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What novel by an author whose previous work you loved has most surprised or disappointed you?

242 replies

Stonehopper · 07/02/2021 15:48

Inspired by having just read a bad first novel by an author whose previous published work a collection of short stories was extremely good, widely acclaimed and multi-prize-winning.

It's not so much that I'm disappointed as that I'm completely baffled as to how an experienced writer who wrote a psychologically acute and dazzlingly well-written collection of stories, which entirely deserved their praise and prizes, could have gone on to write such a banal novel, which commits every possible beginner writers' mistake clichéd adultery plot, far too many characters who aren't differentiated from one another, an antagonist whose age varies, barely sketched-in settings, lots of small errors like variations in how long ago something major happened and how far apart places are and an unintegrated subplot about a dead friend and a past friendship group none of whom are ever described other than in brief asides, so it's hard to care about them at all other than wonder what they're doing in the novel.

(And this came out with a major publishing house, so how come her editor didn't clock lots of the small inconsistencies, even if the author got confused?)

Anyway -- it got me thinking about other writers whose previous work I've loved but then been disappointed by when they brought something new out. The other example I can think of is Hilary Mantel's The Assassination of Margaret Thatcher, which I felt was a loop back to the repellent nastiness of her earliest published novels, and away from the wonderful first two Cromwell novels.

Anyone else?

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lifeinlimbo2020 · 07/02/2021 16:40

Logging Off by Nick Spalding. I always like his books for a bit of light relief and all of them before have made me properly laugh but this one was so rubbish I not only gave up but I put a bad review on Amazon 🤣🤣🤣

EarringsandLipstick · 07/02/2021 16:46

Whereas I don't like anything Lionel Shriver has written. She has a very strong authorial voice which carries into all her work. I find her characters teeth gratingly annoying.

I agree poppy well-put

Beamur · 07/02/2021 16:47

Loved the Wolf Hall books but haven't really enjoyed anything else by the same author.
Am increasingly disappointed with Phillip Pullman. Northern Lights is such a good book but the more recent ones are pretty dismal and I am not at all liking how the characters are panning out - seems such a disservice to them!

DoubleHelix79 · 07/02/2021 16:53

The Unconsoled. I love absolutely everything Ishiguro has ever written, and would probably pay money to read his shopping list, but that one was utterly unreadable.

Also tend to enjoy Updike, but he wrote one about a teenage terrorist (I mamaged to forget the title) that was an absolute stinker. Formulaic, unconvincing, and tedious throughout.

TheSparkling · 07/02/2021 16:55

I know it may not be in quite the same vein but my love of Dawn French was seriously challenged when I read her last 2 novels. I loved her autobiography and have read it more that once. When she published a novel I was so excited and then so disappointed when I read it. Plus she never redeemed herself because all her novels are really poorly written.

Stonehopper · 07/02/2021 16:55

It's unsurprising to me, that a short story writer, can't write a decent novel. I also agree with the pp who said that it may be an older work.

No, the short story collection is from 2014, and the novel, her first, was published within the last couple of weeks. And while I agree that short story writing and novel writing are two very different things, it's bizarre that absolutely none of her rich imagery, her gift for delineating character in not many words, and her ability to suggest entire lives with just a gesture or anecdote, has not made it into the novel at all. It appears to have been written by a different person.

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Veenah · 07/02/2021 16:59

Nine Perfect Strangers by Liane Moriarty. I enjoyed her previous books but found this completely unrealistic and like a different author had written it.

EarringsandLipstick · 07/02/2021 17:11

Sebastian Faulks' later books.

Loved Birdsong, Charlotte Gray etc

The other linked 3 left me cold, and the awful A Week in December. I struggled to finish it.

Loved Engleby tho.

dayswithaY · 07/02/2021 17:11

This is happening to me right now. I really want to get back into reading and I wanted a scary, unsettling book so I went for Stephen King. I remember reading Carrie, Needful Things, Pet Semetary, the Mr Mercedes series, and couldn't put them down. I bought Salem's Lot as I don't know much about it, except that it's about vampires.

