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Authors who are very popular but you just don't get....

211 replies

Corneliawildthing · 21/01/2020 18:38

I read the first Harry Potter book when my kids were little and was rather underwhelmed by it (maybe I wasn't the target audience). I started The Cuckoo's Calling and seemed to have been reading for about 2 hours and had only reached page 25.

My in-laws raved about the Stieg Larsson books but I think I lasted about 20 pages. Confused

OP posts:
HouseworkAvoider10 · 21/01/2020 22:14

Celia aherne
Marian keyes.
Awful drivel.

highlandcoo · 21/01/2020 22:16

Hi Strawberrypancakes Grin Grin

You could try anything by Dan Brown, Jeffrey Archer, Sophie Kinsella. I Don't Know How She Does It and I Think I Love You by Allison Pearson would be fab. Oh and Eat Pray Love might be worth a look too!

As they say, wouldn't life be boring if we all enjoyed the same things? Where did you read your set texts btw?

fruitpastille · 21/01/2020 22:19

I tried Behind the scenes at the Museum and had to give up. Maybe I should try another Kate Atkinson but I keep putting it off.

SploshMeBackwards · 21/01/2020 22:20

Giovanna Fletcher - only successful because her husband is in a band! Her books are ZzZzZzZzZzZzZz

30under · 21/01/2020 22:21

Kate Atkinson. I keep reading them in the hope I will like them. No more though.

MyBlueMoonbeam · 21/01/2020 22:21

Dan Brown - dreadful
JK Rowling - much prefer Enid Blyton
"Chick lit" in general
Thomas Hardy - really hard going
Charles Dickens - just thoroughly depressing IMO

Mistymonday · 21/01/2020 22:30

50 Shades author
DH Lawrence

MyBlueMoonbeam · 21/01/2020 22:37

Oh yes DH Lawrence is a hard slog too
Love Shakespeare though

KatyaZamolodchikova · 21/01/2020 22:38

I’m so pleased so many of you also dislike Ian McEwan. I read Enduring Love for A Level and HATED it. Later on I thought I’d give him the benefit of the doubt and read Atonement and I hated that too.

maddy68 · 21/01/2020 22:40

Jk Rowling....shoddy writing imho

ImportantWater · 21/01/2020 22:43

I love most of these authors, but completely agree re Sophie Hannah. I’ve heard her speak and found her really lovely and entertaining, I really like her Poirot books, but cannot get into her other books at all.

TooGood2BeTrue · 21/01/2020 22:55

Tolkien
Dostoyevsky
JK Rowling
David Williams

tobee · 22/01/2020 00:35

Oh thank god other people have said Kate Atkinson!

I thought I'd have to leave Mumsnet. Grin

TheSandman · 22/01/2020 00:54

‘Bestselling’ Katie Price! Why?

Best selling maybe but does anyone actually READ them?

I've undertaken a project recently to read books by once fantastically popular (mostly pulp) authors who are now - I suspect well out of fashion: Alistair MacLean, Sax Rohmer, Edgar Wallace, Leslie Charteris - etc.

Most have them have been dreadful, some have, occasionally, stepped fearlessly and with firm determined steps - yet, the author thought as he typed grimly, sweat beading his brow - with a certain hesitant insouciant carelessness, right into 'so bad they are good' territory.

Popular authors being crap is nothing new.

purpleme12 · 22/01/2020 00:57

Well I've just read Love in the Time of Cholera by Gabriel Garcia Marquez and I have to say I won't be reading any of his again! I cannot understand why it's a classic!

ioioitsoff · 22/01/2020 01:13

Steig Larrsson
David Walliams - drivel of the highest order
Kate Atkinson - well written but I don't see what the fuss is about

Elbeagle · 22/01/2020 01:26

Kate Atkinson.

