Description This book discussion was started by Misty at The Book Rat on her Youtube channel. Buzz words are elements and words which really make you want to read a book, may they be in the title, plot summary, cover or blurb. Deal breakers are elements which really turn you off a book and make you not want to read it and go bleurgh and put down the book and step away...or maybe not even pick it up at all! Here are mine:
Buzz Words
There are a lot of themes/settings/plot elements which make me want to read a book. If any of the following are involved I'm almost guaranteed to pick it up...and probably enjoy it.
1. Collections and Collectors
2. Anything with an abnormally long and strange/unusual/whimsical title.
3. Books that have unusual formats and Metafiction
Examples: 'Tree of Codes' by Jonathan Safran Foer, 'House of Leaves' by Mark Z. Danielewski, 'The 13 and a 1/2 Lives of Captain Bluebear' by Walter Moer, 'Poor Things' by Alasdair Gray, 'The Selected Works of T.S Spivet' by Reif Larson.
4. Unreliable Narrators
Examples: Charles Kinbote in 'Pale Fire' by Vladimir Nabokov and Humbert Humbert in 'Lolita' by Vladimir Nabokov, the Governess in 'The Turn of the Screw' by Henry James, the Duke in 'The Underground Man' by Mick Jackson, 'Chief' Bromden in 'One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest' by Ken Kesey.
5. Fantastical/ Whimsical/ Magical/ Grotesque/ Carnival/ Peculiar/ Curious/ Circus
7. Graphic Novels, Beautiful Covers and Illustrated Books
8. Comfort Reads: Books set in mansions, huge sprawling estates, castles, beautiful countryside or on islands.
Words There are lots of words which insta-attract me to a book, even if they are tiny elements of the story or barely feature at all. These include:
Bone/Bones
Skin.
Sisters.
Wicked.
Circus.
Labyrinth.
Carousel.
Peculiar.
Cabinet.
Curious.
Atlas/Map.
Disease.
Miss/Mrs/Mr/Dr/Professor.
Machine.
Collector/Collection.
Mirror.
Human.
Bodies.
Flappers. Deal Breakers
Now for the Deal Breakers which are elements/words which instantly make me not want to read a book. Yet they are not set in stone; all of them, if done well, can be good and I will like them...I would still read a book with the elements below if it was getting amazing reviews and was recommended to me by someone who knew my reading tastes.
1. 'Chick Lit' or 'Romance'
Examples: 'Eat, Pray, Love' by Elizabeth Gilbert, Any Nicholas Sparks novel, 'P.S, I Love You' by Cecelia Ahern.
2. Books about Mothers/ Being a Mother/ Having an ill Mother/ Having a dead Mother
Examples: 'Mum's List' by St John Greene, 'Mum on the Run' by Fiona Gibson
3. 'Real-life' stories about abuse (particularly child abuse/ Survival stories/ Cancer and other illnesses
Examples: 'A Child Called It' by Dave Pelzer, 'Tell No One' by Sarah Cooper.
4. Books which have quotes or recommendations on the cover from any of the following publications: Cosmopolitan, Glamour, Closer, Vogue, OK, The Sun, heat [insert trashy women's or celebrity gossip magazine here]
This one is probably purely snobby. I just hate those kinds of magazines and I don't think that, generally, they recommend the kinds of books I would want to read. Saying that, sometimes I do read books recommended by these places and they are fine.
Examples: Lots of books.
5. Books written as Letters or Diary Entries 9an Epistolory novel)
Examples: 'The Perks of Being a Wallflower' by Stephen Chbosky, 'The Boy Next Door' by Meg Cabot.
6. Aliens and Spaceships
I'm not much of a Sci-Fi reader and, even though there are obvious exceptions like 'Hitchhiker's Guide...' most books about space and spaceships and all things U.F.O don't appeal to me.
Examples: Many, many books!
7. Books that use out-of-date slang and text speak/ Middle-aged authors trying to be cool
Examples: 'Della says: OMG' by Keris Stainton, 'Ttyl: Internet Girls' by Lauren Myracle
8. Books that have photographs of people on the front (particularly girls in dresses)/ Film Covers
If a book has good reviews I will still read it if it has a photograph of a girl in a dress on the cover or a close up of an eye, but I don't like them. I prefer drawings and illustrations to pictures of real people: I like my imagination to create the characters not the publisher. This is purely personal preference: I know a lot of people love these covers. I also dislike covers that have photographs of actors from the film version of the book for similar reasons.
Examples: 'Fallen' by Lauren Kate, 'Before I Fall' by Lauren Oliver.
Words
These words are all instant alarm bells for me. Unless the cover was beautiful and the words were in a particular context I wouldn't read books that had these words in the title/summary:
Mum/Mother
Cocktails.
Shoes/High Heels
Work.
Office.
Chocolate.
Mind/Body/Spirit etc
Dear [insert name here].
Diary.
Lavender.
House/Housework.
Family.
Love.
Sexy/Sassy.
Letters.
Lunch/Any food stuff. Thank you for reading my 'Buzz Words and Deal Breakers' article! Please let me know in the comments what yours are- what really makes you pick up a book and what really turns you off?