By Elaine Viets
Don and I are moving, and our condo is chaos. I’ve reposted a favorite blog about what readers dislike. Are these your pet peeves? Would they keep you from buying or recommending a book?
Does the novel you’re writing have a long dream sequence? And it’s in italics, to enhance the ethereal effect? How about sizzling sex scenes? And, for comic relief, a talking cat who solves crimes and a wisecracking kid who’s five going on forty?
Uh, you may want to rethink that work in progress.
Ron Charles, the Washington Post book critic, “asked readers of our Book Club newsletter to describe the things that most annoy them in books. The responses were a tsunami of bile.”
Here are some things that Ron salvaged from the tsunami.
(1) Readers hate dream sequences.
Yes, I know dream sequences are a staple of literature. In Crime and Punishment, Raskolnikov has guilty dreams, including one about a whipped mare. In Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix, the Boy Who Lived is deceived by thoughts implanted by a bad guy. Winston in 1984 worries his dreams will get him in trouble with the Thought Police. A Christmas Carol is a long life-changing dream. And then there’s Shakespeare’s A Midsummer Night’s Dream.
So why should we be wary of dream sequences?
Raging readers told Ron Charles this:
“‘I absolutely hate dream sequences,’ writes Michael Ream. ‘They are always SO LITERAL,’ Jennifer Gaffney adds, ‘usually an example of lazy writing.’”
Aha! So readers hate lazy writing and literal dream sequences. Writing coaches caution writers to avoid cheap tricks, especially the old “and then I woke up” dodge. They say you can use dream sequences if the dreams are premonitions, illustrate an important inner conflict, or help a protagonist realize something major. In short, the dreams must advance the plot. So craft your dream sequences carefully.
(2) Readers hate historical anachronisms and factual inaccuracies.
The Washington Post says, “Karen Viglione Lauterwasser despairs over errors ‘like calling the divisions in a hockey game “quarters” or having a pentagon-shaped table with six chairs.’ Deborah Gravel warns authors that taking a cruise to Alaska is not enough to write a novel about the Last Frontier. Kristi Hart explains that when your characters are boiling maple sap to make syrup, they should not be stirring it. ‘You just boil it until the sugar content is correct, and then you’re done.’”
My pet peeve includes the treatment of black people in historical novels in the first half of the Twentieth Century. With some exceptions, until the late 1950s or 1960s, black people were not allowed to eat in most white restaurants or sit at lunch counters with whites. Nor could they stay at white hotels, go to white schools, use white toilets, or even drink out of white people’s water fountains.
In 1968, I encountered my first segregated water fountain, on a trip through Mississippi. In the local courthouse, the white people drank chilled water from a modern metal fountain. Black people had to drink warm water from a dinky white porcelain fountain. At a Catholic church in the same state, my family arrived late for the service, so we sat in the back. An usher told us that section was for black people (actually, he said “Negroes”) and we had to move.
Encountering this segregation was shocking, but it existed, and to deny it in novels is to deny the shame, hurt and humiliation black people suffered – and still do.
(3) Readers hate typos and grammatical errors.
This is also bugaboo for TKZ readers and writers, and we’ve written often about how to catch typos, while understanding those slippery little devils slip into the best books. But typos seem to be getting worse, especially since traditional publishers are cutting back on copy editors and some indie authors don’t hire them.
The Washington Post noted: “Patricia Tannian, a retired copy editor, writes, ‘It seems that few authors can spell “minuscule” or know the difference between ‘flout’ and ‘flaunt.’ Katherine A. Powers, Book World’s audiobook reviewer, laments that so many ‘authors don’t know the difference between “lie” and “lay.’” TKZ’s Terry Odell wrote a helpful blog on that subject. Read it and sin no more. https://killzoneblog.com/2023/03/are-you-lying-or-laying-around.html
Personally, I wish writers would know the difference between grizzly and grisly murders. While it’s true the Cocaine Bear and some bears in the wild do kill humans, in most mysteries humans performing those grisly murders.