MAFIL · 22/01/2020 01:38

Jacqueline Wilson.
When the world is full of so many fantastic children's books written over the centuries I have no idea why schools are so keen on this garbage.

londonmarathonhalfwaypoint · 22/01/2020 01:43

Irvine Welsh.

alwayscrashinginthesamecar1 · 22/01/2020 02:09

Anything Paulo Coelho turns his hand to is a steaming pile of shite, and that Eat Pray Love woman should be shot. JK Rowling is ok, but seriously over-rated. Dickens is awful, but I love Austen and Hardy.

Pinkarsedfly · 22/01/2020 02:14

Kazuro Ishiguro.
Sally Rooney.
Terry Pratchett.

Graphista · 22/01/2020 02:24

As a lit grad some of mine were controversial especially when I was at uni:

Thomas Hardy - boring as! Way too verbose, too much description of scenery just urgh!

Most of the bronte sisters - I love wuthering heights and Jane eyre but the rest nah!

George Eliot - nope! Total yawn fest!

Among modern authors:

Dan brown - I’m not averse to fluff but his stuff is dreadfully written

John Grisham - LOVE the movies but the books are soooo pretentious and waffly

I love crime fiction so someone bought me something by martina Cole - dreadful! Awful writing and it’s clear she’s in awe of despicable gang people who have killed and hurt so many people.

BUT I love

Austen - op p&p is a bit of a slow burner but it gets really good.

Dickens - funny, caricatures, social commentary, “soap” in written form what’s not to like?

Stieg Larsson I read before he was a “thing” recommended by a uni lecturer to me. Loved it.

Marian Keyes is a favourite author...but her earlier stuff I’ve not enjoyed her more recent books as much.

“James Joyce defeated me, but I might try him again.” To be fair defeats most people - somewhat intentionally! I find most modernist writing very unapproachable but I do like Joyce. I suggest starting with the Dubliners as an “easy” intro to Joyce, then perhaps Ulysses but Finnegans wake is really only for the most masochistic! (And lit students aiming for a first! 😂)

@fruitpastille - behind the scenes at the museum was a set text at uni, I was not looking forward to it, the blurb put me off not my kinda book I thought - took a while to get into but then I absolutely loved it!

“Thomas Hardy - really hard going” god I’m glad it’s not just me! I got such a hard time for it at uni!

I must admit I love Agatha Christie and sir Arthur Conan Doyle. I keep meaning to (and have often been told to) try Dorothy l sayers

Sue grafton (rip) - LOVE these books, so easy to read but not insulting to ones intelligence, characters that are easy to like even though flawed... love em.

But yes I think it’s great we all like different things and I loved discussing the likes and dislikes at uni and loved that everyone had their own passions.

I’d like to like fantasy (terry pratchett, jrr Tolkien, Neil gaiman, Phillip Pullman etc but my heart sinks at the thought of the effort to follow a story with backgrounds I don’t already understand, difficult to understand character names and place names and even whole other languages! I guess I’m a lazy reader but I feel I’m missing out because I enjoyed reading fantasy as a child - Enid blyton, cs Lewis, Joan Aiken, Lewis Carrol, Jonathon swift...

Any fantasy readers have guidance/recommendations for me?

MrsTerryPratchett · 22/01/2020 02:35

I can't believe the Terry Pratchett hatred. Sad

I agree about Jodie Picoult though. Just awful.

SexIsAProtectedCharacteristic · 22/01/2020 06:57

Any fantasy readers have guidance/recommendations for me?

Lies of Locke Lamora - a great audacious heist novel. If you don't like it there's no hope for you Crown Wink

evilharpyinapeartree · 22/01/2020 07:06

Glad someone mentioned Thomas Hardy, he ruined GCSE English language for me. Awful depressing heavy handed drivel. I’ve tried again several times as an adult... nope.

Agree with a few others mentioned. Tolkien, Pratchett, Patricia Cornwell. Chick lit in genera I just can’t be arsed with.

Martina Cole is one I don’t think has been mentioned. Rubbish. Terrible stilted and unnatural dialogue.