trainspotting, found the dialect too hard going
The Honourable Schoolboy by John le Carre - part of the Karla omnibus. Damn near unreadable.
Don't ever attempt "A Clockwork Orange" then.
Crime and Punishment, Dostoyevsky. Heavey going having to check references every few pages.
I also bought a huge academic book on Native American Justice....after a few chapters I was starting to doubt my ability to read.
Likewise. It's at least 200 pages too long as a novel and 400 pages too long as a manifesto for free market capitalism. Can I suggest you give Hayek's 'Road to Serfdom' a go instead? Quite easy to dip in and out of. Also suggest Roger Scruton's books. I suspect you will find him a little too conservative (small and large 'C') at times although I reckon that there's plenty of common ground. I presume you've read the latest Douglas Murray
I didn't like the sound of the Northern Lights much either, but my daughter persuaded me to give it a try. Enjoyed it, and the second book in the trilogy, The Subtle Knife. Kind of lost it half way through The Amber Spyglass (the third book) though.
The Bible
No point in reading it all as he dies in the end
The Honourable Schoolboy by John le Carre - part of the Karla omnibus. Damn near unreadable.
trainspotting, found the dialect too hard going
Silmarillion is basically a Middle Earth Text Book... As you say theres lots more action in LotR.
The Two Towers is my favourite because of all the battles plus the Ents, I suppose this makes me rather shallow.
Back onto the original question, I can't bear Dickens, never managed to get into any of them.