And please realize that the South American country is spelled Colombia, not Columbia. There’s more, but it’s not a good idea to get me started.
“While we’re at it,” the Washington Post wrote, “let’s avoid ‘bemused.’ Bemused ‘doesn’t mean what you think it means,’ says Paula Willey.”
And please, please learn how to use “chute,” as in where you toss your dirty clothes. I’ve seen major writers call it a “laundry shoot,” which can put holes in clothes.
(4) Readers hate bloated books.
According to the Washington Post, “Jean Murray says, ‘First books by best-selling authors are reasonable in length; then they start believing that every word they write is golden and shouldn’t be cut.’ She notes that Elizabeth George’s first novel, A Great Deliverance, was 432 pages. Her most recent, Something to Hide, is more than 700.
“But it’s not just the books that are too long,” the WashPo says. “Everything in them is too long, too. Readers complained about interminable prologues, introductions, expositions, chapters, explanations, descriptions, paragraphs, sentences, conversations, sex scenes, fistfights and italicized passages.”
(5) Readers hate long italicized passages.
“‘Long passages in italics drive me nuts,’ Susan Spénard told the Washington Post.
“‘Cormac McCarthy does entire chapters in italics,’ adds Nathan Pate. ‘Only the rest of his writing redeems that.’”
(6) Readers hate when writers don’t use quote marks.
“‘Sometimes you have to reread a passage to determine who is speaking,’ one reader said.
Quick now, a few more complaints:
(7) Readers hate “gratuitously confusing timelines.”
“‘Everything doesn’t have to be a linear timeline,’ concedes Kate Stevens, ‘but often authors seem to employ a structure that makes the book unreadable (or at least very difficult to follow). There seems to be no reason why this is done other than to show off how clever they are.’”
(8) Readers hate two kinds of show-offs.
“Unrealistically clever children or talking animals . . . are deeply irksome in novels — along with disabled characters who exist only to provide treacly inspiration.”
Some cozy readers adore talking animals who solve crimes, so this objection doesn’t apply to everyone.
(9) A few more things readers hate, according the Washington Post:
– “Susan C. Falbo is tired of ‘protagonists who have had a hard day, finally stagger home and take a scalding hot shower.’” My protagonists sometimes do that, so I guess the key here is to not overdo it.
– “Connie Ogle and Susan Dee have had it with ‘lip biting.’ Ogle explains, ‘If real people bit their lips with the frightening regularity of fictional characters, our mouths would be a bloody mess.’
– “Gianna LaMorte is tired of seeing ‘someone escape a small town and rent a large house, get a job at a local paper or make a living gardening.’” The person who flees to a small town and makes a living writing for a newspaper gets my goat. Especially if they have their own office and come and go as they please. Small town newspapers barely pay enough to keep reporters in cat food. And editors want to know where they can reach you at all times.
And I’m with Tobin Anderson, who wrote, “Vomiting is the new crying. I think it’s part of the whole hyper-valuation of trauma — and somehow tears seem too weak, too mundane. But imagine a funeral filled with upchuckers.” I’m seeing a lot of barfing on TV these days, and watching folks toss their cookies while I’m eating in front of the tube makes me want to . . . well, you get the point.
So, TKZ readers, what are your pet peeves?
Elaine, I don’t envy you moving. Best of luck and may you enjoy many happy years in your new home.
Its and it’s bug me. Its indicates possessive. It’s is a contraction of it is.
Also using ‘s for plural. Esp. a business van with sign’s [sic] painted on the side saying they clean drain’s, pipe’s, septic blockage’s.
Yes! You are speaking to this choir, Sister Burke.
I dislike books that suffer from, what I call, the “Too Many Words” syndrome. My book club recently nominated a 600-page novel that is currently very, very popular. I was looking forward to reading it (long novels don’t scare me; I just need them to be interesting) but the prose was so flowery and over-blown that I began skimming on page two. After twenty pages, I decided life was too short to suffer through 580 more pages, so I gave up.
