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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:
tobee · 12/02/2021 20:34

"That the" not "about the"

KarmaNoMore · 12/02/2021 20:35

Gabriel García Márquez... until I stated noticing there’s always an element of pedophilia in his fantasy themes.

KobaniDaughters · 12/02/2021 20:35

The Goldfinch - massively overwritten and so disappointing that I had to force myself to finish it when I devoured Donna Tart’s other books

KobaniDaughters · 12/02/2021 20:38

Also agree with PP about the Testaments - it wasn’t awful but now where near a amazing as basically everything else Margaret Atwood has written

NaughtipussMaximus · 12/02/2021 20:39

Terry Pratchett. I’d been thinking for a while that his books were going downhill then he announced he had early onset dementia which was really sad.

KobaniDaughters · 12/02/2021 20:40

Oh and also Americanah - I fucking LOVED Purple Hibiscus and Half the Yellow Sun but this was tripe and boring

Wildswim · 12/02/2021 20:41

@RedPaperLantern

The Testaments by Margaret Atwood was dreadful.
Agreed.
BIWI · 12/02/2021 20:42

Yes @user1467048527

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

Exactly this!

I think the problem was that the producers of the TV series had conjured up such a vivid evocation of The Handmaids Tale, and had created other story lines, that Margaret Attwood was writing for them, and not really to complete the story - it was more like she was having to tie up loose ends, rather than create something original in its own right.

sproutsandparsnips · 12/02/2021 21:13

I have to disagree with a pp (way up thread!) I loved The Casual Vacancy. Took a while to get into but I cried at the end and I could really empathise with some of the characters.
I keep reading Scarpetta but she is so annoying - self absorbed and unpleasant, as are many of the other characters.

jennymac · 13/02/2021 22:14

My favourite Maggie O'Farrell is The Hand that First Held Mine - stayed with me for ages after. Agree to a certain extent with the comments on Marian Keyes. I have enjoyed all her books but the earlier ones are the only I have re-read. Just finished her latest Grown Ups today though and enjoyed it more than I have a book in ages. Great characters and some laugh out loud moments.

EarringsandLipstick · 14/02/2021 06:42

@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?
@whataboutbob

All of Maggie O'Farrell's work. I absolutely love her, have read nearly everything & so far, not been disappointed.

Hamnet is wonderful - different in style to her other books.

Also, non-fiction, 'I Am, I Am, I Am' is absolutely engrossing. Part memoir / reflection on brushes with death, it's incredible.

EarringsandLipstick · 14/02/2021 06:47

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!

Yes! It's Robert Harris, but I agree fully. I did race through it, it had got a glowing recommendation from a radio presenter I rate. It was intriguing to start but got very slight & YY about the daft ending.

MsTSwift · 14/02/2021 06:51

Loved Secret History and Goldfinch one of the best books I’ve ever read. Couldn’t finish The Little Friend.

Really liked Hilary Mantel Wolf Hall trilogy then read a really weird book of hers about seances or something.

All Lionel Shrivers books are great some better than others but all good. Dh didn’t like the last one about exercise so much but I did.

MsTSwift · 14/02/2021 06:54

Also liked all Maggie Ofarrells though my mum criticised the avoiding death one as being too self absorbed Maggie going on and on about herself. Which was kind of the point of the book! But can see what mum meant

bibliomania · 14/02/2021 09:35

Maybe lowering the tone here, but the original Bridget Jones' Diary was funny and captured the zeitgeist. Helen Fielding should have been forcibly restrained from publishing Mad About the Boy.

LawnFever · 14/02/2021 22:09

@MsTSwift

Also liked all Maggie Ofarrells though my mum criticised the avoiding death one as being too self absorbed Maggie going on and on about herself. Which was kind of the point of the book! But can see what mum meant
On that Maggie O’Farrell one I just got irritated how often she kept going swimming, and taking her son I think swimming, even though she knew she wasn’t confident in the water and then getting into bother Confused
LawnFever · 14/02/2021 22:10

@MsTSwift

Loved Secret History and Goldfinch one of the best books I’ve ever read. Couldn’t finish The Little Friend.

Really liked Hilary Mantel Wolf Hall trilogy then read a really weird book of hers about seances or something.

All Lionel Shrivers books are great some better than others but all good. Dh didn’t like the last one about exercise so much but I did.

Yes! I read the psychic one! I was so confused, the style was so completely different it was as though someone else entirely had written it
Jeremyironseverything · 14/02/2021 22:11

I love Jodi picoult but a couple of her books I really couldn't get into. One featuring a wolf and one with a whale.

Ginfordinner · 14/02/2021 22:15

The Strawberry Thief by Joanne Harris. It is the last one in the Chocolat series, and either my tastes have changed on or it wasn't as good as her previous books.

theliverpoolone · 14/02/2021 22:32

Nine Perfect Strangers by Liane Moriarty. I enjoyed her previous books but found this completely unrealistic and like a different author had written it.
Totally agree. Absolutely love all her previous books, especially Big Little Lies, and the one about the family on the island, but this was dreadful. I do hope she returns to form.

OhWhyNot · 15/02/2021 08:05

I loved Marian Keyes earlier books and agree with previous poster after Sushi for Beginners (and that wasn’t as good as previous books) her writing went down hill

I really enjoyed Jojo Moyes The Giver of Stars (even though it was predictable) but not her other books (apart from one I can’t remember the name of that was ok)

whataboutbob · 15/02/2021 08:55

Thanks all, I think I will avoid I Am x3. I know the subject matter as I remember the interviews when the book came out and her narrow brush with a murderer when out hiking. As I often hike, alone, I don’t want that image in my head!

Sheleg · 15/02/2021 19:12

Most second novels, to be fair. The vast majority of people only have one book in them.

onlymyselftoanswerto1 · 15/02/2021 19:19

The last couple of books by Jodi picoult. I have LOVED all her stuff and how much she researches the backstories. However the last few have felt off. It's almost like she's done too much research and wants to show that off meaning the story is an afterthought. So they're more like trying to read a text book for uni or something. I wish she'd go back to how she was before but sadly I think it's impossible now

IntermittentParps · 19/02/2021 14:12

really liked Hilary Mantel Wolf Hall trilogy then read a really weird book of hers about seances or something.
Beyond Black. I couldn't finish it. I'm a bit hot and cold on her; I love the Cromwell trilogy and very much like some of her others (Eight Months on Ghaza St, The Giant O'Brien, her memoir, A Place of Greater Safety) but that one baffled me. Didn't know what it was for.