WorldsEdge wrote:
One book that has always left me scratching my head in terms of a best/worst categorization is American Psycho. Surprised no one's thrown its name out yet in this thread. I think Ellis nailed the alienated, consciousless killer almost as well as Camus did in The Stranger...but then you've also got the stomach turning mutilations, multi-page descriptions of the "genius" of Whitney Houston and Huey Lewis, and what must be a ten page monologue on the state of the art in stereo equipment, circa 1986. After all, all Camus' "Stranger" did was shoot an Arab for no real reason, none of this other crap.
I liked
American Psycho and see the things you deride as awful as really adding to the book - it's really a way of confronting the reader, and putting him/her in Bateman's mind. I can see why someone wouldn't like it, though, if they find it too shallow or one-dimensional.
The only other book mentioned here that I read was
The Catcher in the Rye. I read some of it when I was eleven and didn't like it, couldn't even finish the thing. I just hated Holden Caulfield and couldn't bear his narrative. I gave it another chance when I was nineteen and enjoyed it enough. If you're prepared for Holden Caulfield it's a very readable novel, with a strong narrative. Some would say I first tried to read it when I was too young and I then tried again when I was too old. Ultimately, though, I didn't see any big revelation or identify with Holden Caulfield as many others seemed to. I knew several people like him in secondary school and they were typically those that I didn't want to have anything to do with.
I'm not all that well-read for the worst book I ever read to really be any great distinction. However, in my mid-teens I read quite a bit of Iain Banks stuff and I don't care for him that much now besides the early non-Culture novels (
The Wasp Factory,
The Bridge). Not that most of it is bad of course, but fans of his should stay away from
Canal Dreams. If it's not quite the worst adult novel I've read, it's up there.