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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?

OP posts:
smallandimperfectlyformed · 07/02/2021 19:53

I hated Mark Haddon's The Red House. I had loved The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night Time and I enjoyed A Spot of Bother but this one was dreadful! I was so glad that I had taken it out of the library rather than bought it. I remember saying to the librarian that I was surprised that the editor had let so many changes in narrative go and if it was his debut novel it wouldn't have been published. (Now all the far more well read people than me will say that it was really well executed and the narrative changes were intentional...I'm always a bit scared of criticising someone's writing in case it marks me out as stupid!)

ElizabethinherGermanGarden · 07/02/2021 19:56

OP, are you prepared to name the writer who's annoyed you? I really want to read some great short stories and haven't been able to figure out who you mean.

Meredithgrey1 · 07/02/2021 19:56

9 perfect strangers by liane Moriarty. I like a lot of her other books (big little lies and truly madly guilty in particular) but 9PS was nothing like them, and was just weird. If it was the first book of hers I’d read I probably wouldn’t have read the others.

TooMinty · 07/02/2021 19:57

The Ice by Laline Paull. I loved The Bees so much I recommended it to everyone and bought copies for friends, lent my copy to relatives. But The Ice was so disappointing in comparison, not a single likeable character, fairly obvious plot... 🙁

TooMinty · 07/02/2021 19:59

@BigBadVoodooMummy

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

I haven't managed to read this (gave up pretty quickly) and your review makes me glad - probably best to reread To Kill a Mockingbird and enjoy it again

BigBadVoodooMummy · 07/02/2021 20:04

Yes, stay away from Watchman, it broke my heart! Obviously I have read Mockingbird repeatedly for decades and it was one of my favourite books. I tried to read Mockingbird again after but can't unsee Watchman and so lost all the pleasure of it.

To the reader who struggled with Toni Morrison try listening to talking book versions. She reads her own books and has the most amazing voice to listen to, it changes the story somehow. Sula is an excellent one to start with.

ClashCityRocker · 07/02/2021 20:04

I like quite a few of Lionel Shriver's books - but couldn't finish the tennis one. So Much For That was brilliant, I thought, but I do agree that she has a strong authorial voice and many of her characters are unlikeable.

For me Neil Gaiman... Neverwhere and American Gods were absolutely fantastic, but both Anansi Boys and The Ocean at The End of The Lane were pants. I have no idea what order they are written in though, just the order I read them in.

I always found Salem's Lot one of the weaker SK books... It's a very early one too.

lljkk · 07/02/2021 20:16

I liked the radio adaptation of The Watchman. I liked the actual story. I found the characters and situations more interesting than those in TKAM.

As a short story, I quite liked The Assassination of Margaret Thatcher.

I read a dull Margaret Atwood book, boring plot about dull characters.

Some Harlan Coben books are great. Some are disjointed, dull.

The girl with Dragon Tattoo: book 1 good, sequels ridiculous

First 2 Harry Potter books are charming. Rest of HP series, meh.

GGM: One hundred years of solitude was great; Love in Time of Cholera: meh.

I appreciated everything I've read by Ernest Hemingway, but nothing beats For Whom the Bell Tolls .

I can't get on with any Lionel Shriver book. At least there's nothing to be disappointed about.

JaninaDuszejko · 07/02/2021 20:55

I think The Unconsoled is universally recognised as 'challenging'. It was too dream like, not in a good way, in that 'what the hell is happening now' way that actually happens in dreams. For example, I once had a dream where I dreamt I woke up in our bedroom, looked out the window and saw all our washing hanging on the telephone lines down the street. All of 'The Unconsoled' is like that dream. It is deeply unsettling.

My vote is for The Chemistry of Tears by Peter Carey. I adored Oscar and Lucinda and The True History of the Kelly Gang (which I've just realised reminded me of the later work of the wonderful Beryl Bainbridge) but in TCOT the novel is narrated by a woman who is having an affair with her boss who dies in the first sentence. On p2 she describes herself as a very elegant tall woman and I just though no woman has ever described themself as elegant. It then goes on to describe the man's sons coming and telling her that she was his true love and their mother was not important. And it was all so like some bastard man having an affair and wanking over his fantasy of what happens after he dies. Just fuck off.

Stonehopper · 07/02/2021 21:32

@ElizabethinherGermanGarden

OP, are you prepared to name the writer who's annoyed you? I really want to read some great short stories and haven't been able to figure out who you mean.
I won’t, @ElizabethinherGermanGarden. She’s quite a vulnerable person, despite her huge success with her stories, and has an adult diagnosis on the autistic spectrum. I would feel mean identifying her.

For short stories, have you read Alice Munro, Mavis Gallant, Edna O’Brien?

OP posts:
sausagerole · 07/02/2021 21:37

I used to devour John Grisham books, I remember the first time I read 'The Firm' and was totally stunned by it. But all his most recent books (A Painted House etc) I have trouble believing they're written by the same person. Absolutely nothing noteworthy about them at all.

