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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:
highlandcoo · 08/02/2021 01:15

The final novel in Elizabeth Jane Howard's Cazalet Chronicles was written many years after the first four and is really poor imo

Totally agree with this. I love the first four, and I warn everyone not to go near the fifth. I simply didn't believe the way some characters changed or how they behaved. Wish I'd never read it, and that EJH had left well alone.

Collidascope despite not rating Trespass, Rose Tremain is one of my favourite writers. It's really worth giving her another go imo. I'd recommend Restoration, Music and Silence and The Road Home. All very different and great reads.

rc22 · 08/02/2021 11:49

@Frouby I found Jane Green's went down hill when she moved to America and started to set her books there rather than in London.

I loved Never Let Me Go and the Remains of the Day but couldn't get along with the last Kazuo Ishiguro book I tried to read. I think it was called the Buried Giant.

flappityflippers1 · 08/02/2021 11:53

I absolutely adore Trudi Canavan - Age of the 5, Black Magician and Traitor Spy

Cannot get on with and hate Milleniums rule. So disappointing, especially the last book.

littlepeas · 08/02/2021 12:54

Agree re the last Cazalet book. She should have left them alone.

Loved The Secret History and found The Goldfinch boring (didn’t finish it).

Possibly a controversial opinion, as I know it was loved by many, but I didn’t like A God in Ruins, when I absolutely loved Life After Life.

I enjoyed Belman and Black and Once Upon A River, but neither were a patch on The Thirteenth Tale.

Also controversial - I much preferred Her Fearful Symmetry to The Time Travellers Wife.

Also did not like The Paying Guests, despite enjoying everything else I’ve read by Sarah Waters.

I do think it depends a bit on what order you read things in and the opinion you form of the writer based on the first book you read.

Cornishblues · 08/02/2021 13:53

Ian Rankin’s Doors Open reads like it was written when he was a teenager. I really enjoy his Rebus books and felt irritated his name was put to this one - if it had been another writer I wouldn’t have persevered. The worst thing is that it exposes some of the things that only feel like niggles in the other books more harshly so might affect how I read others of his books in future. This may just be lockdown grumpiness.

Theredjellybean · 08/02/2021 13:59

The testaments... Dreadful, not menacing, silly plot, contrived happy ending.. I honestly doubted it was actually written by Margaret atwood

I also find Lionel shriver hit and miss.. Good one, then bad one

Kit19 · 08/02/2021 13:59

Elizabeth George's Inspector Lynley series

loved the early books but she should have stopped at "what came before he shot her". The last 2 books have been so bad, it felt as if she'd handed them over to a first term creative writing class at college.

NotYourReindeer · 08/02/2021 14:19

I am not a big reader, I have ADHD and find it hard to concentrate at times whereas occasionally I get completely OTT obsessed with an author and read everything they've done (or try to) in the space of a few months.

I did this with Marian Keyes and was SO disappointed with The Break,it wasn't a patch on anything else she'd done. I didn't love all her other books but still enjoyed them to a degree but my gosh, The Break really put me off.

I see she has a new book out and I haven't read for so long and really want to get into residing again, will it be worth it though....!?

BIWI · 08/02/2021 14:24

What I hate the most is when a writer is clearly starting to churn out books - often using the same formula for the plots. Jodie Picoult is a classic example of that. I enjoyed the first couple of hers, but when I was reading the next one suddenly though 'hang on, this is exactly how the last story turned out!'

Lee Childs is another one. And now he's handing of the writing of them to his brother it just makes it even more obvious. (Mind you, that he is only in it for the cash was pretty obvious when he sanctioned the casting of Tom Cruise as Jack Reacher Hmm)

unmarkedbythat · 08/02/2021 14:31

I thought Sarum was amazing. Russka was good. London was... this again? And so I have never read The Forest, Dublin, Paris, etc.

AlbertCampion · 08/02/2021 14:33

Her Fearful Symmetry by Audrey Nifenegger was such a disappointment after a the Time Traveler's Wife.

I think someone upthread mentioned The Buried Giant. I also adore Ishiguro and I also found that one hard going, but the pay off in the end is worth it if you can stick it out. I wept for ages.

