I never could get into "Doc Savage." I once had a college roommate, who seemed to have had every "Doc Savage" paperback ever printed, and I tried to read 'em. Just couldn't get into 'em.
I have the entire paperback collection and I'm leisurely working my way through it. I've read the first 36 or 37 books (for some reason, they published the paperback books in a completely different order than the original pulp magazine stories . . . so you end up reading a story from 1937, followed by a story from 1939, followed by a story from 1936 . . . luckily, the order doesn't matter too much . . . they rarely make reference to an earlier story . . . each story is essentially a "stand alone"). I can easily see why many people can't get into these books. The writing is obviously rushed and very basic . . . written at about a 13-year-old reading level. Plus, Lester Dent, the creator, didn't write all the stories. Many were written by a stable of ghost writers using the pseudonym Kenneth Robeson. Some of these writers were worse than others (the differeing writing styles are obvious when you read the books). I'm sure many people can't get past the first few pages. But, hey, this is classic 1930s and 40s pulp fiction!