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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:
greenemerald · 11/02/2021 19:42

Also there's some love for Never Let Me Go on this thread but I thought it was dreadful Blush I tried so many time to get into it again but I didn't make it even half way before giving up! These two books are the only ones I've never finished.

Chameleon2003 · 11/02/2021 19:50

Absolutely loved The Time Traveler's Wife. Her Fearful Symmetry was awful.

LawnFever · 11/02/2021 22:18

@highlandcoo

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.

Wow really? I thought they were both brilliant, it’s not quite a sequel though I’d say more of a companion because it’s another alternative reality
LawnFever · 11/02/2021 22:19

@greenemerald

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.
Yes, there were too many character twists in And the Mountain echoes, it should’ve been edited more
LawnFever · 11/02/2021 22:21

@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?
Yes! My favourite of hers is The Vanishing of Esme Lennox, it’s brilliant
tobee · 12/02/2021 06:16

@Stonehopper

With regards to the short stories v the novel you mention, I think there could be several reasons. Short stories are not the same discipline as writing a book. It's a completely different exercise. Maybe the novel was poorly edited? Maybe they were incapable of sustaining a plot for the length of a novel? They might not have had enough to say and so padded it out? Maybe they just didn't have it in them to write more?

Sorry I know you didn't ask that but just some pondering.

Lots of great ratings for Amor Towles Gentleman in Moscow. I've not read that but read Rules of Civility which I thought was largely terrible. Be interested to read Gentleman in Moscow but am trepidatious

tobee · 12/02/2021 06:26

One of my favourite authors is Pat Barker. However, find some of her earlier books quite uneven. Then the last in her Life Class trilogy, Noonday, a disappointment, although readable, I think she got carried away with a new character, when I wanted to know more about the characters from the earlier novels. Maybe there just wasn't enough to say for the 3 books.

It's a great cliche, isn't it, the author unable to get out the second novel!

tobee · 12/02/2021 06:29

Btw, I really enjoyed Lisa Jewel's The Girls!! But I listened on audiobook and enjoyed the reading.

tobee · 12/02/2021 06:32

Sorry.. even more of me.

It's a shame that it must work the other way; read a bad book by an author and decide to never read anything by them again. Potentially missing out on great reads!

AnnLouiseB · 12/02/2021 06:32

Absolutely loved The Night Circus by Erin Morgenstern, but couldn’t even force myself to finish The Starless Sea. Boring, self-indulgent, tedious and underdeveloped plot, the very definition of style over substance. I was reading the 150th page of purple prose about some endless whimsical setting and wondering when the plot was eventually going to show up before I realised life was too short and closed it forever.

Also The Gloaming by Kirsty Logan. It’s certainly not a bad book, but it has nowhere close to the breathtaking originality and emotional pull of The Gracekeepers. I was so excited about The Gloaming because The Gracekeepers is the book I wish I could read for the first time again, and it just didn’t live up to my expectations at all.

tobee · 12/02/2021 06:58

I suppose a lot of these books are pressure from the publisher? There are so many books around and if your a publisher and your author gets a success you're going to tell the author to strike while the iron's hot. Writing a literary masterpiece and making money are a tricky combination.

I noticed Lisa Jewel's latest books seem to have a more overt domestic noir feel judging purely by the synopses. Presumably to cash in on that currently very popular and done to death genre

Pluas · 12/02/2021 07:16

@MissMatty2hats

I loved The Thousand Autumns and Bone Clocks and everything else David Mitchell has written and I was so excited for Utopia Avenue. Such a disappointment, clunky dialogue, obvious plot devices, dull characters. I felt like I’d been betrayed! I know that’s unreasonable, the man owes me nothing but still...
I think everyone thought similarly, actually. The reviews were all polite and rather muffled, and had an air of ‘Seriously, David?’ as when someone you know is capable of remarkable work drops the ball for a bit and you pretend not to notice.

I actually think I know the book the OP is talking about, and I agree.

