Read Desperation by Stephen King. The first Stephen King novel I've read. It wasn't bad but it had such a slow start, I almost dropped it. He'd spend 30 pages introducing a character and going over their backstory and then they'd get caught by the villain and he'd backpedal and do it all over again with another character. Like 5 times. I skipped about 20 pages of the introduction of one of the characters and it didn't impact my understanding of the story at all, so the book could have been a bit more aggressively edited. The other problem is that Stephen King seems like a very horny man, and it made things kind of awkward when he starts having the characters think about sex when there's 15 corpses hung up on hooks and stuff like that. Or constantly giving us descriptions of what the characters balls or sphincters are doing, or people wetting their pants. And then more sexual descriptions all over. Like, you just get the uncomfortable feeling that he was rubbing himself through his pants while he was writing this.
Also read 20 000 Leagues Under the Sea by Jules Verne. I tried to read this when I was in High School and gave up, but I decided I would finish this time. The only reason I made it was because I was listening to an audio book and would just stop listening when he'd get into his endless lists of marine life. Just blah blah, cartilaginous this, and genus that, blah blah blah. Incredibly dull for long chapters. Besides that, the story about Captain Nemo is largely untold. We know little more about him at the end of the book than we learned at his introduction. Journey to the Center of the Earth was a much more interesting adventure. It's not quite as dull as Moby Dick, but it's close. Probably helps that it's about 150 pages shorter. And you could fit the book 5 times over into the door-stopping soporific that is Les Miserables.
Also read 20 000 Leagues Under the Sea by Jules Verne. I tried to read this when I was in High School and gave up, but I decided I would finish this time. The only reason I made it was because I was listening to an audio book and would just stop listening when he'd get into his endless lists of marine life. Just blah blah, cartilaginous this, and genus that, blah blah blah. Incredibly dull for long chapters. Besides that, the story about Captain Nemo is largely untold. We know little more about him at the end of the book than we learned at his introduction. Journey to the Center of the Earth was a much more interesting adventure. It's not quite as dull as Moby Dick, but it's close. Probably helps that it's about 150 pages shorter. And you could fit the book 5 times over into the door-stopping soporific that is Les Miserables.