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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:
JamesMiddletonsMarshmallows · 10/02/2021 04:47

Lisa Jewell, who is an AMAZING thriller author, had a really awful novel called the Third Wife. It was so bad I actually at one point checked the cover to see if it was Lisa Jewell's book.

Also I adore Marian Keyes, her early stuff was fab but I felt like hurling The Break at the wall. Really ridiculous and disappointing end.

hagsrus0 · 10/02/2021 06:00

@hagsrus0

The Waters Rising by Sheri Tepper - one of my favourite SF authors - was something of a mess (albeit with wonderful bits). As far as I can make out it was a draft that I'm sure she would have improved substantially had she lived to do so. Very glad to have read it, though.
Fish Tails, not The Waters Rising
pastapestoparmesan · 10/02/2021 06:22

100% agree with everyone who mentioned Nine Perfect Strangers. It’s utterly ridiculous. Also, in my opinion, her first novel Three Wishes is by far the best, and seems to be less well known than the others.

rookiemere · 10/02/2021 08:49

@Costalatte I was so disappointed with David Nicholls Sweet Sorrow as I absolutely loved Us. It just felt terribly lazy and I have a bit of an issue with books that spend a lot of pages reprinting other books or plays.

JamesMiddletonsMarshmallows · 10/02/2021 11:09

I'm pleased I read this thread, I'm currently reading the Husband's Secret by Liane Moriarty, I'm loving it and was going to go and get Nine Perfect Strangers today. I think I won't bother - has anyone read her novel The Hypnotist's Love Story?

Re Lionel Shriver - Big Brother is an excellent book and has a really shocking twist at the end

LApprentiSorcier · 10/02/2021 11:25

has anyone read her novel The Hypnotist's Love Story?

Yes. I didn't think it was as good as Nine Perfect Strangers, but it was okay. There was too much waffle about hypnotism for my liking, but then I do have a particular dislike of excessive work-related procedural stuff getting in the way of a plot.

JamesMiddletonsMarshmallows · 10/02/2021 11:41

I'm enjoying the Husband's Secret but there are so many characters I've written them down and popped them in the front of the book 😂

Anoisagusaris · 10/02/2021 12:40

I loved Sweet Sorrow and Winter in Madrid. And all of both authors’ other books, except Us for some reason. I might re-read it.

I really The Girl on the Train but Into the Water was dire.

Sometimes I wonder if it’s just the mood/situation I’m in when I reading something. Plenty of people though Girl on the Train was crap so perhaps if I read it again I’d be of the same opinion.

whataboutbob · 10/02/2021 13:37

Fellow Winter in Madrid lover!

IntermittentParps · 10/02/2021 17:38

I love Jim Crace's novels The Gift of Stones, Quarantine, Being Dead, Harvest and The Pesthouse. Was very excited to read The Melody, but couldn't finish it. It didn't seem to be doing anything or going anywhere. What a let-down.

JanFebAnyMonth · 10/02/2021 17:55

Agree re The Buried Giant by Ishiguro - just what is it actually about?? I had no clue.

I came on to say K Hussein's A Thousand Splendid Suns. Now I now people rave about this, but I hated it. I loved Kite Runner to pieces.

QuinionsRainbow · 10/02/2021 18:10

Disappointed with C J Sansom's Tombland, after all the other Shardlake books, and think I'm going to be saying ditto to The Mirror and the Light - so far not a patch on the first Wolf Hall episodes.

Candleabra · 10/02/2021 18:25

Death Comes to Pemberley

Disappointing for so many reasons.

Candleabra · 10/02/2021 18:27

I loved Winter in Madrid.
But agree that the later Shardlake books have definitely gone downhill (still enjoyed them all though)

Candleabra · 10/02/2021 18:31

Also Victoria Hislop.
I thought The Island was quite good, certainly an interesting story. Everything else, awful.

JanFebAnyMonth · 10/02/2021 20:44

Again I know people loved The Island. Me,nope!

whataboutbob · 10/02/2021 21:41

Sorry., it’s not quite on topic but does anyone like Maggie o’farrell? I picked up Instructions for a Heatwave in a youth hostel library and got really engrossed, surpassed expectations. Any other books of hers you’d recommend?

Overdoor · 10/02/2021 22:39

@whataboutbob

Sorry., it’s not quite on topic but does anyone like Maggie o’farrell? I picked up Instructions for a Heatwave in a youth hostel library and got really engrossed, surpassed expectations. Any other books of hers you’d recommend?
She’s not hugely my thing, but I think her work is reliably well-crafted. Friends have been impressed with her latest novel, Hamnet.
JamesMiddletonsMarshmallows · 10/02/2021 23:03

@Candleabra

Death Comes to Pemberley

Disappointing for so many reasons.

Yes!

A rare occasion when the TV show does a much better job than the book

Downton57 · 11/02/2021 08:30

@whataboutbob The Vanishing Act of Esme Lennox, Hamnet and I Am, I Am, I Am are all great.

Yuddiesorno · 11/02/2021 13:40

It's really interesting reading everyone's opinions here. I totally agree with Marian Keyes - used to be my go to for comfort reading but the last couple well, I gave up on the Break quite early as I just couldn't feel anything for the characters.

I'm obviously in the minority in that I hated Life After Life but loved Kate Atkinson's earlier stuff, especially the early Jackson Brodie ones.

I think Lisa Jewell's stuff has changed quite a lot although was a bit miffed recently as gave my anti-reading 15 yr old DD Ralph's Party which she has actually read (amazing in it's own way if you knew her) but must have read it about 25 years ago (or when it first came out anyway) and she keeps telling me things that happen in the book which I have zero memory of (and may not be what I would have chosen for her to read about!!).

I am a massive Cazalet fan and did read the last one but have realised one of the benefits to growing older is that I can't remember anything that happened in it. Smile

Re Maggie O'Farrell - I loved her first couple of novels but found the Heatwave one so disappointing. I can't remember the detail but felt a bit cheated by the ending (which is one of my pet peeves).

whataboutbob · 11/02/2021 16:43

Thanks @Overdoor and @Downton57. I think we can still order books via our library website so will give a couple of MO’F books a try. Literature is a refuge right now.

LadyEloise · 11/02/2021 19:05

@Yuddiesorno
I'm so glad I'm not the only one who REALLY disliked Life After Life.

highlandcoo · 11/02/2021 19:29

I really enjoyed Life After Life. Having struggled with the time shifts in The Time Traveller's Wife I didn't expect to, but I was engrossed.

I am still furious about A God in Ruins though. What a let-down of a sequel.

greenemerald · 11/02/2021 19:34

Really loved the Kite Runner and A Thousand Splendid Suns by Khaled Hosseini. Was so looking forward the And The Mountains Echoed but it was so bad I couldn't even finish it.