Having read lots of interviews with the author —- if I’m right about who it is — it doesn’t sound like it was forced upon her by a publisher, or rushed through, though it certainly needed a better editor. It’s a bland, commercial novel that piles cliché or cliché, written by someone whose short stories are incredibly good, and multi-award-winning.

highlandcoo · 12/02/2021 10:11

Lawnfever it wasn't the quality of the writing to be honest. It was how she chose to end it.

I can't say any more without spoilers but you probably understand what I mean.

highlandcoo · 12/02/2021 10:13

tobee I loved A Gentleman in Moscow; I really recommend it.

I bought Rules of Civility on the strength of having enjoyed AGIM. Now I'm hoping not to be disappointed ..

whataboutbob · 12/02/2021 16:50

@tobee I liked a gentleman in Moscow, even though I thought the book had quite an “ American voice” if that makes sense. Good plot.

whataboutbob · 12/02/2021 16:51

Thanks for the tip @LawnFever I will look out for that MO’D novel.

littlepeas · 12/02/2021 17:44

@Candleabra

I loved Winter in Madrid. But agree that the later Shardlake books have definitely gone downhill (still enjoyed them all though)
I was so unbearably bored reading Lamentation. Way too long and incredibly dull compared to the other Shardlakes. DH ditched Tombland about a third of the way through and I haven’t bothered at all.
littlepeas · 12/02/2021 17:54

Also, the narrow escapes start to get ridiculous from the end Heartstone onwards.

HmmSureJan · 12/02/2021 17:58

Jilly Cooper - "Pandora" was ok, just, everything after that just horrible. I couldn't even finish the final two.

Sittinbythetree · 12/02/2021 18:00

Richard Harris - Second Sleep, it started well but was so thinly written and such a crap ending that I was genuinely angry when I finished, I threw it on the floor with a hmph!

Agree with others that the most recent shardlake book is dullsville and the Rivers of London books lost it for me after the first few, I don’t really know why though. Maybe after the novelty had worn off other weaknesses took over?

Other books I think I just read too much or grew out of (ie all ‘chic lit’).

user1467048527 · 12/02/2021 18:17

Another one for The Goldfinch here - boring, yes, but my dislike is really reserved for the cartoonish Boris. Reads like the author was trying to write a comedy foreigner. Cringey and very odd for a writer who can clearly master subtle characterisation. On that point, I have to thank pps for alerting me to how they have responded differently to the characters in The Secret History over the years as I realise I have too, without actually realising it because I do still find it a wonderful book each time. I only have to think about that winter spent at the college when everyone else has gone home for the holiday to admire it - that whole section really makes me feel the cold the narrator is enduring!

Yes to Graeme macrae burnett too. I didn’t even make it to a third as after His Bloody Project I was shocked at how bad The Accident on the A35 was.

Mixed feelings about The Testaments as it slipped down easily enough, but I think it was just a bad idea. The Handmaid’s Tale was just perfect as it was, especially the ending. Kind of like having a wonderful, inventive meal created by a chef at the top of their game and finishing it off with a Big Mac.

Another is Ruth Rendell. When she was at the top of her game she wrote some fantastic psychological thrillers. In later years she wrote some awful pap though - I remember The Water’s Lovely as a real low point. Some of the stuff in the Wexford novels was a bit silly too. Shoehorning in unbelievable references to contemporary life - Wexford and Burden eating out at an macedonian restaurant in kingsmarkham sticks out in my memory as an example of how she could get it wrong! But, yes, she wrote some absolutely fantastic stuff too.

Ellmau · 12/02/2021 19:05

George R R Martin - the first couple of Game of Thrones books were genuinely brilliant. But then he let the story get away from him, introduced too many uninteresting new characters, let the plot sprawl from a planned trilogy to God knows how many books - no wonder he's got stuck finishing. The last one published was awful, and failed to progress any of the many many plotlines.

Oregano20 · 12/02/2021 19:36

Call me by your name. Loved that. Find me... Advertised as a sequel.. very disappointing

tobee · 12/02/2021 20:32

Wrt Rules of Civility looking at Good Reads reviews I find others agree with me about the first person narrative doesn't ring true as a woman.

tobee · 12/02/2021 20:33

*That the not about the. Poor editing by me there!