn't actually write it but farmed it out to Jean Rabe.
I didn't even make it half way through Master of the Five Magics. Very mechanical and uninspired.

It became a byword among my friends for awfulness.
Well, to be fair, the author made the attempt. More than I'll ever do.


"Quag Keep" is interesting, but "Return to Quag Keep is beyond awful. Not only uninteresting, but the writer seemed to barely have read the first book.


About Marion Zimmer Bradley ... there's an element of badfic in there sometimes, I have to admit. But at the same time, I like her Darkover books. Probably because she's pretty good at conflict: inter- and intra-personal as well as inter- and intra-social. And at depicting and describing emotional states. When you're in the mood for something where the angst level is pretty high, Darkover books are usually a good choice, because you get angst and action. Maybe that explains why I like them despite thinking of them as a bit of a guilty pleasure, as Mark put it.

I tried reading one of McCarthy's Dragon Rider books but I didn't get far with it. Great concept though.

Worst book I ever tried to read. Horrible."
I own that book but haven't read it. You have this cover


Steven Barnes' Street Lethal trilogy, a futuristic martial arts fantasy that wasn't badly written, but his negative stereotypes were just blatant reverse racism. At least most of the books described above were attempts at something positive. But Barnes' works were just malicious denigration of a group of people he obviously doesn't like.


I'll probably get drawn and quartered but The Lord of the Rings is probably the worst fantasy I've read. So boring and long winded. That was an exercise in persistence.
You're not going to be drawn and quartered Felina. For slandering LOTR offenders are burned at the stake. Not. Seriously, what you like is for you choose and it's not for anyone to say otherwise.
Books mentioned in this topic
The Host (other topics)The Chronicles of Thomas Covenant, the Unbeliever (other topics)
The Chronicles of Thomas Covenant, the Unbeliever (other topics)
The Gap Into Conflict: The Real Story (other topics)
The Chronicles of Thomas Covenant, the Unbeliever (other topics)
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Authors mentioned in this topic
Poul Anderson (other topics)Marion Zimmer Bradley (other topics)
Larry Niven (other topics)
David Eddings (other topics)
R.A. Salvatore (other topics)
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Hmm, I'm just about to try David Gemmell's Troy trilogy. I can consider myself warned, anyway.