- Published: 28 January 2025
- ISBN: 9781529930634
- Imprint: Doubleday
- Format: Trade Paperback
- Pages: 288
- RRP: $34.99
Disappoint Me

















- Published: 28 January 2025
- ISBN: 9781529930634
- Imprint: Doubleday
- Format: Trade Paperback
- Pages: 288
- RRP: $34.99
Dinan’s prose is heartfelt and endlessly readable. She explores her characters with sympathy and patience, never casting villains, only complicated humans who are trying their best
Reader’s Digest
Nicola Dinan’s second book confirms to me that she is one of our most exciting writers. Delving into how we fall in and out of love, Dinan knows how to write directly to the flaws we show when in love, with biting wit and laugh out loud humour. Yet the characters linger with you after you have finished. Disappoint Me is an addictive read, that I really did not want to end.
Travis Alabanza, author of None of the Above
Nicola Dinan is able to bring an incisive wit to the big questions of modern relationships: namely, how do we know when to trust another person with our heart and how do we show our love to one another. Disappoint Me is a study in human frailty that is riveting, funny and devastating. It explores heteronormativity, friendship and getting older but, most of all, it’s about confronting the disturbing fact that we cannot ever fully know the person we are sleeping next to. It’s rare I read a book in one sitting but I was carried along by these compelling characters.
Shon Faye
I adored it. A delicious story of change, and a beautiful meditation on human connection. Dinan is a stunning chef of words and this is a book for greedy readers. I melted into every page like butter and didn’t want it to end.
Jodie Harsh
Brimming with razor sharp wit and compassion, Disappoint Me is a charming, big-hearted love story unlike any I’ve read before. It’s an insightful and brilliant meditation on the existential anxiety of otherness, the intermingling of pride and shame, and forgiveness. Dinan forces us to ask ourselves: are we more than the worst thing we’ve ever done? How do we reckon with our pasts so that we can forge a future? Disappoint Me is an absolute knockout.
Marisa Crane, author of A Sharp Endless Need
Disappoint Me is an absolute gift. Bursting with big questions about the politics of romance, family, and care, this novel navigates moral and emotional complexity with grace, nuance, and real storytelling nerve. Dinan is a savvy observer of contemporary culture; she writes with wisdom, style and brilliant comic instincts. I loved it.
Oisín McKenna, author of Evenings and Weekends
Nicola Dinan writes like some kind of demigod, her fictions make thinkable new realities for how we live, what we might expect from each other.
Torrey Peters, author of Detransition, Baby
Disappoint Me is a mature and assured novel. Its two intersecting stories show that the spaces people hold for each other are always in transition, and I admired Nicola Dinan’s work in elaborating the growing pains of a trans experience muddled by race, class and changing public attitudes.
Mendez, author of Rainbow Milk
Disappoint Me is a wonder of a novel, hilarious and heartrending in equal measure: one that marries the prickly, delicious pleasures of its keen observational comedy with the riskiest ventures into the unavoidable messiness of true human intimacy. Dinan has created a work of profound heart and clarity, with a vision of fear, love, growth and repair that will give you hope for the future, and with lines so unforgettably funny and true you’ll be sending them to your group chat immediately.
Elaine Castillo, author of America Is Not the Heart
Dinan has such a deep understanding of people and why they do what they do, how they arrive where they are, she brings the world to us so completely, all the pain, love, joy and mess of it, I feel completely winded by the wholeness of it. Her writing is so beautiful, so affecting it left a lump in my throat
Annie Lord, author of Notes on Heartbreak
Disappoint Me is a brilliant and funny love story—the kind that shows us who we are, who we’re scared we might be, and what it really takes to trust another person. Immersive, perceptive, and layered with nuanced truths about friendship, family, queerness, and real romantic partnership. I didn’t want this novel to end.
Jules Ohman, author of Body Grammar
Reading Nicola Dinan’s writing feels like reading the inner workings of your mind on a page. So perceptive and honest about failure and love, and how inextricably linked they are. Disappoint Me is clear evidence of the skill and talent of a writer who does not know how to disappoint, whose prose is vivid, emotive, powerful and funny, and whose ability to make us feel only grows stronger with every story she tells.
Ore Agbaje-Williams, author of The Three of US
Sharply insightful, warm and heartbreaking
Cosmopolitan, ‘Best Books of 2025’
Exploring themes of identity, ageing and forgiveness, this novel is original, addictive and thought-provoking
Diva
A very modern love story and Dinan is very much the woman to write it
GQ, ‘Best Books of 2025’
Nicola Dinan’s observations are so razor-sharp that you’re sure you’ve met her characters: the self-important East London poet, the over-friendly girl in the bathroom queue, the gap-year student convinced he’s worldly after two weeks on a silent retreat in India. For this reason, every description and bit of dialogue is delicious to read, and if she nailed it in her debut novel Bellies, she’s mastered it in Disappoint Me. The book follows a blossoming relationship between twentysomethings Max and Vincent in present-day London, peppered with flashbacks to Vincent’s first relationship with a trans woman in his teenage years. It is pacy, perfectly pitched and emotionally honest: I loved every page.
Stylist, ‘Best Books of 2025’
A riveting, hilarious and totally devastating love story… This exploration of millennial angst, race, and trans panic will have you gripped and sets Dinan as a literary voice to watch.
Elle, ‘Best Books of 2025’
In the follow-up to her award-winning and critically acclaimed first novel Bellies, Dinan examines the pain and growth that disillusionment brings... Dinan writes so intelligently about regret, remorse and hope – and still manages to nail humour, too.
AnOther, ‘Best Books of 2025’
A story of millennial fears and forgiveness, reckoning with past mistakes, stylishly interweaving two compelling voices as they unravel their own love story. Disappoint Me follows Dinan’s debut novel, Bellies, which is another example of deeply empathetic writing and elastic endings that stay with you long after.
Vogue, ‘Best Books of 2025’
Disappoint Me is anything but a disappointing follow-up in its smart exploration of heteronormativity and the weight of expectation.
Dazed, ‘The 12 Most Anticipated Novels of 2025’
Disappoint Me is a refreshingly unsentimental and moving exploration of millennial ennui, prickly friendships and toxic masculinity. It eschews essentialism by depicting modern relationships and the flow of power and secrecy with astuteness and compassion, cementing Dinan as one of the UK’s most perceptive young novelists with her finger firmly on the pulse of contemporary behaviour.
Guardian
Nicola Dinan will be studied in years to come as one of the modern greats... The kind of writing you’ll be talking about for weeks after you’ve finished reading.
nb Magazine
The author of the award-winning Bellies returns with another insightful dissection of millennial life ... tackling tricky friendships and toxic masculinity.
Harper's Bazaar
Confident and captivating in her writing … Dinan is certainly one to watch
PA Media
A poignant treat of a read
heat
A poignant read.
Closer
A fresh take on tangled relationships and millennial ennui . . . Dinan unpicks the complications of both [characters'] pasts with delicacy and care.
Marie Claire
As the title indicates, it explores the fundamental point that building a sustainable love for someone involves them disappointing you: eventually, the dreams and expectations that we attach to a person will be somewhat compromised. I think the novel explores that so amazingly.
Shon Faye, Guardian