Blimey, so far it's been 70 odd pages about rural life in a small American town where basically nothing happens. I'm sure it's all about setting the scene or foreshadowing and such but I'm reading about the daily life of a cow farmer, a milkman, a housewife who is planning dinner and two policemen sitting at the war memorial watching the world go by.

Not sure if it gets any better and not sure if I care.

Holothane · 07/02/2021 17:14

The last in the earth series, the first The Clan of The Cave Bear I’m always playing but the last I couldn’t finish it so disappointed.

cheeseybean · 07/02/2021 17:34

Funnily enough, I saw your title and came on to say Lionel Schriver. I was SO excited to read her other books after I read WNTTAK and then sooooo disappointed

Stonehopper · 07/02/2021 17:36

@cheeseybean

Funnily enough, I saw your title and came on to say Lionel Schriver. I was SO excited to read her other books after I read WNTTAK and then sooooo disappointed
When you think about it, it would be awful to have a successful novel well on into your career and then realise that readers only love that novel because it's completely unlike everything else you've ever written. Grin
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highlandcoo · 07/02/2021 17:36

Trespass by Rose Tremain is disappointing. Not dreadful but in comparison to her other books some of which are outstandingly good.

Charley50 · 07/02/2021 17:40

Really love Never let me go by Kazuo Ishiguro. I've heard Remains of the day is brilliant, haven't read it yet.

But read When we were orphans. Found it hard going and it didn't really work as a story.

Also agree about Lionel Shriver. We need to talk about Kevin is just so brilliant, many of her other books are a disappointment.

LawnFever · 07/02/2021 17:43

I absolutely loved A Visit from the goon squad by Jennifer Egan, so fresh and innovative so I was really looking forward to Manhattan Beach but it was like it’d been written by a completely different author! So dull and predictable, it was just bizarre how differently it was written

Ftumch · 07/02/2021 17:45

Jeff Vandermeer! The Southern Reach trilogy are some of my favourite books ever, but I tried reading the first of the Ambergris books and my eyes almost rolled out of my head, it's like something an overexcited teenager would write. So disappointing.

Californiabakes · 07/02/2021 17:50

The Unconsoled by Ishiguro. He’s a genius but that novel is dreadful

WingingItSince1973 · 07/02/2021 17:55

I like reading female detective stories but waiting for the authors latest one released in April so I thought I'd read her other ones, same sort of thing but different character and place. Its just so so weird and I can't get into it. Such a shame as I have to wait till April now 🤣

Luckyelephant1 · 07/02/2021 17:56

I agree with The Testaments. It was still very readable but the storyline was so contrived and soapy, it was almost trashy. I definitely rolled my eyes a fair few times when reading it.

Whereas The Handmaid's Tale was incredibly well-written, well-paced and horrifying yet compulsive reading. It's still one of my favourite ever novels and I try to forget The Testaments exist.

ConnectFortyFour · 07/02/2021 18:13

The mirror and the light, so poor after wolf hall

DoubleHelix79 · 07/02/2021 18:37

@californiabakes funny that we both thought of the same (not that well known) book

Dotinthecity · 07/02/2021 19:43

@Veenah I agree about Nine Perfect Strangers, it was so slow and seemed to lose its way in the middle. I love Louise Candlish but didn’t really enjoy Those People. It just didn’t seem to be as well written as her other books.

Charley50 · 07/02/2021 19:46

Aw I love Lisa Jewell and Lianne Moriary. Even their not so good books I love.

Charley50 · 07/02/2021 19:50

Aw I love Lisa Jewell and Liane Moriarty, even their not so good books.

BigBadVoodooMummy · 07/02/2021 19:52

Harper Lee, Watchman destroyed Atticus for me. To be fair I am not certain she wasn't manipulated into publishing against her will.