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Literary Misery, Please...

95 replies

LittlePrecious · 22/04/2024 15:06

I like dark, disturbing, atmospheric and/or miserable fiction books. I veer towards literary fiction.

As a flavour of where I'm at;
I love everything that Hanya Yanagihara has written.

I love most of Siri Hustvedt's fiction books, even if the art bits are a bit pompous.

I love most of Ottessa Moshfegh's books.

I love Rohinton Mistry's "A Fine Balance" though struggled with his other works.
I love "My Dark Vanessa" by Kate Elizabeth Russell.

I love "The Handmaid's Tale" but hate everything else Attwood has ever written. I've never tried "The Testaments" because HMT ended perfectly for me.

I love most of Kazuo Ishiguro's books but was taken completely aback at how shit "The Buried Giant" was and so haven't gone back to his works.

I love "Washington Black" by Esi Edugyan but hated "Half Blood Blues" and so haven't tried anything else from her.

Not quite as dark, by other favourite authors are:
Isabelle Allende
Chimamanda Ngozi Adiche
Bernadine Evaristo
Karen Maitland
Yaa Gyasi
Sarah Waters

Currently waiting be read I have:
"Shuggie Bain" by Douglas Stuart
"The Virgin Suicides" by Jeffrey Eugenides

Wise readers of MN, do you have any recommendations for other dark, atmospheric, disturbing and/or miserably novels which veer towards literary fiction?

OP posts:
CrepuscularCritter · 22/04/2024 15:16

Antonia White's Frost In May quartet. The last two - The Sugar House and Beyond The Glass are chilling and beautiful.

kublacant · 22/04/2024 15:20

Have you read The God of Small Things by Arundhati Roy? It isn’t dystopian but there is a lot of misery.

LittlePrecious · 22/04/2024 15:21

Both of these recommendations look amazing, thank you!

Keep 'em coming.

OP posts:
OhYoko · 22/04/2024 15:24

Placemarking shamelessly.

exexpat · 22/04/2024 15:53

Burntcoat - Sarah Hall
Hotel Iris - Yoko Ogawa (and possibly also The Memory Police by the same author)
The Vegetarian - Han Kang
Addlands - Tom Bullough
Ghost Music - An Yu
How to be Human - Paula Cocozza
Ghost Wall - Sarah Moss
My Year Abroad - Chang Rae Lee
Starling Days - Rowan Hisayo Buchanan
Intimacies - Katie Kitamura

highlandcoo · 22/04/2024 15:58

Young Mungo is even grimmer than Shuggie Bain imo

bigdecisionstomake · 22/04/2024 15:59

Therese Raquin by Emile Zola sprang to mind when I read your thread title - sorry don't know how to do the accents.

exexpat · 22/04/2024 15:59

One more:
The Book of Form and Emptiness - Ruth Ozeki

Lurkingandlearning · 22/04/2024 16:01

Little Dorrit. Charles Dickens

GeorgeTheFirst · 22/04/2024 16:10

Demon Copperhead by Barbara Kingsolver

Talipesmum · 22/04/2024 16:12

The Tenant of Wildfell Hall - Anne Brontë. Totally different to other more dramatic / flamboyant Brontë sister novels. Must be one of the earliest books on insidious creeping domestic abuse written by a woman.

LittlePrecious · 22/04/2024 16:21

GeorgeTheFirst · 22/04/2024 16:10

Demon Copperhead by Barbara Kingsolver

Oh, I should've said that I've not long finished that book. Fantastic. I loved "The Poisonwood Bible" by Barbara Kingsolver. My friend told me about "Demon Copperhead" and I was really unsure because I hated everything that she wrote since "The Poisonwood Bible" but I'm glad I gave it a go.

OP posts:
LittlePrecious · 22/04/2024 16:26

exexpat · 22/04/2024 15:53

Burntcoat - Sarah Hall
Hotel Iris - Yoko Ogawa (and possibly also The Memory Police by the same author)
The Vegetarian - Han Kang
Addlands - Tom Bullough
Ghost Music - An Yu
How to be Human - Paula Cocozza
Ghost Wall - Sarah Moss
My Year Abroad - Chang Rae Lee
Starling Days - Rowan Hisayo Buchanan
Intimacies - Katie Kitamura

So many to go on here, thank you

I think I might've read "The Vegetarian" a while back.

[Potential Spoiler Alert]

Is that the one where a woman turns into a pot plant? And her husband puts her on the balcony? Is that the same book, or a different book by the same author?
I hated that book, I was completely lost all the way through.

OP posts:
LittlePrecious · 22/04/2024 16:26

So many great ideas here, thank you all!

OP posts:
exexpat · 22/04/2024 16:32

"Is that the one where a woman turns into a pot plant?"

She gradually tries to become more plant/tree like, but I don't think she actually succeeds in becoming a pot plant!

But if it is the same book you are thinking of, I can definitely see how it would not be everyone's cup of tea. Most of the others on my list are not quite so out-there.

LittlePrecious · 22/04/2024 16:40

exexpat · 22/04/2024 16:32

"Is that the one where a woman turns into a pot plant?"

She gradually tries to become more plant/tree like, but I don't think she actually succeeds in becoming a pot plant!

But if it is the same book you are thinking of, I can definitely see how it would not be everyone's cup of tea. Most of the others on my list are not quite so out-there.

😅 See - I was completely lost. I thought she actually turned into a plant.

Thank you - I've heard of a few of your other suggestions and they don't seem as wild, so shouldn't get me too confused! Thank you!

OP posts:
ChardonnaysBeastlyCat · 22/04/2024 16:42

Burial Rites should be a good one for you.

Geebray · 22/04/2024 16:43

A Little Life by Hanya Yanagihara.

It doesn't get much more miserable than that.

Trolleytoken · 22/04/2024 16:53

Behind the Beautiful Forevers

Orangebadger · 22/04/2024 17:33

Any Daphne Du Maurier. I am thinking especially Jamaica Inn. That's very dark, bleak and brilliant!
Burial rites by Hannah Kent, wonderful book.

Spinet · 22/04/2024 17:38

I've recently read Boy Parts and Penance by Eliza Clark, which I think meet the brief? She creates voice amazingly, I think. And it's definitely dark/ miserable/ verging on horrible. But it doesn't have the intense broodingness of the other stuff you're describing. You kind of have to bring that aspect yourself, if you know what I mean?

Hartley99 · 22/04/2024 19:52

Can't believe no one has mentioned Thomas Hardy. It doesn't get much darker than Jude the Obscure.

Wilde's Dorian Gray is surprisingly dark, and so is early Evelyn Waugh. J G Ballard disturbs me too. I also find Tolkien's description of Mordor horrible.

Cormac McCarthy is beyond dark. He's utterly horrific, frankly. In fact, he makes Hardy look like P. G. Wodehouse!

NashvilleQueen · 22/04/2024 21:01

Cormac McCarthy?

Hamnet is pretty bleak.

I like southern gothic with a twist of sadness so recommend Carson McCullers.

Notellinganyone · 22/04/2024 21:02

David Mitchell’s ‘Cloud Atlas’. Absolute genius.

Notellinganyone · 22/04/2024 21:04

@CrepuscularCritter - god yes. I don’t many people who have read these. I was obsessed with them as a teenager.