HeadNorth · 07/02/2021 21:47

I thought His Bloody Project by Graeme Macrae Burnet was superb. I then read The Accident on the A35 and thought ho, hum, not as good. I then read The Disappearance of Adele Bedeau and realised he basically writes the same blooming book every time for diminishing returns. Creepy unreliable misfit narrator, unpleasant violence, found evidence - same plot, just different location. What a let down.

dementedma · 07/02/2021 21:54

The Night Circus was utterly brilliant. Couldnt wait for next book.
It was The Starless Sea and utter shite.

shinynewapple2021 · 07/02/2021 22:01

@Veenah

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

I agree with this : lives her earlier work but this was so contrived .

Lisa Jewell - her more recent work is quite different to her earlier work so it depends on what kind of book you like . I prefer her recent stuff . The Girls (mentioned by PP earlier) is not a new book .

I recently forced myself to finish We need to talk about Kevin - I kept on to the end awaiting the amazing twist which a poster who recommended it on another thread said was 'like being smacked in the face'. I still don't know what she didn't expect to happen - the fact that her husband was dead ? Sorry but it didn't take a lot of imagination to work that out after about the second chapter. I won't be reading any more of her books .

Aroundtheworldin80moves · 07/02/2021 22:06

I often get like this with book series. They start great. But it gets to the point the author has used all their ideas and starts repeating themselves. The ones that start again with a new protagonist are usually better.

It may be an unpopular opinion, but the worst offender of this for me is Enid Blyton. She just wrote too many books.

Collidascope · 07/02/2021 22:10

The Girls by Lisa Jewell and Trespass by Rose Tremain (both mentioned here) are the only books I have from those two authors. I couldn't get past the first few chapters of either. Interesting to know their other books are better.

Transmission by Kate Atkinson is my disappointment. I love her other books.
Also, Let Me Tell You About A Man I Knew by Susan Fletcher who is usually a wonderful writer.

AgentCooper · 07/02/2021 22:16

@jusdepamplemousse

Curtis Sittenfeld has written some completely amazing books, some utterly crap.
@jusdepamplemousse amen to that. I read Eligible after seeing it in the library and remembering her getting rave reviews for other books in the Guardian. I felt like, what is this guff?

But Rodham and American Wife I think are stunning, I love those books.

ElizabethinherGermanGarden · 07/02/2021 22:21

@Stonehopper Okay, I can respect that. Yes, thank you, I have the three you mentioned - I'm just collecting short stories. They seem to suit me! I will keep an eye out for other collections.

Stonehopper · 07/02/2021 22:22

@Collidascope

The Girls by Lisa Jewell and Trespass by Rose Tremain (both mentioned here) are the only books I have from those two authors. I couldn't get past the first few chapters of either. Interesting to know their other books are better.

Transmission by Kate Atkinson is my disappointment. I love her other books.
Also, Let Me Tell You About A Man I Knew by Susan Fletcher who is usually a wonderful writer.

Yes, Transmission had weird rookie errors, like about six completely indistinguishable male British spies.
OP posts:
unmarkedbythat · 07/02/2021 22:22

Stephen King has written some amazing stuff but also some absolute rubbish, and not all of it is explained by the period of his illness and addiction.

Alma Alexander I thought delivered something really good with The Secrets of Jin-Shei, but Embers of Heaven was just awful.

Firefretted · 07/02/2021 22:25

The final novel in Elizabeth Jane Howard's Cazalet Chronicles was written many years after the first four and is really poor imo. Terrible continuity from the previous books and far too much focus on the antics of a new generation of the family that I just didn't care about - I was there to see how things turned out for my old favourites!

Love, love, love Elly Griffiths' Ruth Galloway mysteries but tried the first in the Stephens and Mephisto series and found it so dull I couldn't finish.

Sarah Moss' Bodies of Light was brilliant but it's sequel, Signs for Lost Children was very boring.

JoannaDory · 07/02/2021 22:27

The Goldfinch. I loved the Secret History and thought the Little Friend was OK and was very excited when the Goldfinch came out after a huge gap. I hated the book and couldn't finish it.

I know it is a marmite book and some people say it was her best Smile

chipsandgin · 07/02/2021 22:30

I’d go as far as to say ‘Rivers of London’ by Ben Aaronovitch is in my top 5 books ever...but as the series went on they became unreadable dirge & to tedious and confusing to finish, so disappointing!

chipsandgin · 07/02/2021 22:30

*too 😳

Beamur · 07/02/2021 23:36

Now I loved the Goldfinch, then read the secret history and really disliked it. We read in a book group I was going to (secret history) and without fail no-one liked it! Funnily enough, some of them had read it when it came out and loved it, but now they were older found the characters much less likeable.