Overwritten works are beloved by book clubs, and I’d struggled through some turkey, too.
You’ve hit so many of mine, Elaine. #7, which I truly hate, didn’t stop a book from becoming a finalist in the Edgars, so I guess not everyone hates bouncing timelines.
Good luck with the move. You have my sympathy for the process, not the result. Enjoy your new home.
I feel your pain, Terry.
I have soooo many pet peeves in addition to the ones you mentioned. One is the over use of italics to indicate inner dialog. It disrupts the flow of my eyes over the words. Two is the debut novelist who is on a multi-city book tour with her first book, making millions. Lie and lay are another for me. (sigh)
Thanks for the post!
Good ones, Jane.
My two current pet peeves. The mega rich detective. I will just have the jet fueled up and hop over to Zurich to see the bank. Which of the seven cars should I use for the stake out? Just over it.
The Star Wars copies. The scrapy kid who meets up with the space pirate, saves the hot princess and the galaxy. Sorry. I saw it in 1977. George did it better.
Best of luck in your new place.
Thanks for stopping by, Alan. the mega-rich detective is often a poor 007 ripoff.
Good luck on the move, Elaine, and best wishes for much happiness in your new home.
Typos and grammatical errors bother me. Although I realize some of these can slip through in even the best books, some books are just sloppy.
I don’t read a lot of historical fiction, but when I do, I expect the history part of it to be factually correct. It’s not fair to change facts to support an author’s political agenda.
Happy moving!
Thanks, Kay. I’m reading a good book, but the author can’t tell the difference between it’s and its. Really drags me out of the story.
I agree with all the above pet peeves, especially opening a novel with a dream sequence. It makes me feel tricked.
Best of luck with your move, Elaine!
Thanks, Sue. Dream sequences rarely work in many novels.
Hope your move goes well, Elaine.
At present (subject to change at any moment), my pet peeve is the misuse of the apostrophe. It’s probably on your list, too.
Short example: there’s an author/editor (!), who shall remain nameless in this post, who posts on FB. She creates graphics for the weekends to encourage other authors to share their books and websites, which I appreciate.
But it usually goes something like this: Its The Weekend! Author’s…share your website’s! Lets support each other!
Her heart’s in the right place, so I try to ignore.
Have a peeveless day, everyone! 🙂
Yikes! Misplaced apostrophes by an editor? For shame.
The big words, the flowery writing, ridiculous timelines, and most of the other nonsense mentioned above are signs of utter pretension. “Look at me! I’m smart and clever, and l’m the next great thing. I am a literary writer!” Yawn. Most of the other errors I can forgive is it’s obvious the author is trying to do their invisible best like a good popular genre writer.
One of the most dangerous things popular writers can do is believe their own reviews to the point their crap don’t stink, and the editors don’t have the time or the power to actually edit them. A certain famous horror writer lost a lot of readers with this problem and turgid and over-long novels before someone knocked some sense into him.
I just struggled to read a new novel, which was one of the free ones from Amazon Prime. On at least every other page, a character said something, always in italics, like pllllleeeeeeeaaaaassseee! Or riiiiiggggghhhhttttt. Or okaaaaayyyyy. It became like the screech on a chalkboard. Not too far into the book, I came to the point that I didn’t give a rip about the characters or their problems. I don’t even care how the book ended. I deleted it from my library and will never try another book by this author.
Sounds horrible, Becky.
I hate:
ambiguous endings
endless musings by a character, italics or not
“as you know, Bob” dialogue
completely unrealistic AND not justified huge mismatches in lovers
writers using OTHER writers’ characters for name recognition value
use of historical characters with invented dialogue
obvious true historical anachronisms
descriptions of characters when it brings the story to a halt
threadbare cliches
plus most of the above-mentioned.
So I try not to use them, and to not judge other writers who do, because not my circus, not my donkeys, and THEIR readers either don’t mind or actively love them.
Good additions, Alice.