the later narnia books made me unhappy, specially the last one. there is a great short story by the author neil gaiman about Susan as an old woman, thinking back to her childhood. and how it was not exactly fair that just because she was "interested in makeup and boys" she had to go identify the mashed remains of her siblings from the train accident that kills them.
if you dont know, neil gaiman is a great author who did the novel that recent "stardust" movie was based on. hes also famous for writing the sandman comic book series, and coauthored a novel with terry pratched in the early 90s. his short stories are allways awesomely mind bending and bittersweet. there is a reimagining of the snow white story which i found an online copy of here -
http://www.holycow.com/dreaming/stories/snow-glass-apples. its particularly excelent, and i reccoment reading it. i could not find "the problem of susan" short story online, though the author talks about it here -
http://www.thestonetable.com/articles/224,1.htmla pet hate of mine is when a writer just does not research something, even when such research would be as easy as say, visiting the manufacturors website for the thing they are writing about. mattew reilly is a great example, as he does this a lot. i read his stuff way back in high school, they are all fairly trashy ultraviolent fun. but his tendancy to just make things up about real world stuff is very annoying. i particularly hated his description of the metalstorm guns he invented in one of his more recent books. he could have just gone to
www.metalstorm.com and watched a demonstration video about how they actually worked, rather then inventing a bunch of silly nonsense.
also, while i have liked some of david eddings stuff, in my limited experience he tends to end whatever conflict that drives his epic fantasy sagas with care bears, rainbows and lollipops. the ending thatguyyaknow describes seems pretty typical of him, all the good people end up happily ever after to the extreme, and the baddies get destroyed, killed, or otherwise permanantly erased from existance.
and animorphs did have a nice idea behind it, but yes it was full of horrible logical inconsistencies you were somehow expected to not notice.