Ifyourefeelingsinister · 08/02/2021 14:36

@dementedma

The Night Circus was utterly brilliant. Couldnt wait for next book. It was The Starless Sea and utter shite.
Coming on here to see if anyone else also thought the Starless Sea. Incomprehensible, and I just stopped caring. There was the ghost of a good book there but it needed quite a few more rewrites.
DahliaMacNamara · 08/02/2021 14:38

@Ormally

Not a novel but an autobiography: David Lodge. Love all his fiction, a lot of which has a brush with the autobiographical, but got the rage reading his autobiography.
I hadn't heard about an autobiography, and now that I have, I need to know why it gave you the rage, before I fall into the same trap.
Ifyourefeelingsinister · 08/02/2021 14:39

Also despite loving some Rose Tremain novels, I didn't like Trespass or The Gustave Sonata at all. Love her autobio, Rosie, though.

Abracadabra12345 · 08/02/2021 15:01

@JoannaDory

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

I was waiting to see if anyone mentioned this! Secret History was superb and it took about a decade for her to finally write her second.. and it was Little Friend. It was quite frankly, disappointing.

Apparently, the film shows up the many flaws in Goldfinch. Some trademark, lyrical and beautiful writing but often long winded and dull

theleafandnotthetree · 08/02/2021 15:12

On Lionel Shriver, The Mandibles is also very good and plays to her strengths, its very caustic. She is a total misanthrope.

Agree about The Buried Giant and sad to say I didn't finish it and I love him generally.

Also Kate Atkinson's book which I think was called Transcription rather than Transmission. I bought it new, very excited and it just didn't grab me at all. I was very disappointed because I love everything else she has written and think her both a talented writer and a generous-hearted person.

Total consistency is rare, though I don't think Ian McEwan has written a bad book though some I liked more than others.

LApprentiSorcier · 08/02/2021 15:17

@Ormally I've read all David Lodge's fiction and planned to read his autobiography at some point - is this a bad idea?

AOwlAOwlAOwl · 08/02/2021 15:23

Agree with others about Patricia Cornwell.

The first three(?) four (?) Scarpetta books were amazing. Then things took a bit of a turn and went all conspiracy theory. I think she ran out of ideas. I stopped reading them after her lover came back from the dead, that just killed all my enthusiasm for her writing. It was ludicrous.

HexWitch · 08/02/2021 15:26

I loved You by Caroline Keynes, hated Hidden Bodies and couldn't finish it no matter how many times I went back to it.

Gastropod · 08/02/2021 15:30

CJ Sansom - loved every Shardlake book but really couldn't get on with Winter in Madrid.

And Nick Hornby - his first novels were fabulous and then along came Juliet, Naked and I can't take him seriously ever again, so dire was it.

MinnieJackson · 08/02/2021 15:39

I agree hidden bodies and nine perfect strangers weren't so good.

Artus · 08/02/2021 15:49

I loved Charlaine Harris True Blood series up to the last couple of books. I think she just lost interest but was contracted to write them. I believe she got death threats from disappointed readers!

The TV series went for a different equally unsatisfactory ending.

Walkingtheplank · 08/02/2021 15:50

I enjoyed the Cleaner of Chartres by Sally Vickers. It has a bit of the Tracey Chevalier about it although not quite as good.. Nice social history and details of Chartres itself.

DH bought me Vickers' 'The Librarian'. Really what a load of tosh that was. Even she couldn't be bothered to finish her own story, totally changing track and the nature of the book towards the end.
And it comes from with a pile of anti-Conservative commentary. I don't need that in a novel. I won't bother with her again.

HopeForTheBestExpectTheWorst · 08/02/2021 15:53

This reply has been withdrawn

This has been withdrawn on request of the poster.

SeeyouontheothersideofCovid · 08/02/2021 15:53

Douglas Kennedy for me. All earlier books had a unique take, were well written with interesting plots.

But the later ones seem to be writing by numbers - very formulaic and they feel that he's just banging them out for the income and not very interested in actually writing them anymore.