I've read many stories, books, series... and in a significant percentage, authors seem to delight in stress-testing their characters to the point of torture. This is by no means universal, of course. Most of the stories/books/series that I prefer, characters may face challenges, but...
Well, the old joke says it best: After Job lost everything, he turned his head up and cried "Why me, Lord" and a thunderous voice answered "Something about you just pisses me off" and it seems like a lot of characters just piss off the people writing about them.
It's one thing when a unit takes heavy casualties on a patrol, and another when the sole survivor of the patrol is captured and tortured for days. Stories along the line of the first are compelling. The second...well, if that sole survivor's name is John Rambo you kind of expect the rest of the story to be bloody vengeance, but just about any other case it's just piling on.
One of the things I most appreciated in Don Lockwood's stories was the way he never went that far. Characters had weaknesses and challenges, but they also had strengths and support.
So I'm curious... anyone who believes in relentlessly beating down characters until they have nothing left to go on with except an inexplicable desire to go on... why? Anyone else agree? Or am I the only one who suspects that such stories are the literary equivalent of a train wreck, that you don't want to see but can't turn away from?