I don't know...in some cases, but not always. Sometimes it's how they tell it.
Mal ,'Safe'
Literary Buffistas 3: Don't Parse the Blurb, Dear.
There's more to life than watching Buffy the Vampire Slayer! No. Really, there is! Honestly! Here's a place for Buffistas to come and discuss what it is they're reading, their favorite authors and poets. "Geez. Crack a book sometime."
I could never watch Seinfeld because everyone annoyed me so much. Not that that was a book.
That's why I couldn't watch The Inside. As much as I wanted to get behind a Minear project, I found everyone on that show impossible to like.
I'm trying to think if there are any books that I read willingly in which I disliked the main character, or more than 1 character. I find almost all the characters in Wuthering Heights very unlikeable, but I had to read that for a class.
Most of the characters in Vanity Fair are either loathsome or contemptible (some, of course, are both), but Lordy it's a fun read.
Wuthering Heights was actually the book that got me started thinking about this. I don't like any of the characters, I think several of them are really horrible people, and most of the rest make ridiculously bad decisions for incredibly stupid reasons. But I still like reading it, because they do interesting things.
I think several of them are really horrible people
Nelly Dean, the textbook example of an unreliable narrator. Eeeeeevil.
Hil -- I don't need to like the characters in the sense that I'd want to be their friend, as long as I'm interested in the story. It can be an issue when I think I'm supposed to find characters incredibly likable/admirable, when in fact I want to punch them in the face.
I think that's a bigger issue for me with TV or movies, though. I know there was something recently where I was just like, "I hate these people too much to watch this." I'm not sure if that's because a book has more time to delve, or if it's because it's harder for me to overlook traits I don't like when they're being shown instead of imagined.
I'm looking forward to partaking of American Psycho in one form or another, and I understand there's no liking to be had there.
Nope, not so much. But I think it's a great black comedy novel.
This is why I ended up disliking The Kite Runner so much -- I hated that guy! But didn't think I was supposed to. Actually, I think that's the key for me -- I'm pretty sure no one thinks Patrick Bateman is an OK guy.
Some of P.D. James' books focus mainly on the potential suspects and victims, and in a few books, they were all so loathsome that I stopped caring who killed them. The reason I hated As I Lay Dying, even though I like most Faulkner, was spending too much time with the Snopes.
I'm trying to think of enjoyable books with unlikeable characters.
Lolita comes to mind.