Awesome thanks guys, should have plenty for the next few months
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Not a series but if you haven't read any of Philip K Dick's sci-fi you should.
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Since the major guys (GRRM, Lynch, Rothfuss, Abercrombie, Weeks, Sanderson, Brett, Cook etc.) are already listed, here are some lesser known authors I've found enjoyable:
Michael Sullivan: The Riyria Revelations Daniel Abraham: The Long Price Quartet N.K. Jemisin: The Inheritance Trilogy Glenda Larke: The Watergiver/Stormlord Trilogy Trudi Canavan: The Black Magician Trilogy, Traitor Spy Trilogy Garth Nix: Abhorsen/The Old Kingdom Older stuff by well known authors that are worth reading by if you have not gotten around to them yet: Tad Williams: Memory, Sorrow and Thorn (GRRM's inspiration to write aSoIaF) George RR Martin's Tales of Dunk and Egg novellas (same universe as aSoIaF) Robin Hobb: Farseer Trilogy, Tawny Man Trilogy Neil Gaiman: Neverwhere, Stardust, Good Omens, The Graveyard Book, American Gods (these are not series, but they are definitely on my must reads list) Terry Pratchett: Discworld Series(newer stuff are much better imo), Nation Raymond E. Feist: Riftwar series |
Riftwar sucks. It is about as bland and generic as fantasy books get. Name a genre cliche and its probably in there.
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That might be true, my memories are probably tainted by the fact I read them while I was in middle school. I used to think Eddings was cool back then too, can't stand his crap now.
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I like the coming of age type stories like name of the wind... i read the first book of the riftwars series (magician: apprentice), it started really well then all of a sudden had way too much going on with too many characters... would have been better if it had just followed the main char
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Snow Crash by Neal Stephenson
it's good |
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what does everyone see in the SoiF books? I've read the first four (not sure if there are newer ones yet) and I didn't think they were very good.
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You might also like Lynn Flewelling's Tamir Triad, which is mostly generic coming of age fantasy with a few ****ed up twists. Tamora Pierce's stuff are all coming of age fantasy...sorta a YA fantasy version of Ender's Game with female characters (but not as good and gets kinda repetitive) |
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it's also incredible detailed, which is part of the reason why it takes so damn long to crank the books out, the other part being that the guy probably came down with writers block and/or just stopped caring |
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Really funny dialogue and characters (not silly funny but just funny smart-ass characters). Interesting technological/sociological set-up as well. |
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When I eventually read Free Live Free I became really pissed off because it is fast, easy and fun to read. I had just assumed that Wolfe couldn't really help himself in terms of the writing style but it turns out that he intentionally made the New Sun series that freaking dense which sort of makes him an ******* in my book. |
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I enjoyed the slow pacing and the academic sort of writing through most of the series. It did sap the drama and suspense from the action sequences but I liked it overall. The first person narrative got too spotty though - sometimes it was fun to guess at what had been left out, but there were sections where I felt like I didn't have enough information to piece together what had happened. He also wrote a sword & sorcery story in two books, the wizard and the knight, but I'm hesitant to recommend it - I don't think its as good as his other work, but if you like gene wolfe you'll enjoy it. |
Someone has already mentioned the Takeshi Kovacs series by Morgan, don't let them slip you by.
My recommendations would be Iain M. Banks, Cormac series by Asher, Commonwealth saga by Hamilton. |
Gygax's Gord the Rogue books, though simple and geared toward teenagers are pretty decent. It was his take on DandD, while others with the intellectual rights made the Dragonlance series.
Leiber Fafard and the Gray Mouser stories, each very creative. A lot of Lovecraft themes and things are spun out differently. Princes of Amber books by Roger Zelanzy. Stormlord and Birthgrave series by Tanith Lee. Don't really care for the rest of his writing that much, but the two Mordant's Needs books by Stephen R. Donaldson are very good. I would consider them now to be kind of proto-gothic urban horror. They bridge the gap between Tolkien and Tanith Lee in a way that has been emulated by Martin and some others, and which the Wheel of Time series may have failed at. The Black Company books must be good. I read The Silver Spike and really liked it, and then later realized it was one of Glenn Cook's series. There are books I like that people would find strange, and other books that people like that I may see as flawed or uninteresting. It's hard to get a good handle on what other people enjoy about fantasy. Wheel of Stars by Andre Norton- A comprehensive, 300 page fantasy novel that explains the Wheel of Time series. |
The Black Company by Glen Cook, and the Malazan Books of the Fallen by Steven Erikson.
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Name of the Wind is a good fantasy book also Painted Man and Desert Spear by Peter Brett |
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Look into Jack L. Chalker if you can find his books printed anywhere. The Changewinds Series: * When the Changewinds Blow * Riders of the Winds * War of the Maelstrom The Soul Rider Series * Spirits of Flux and Anchor * Empires of Flux and Anchor * Masters of Flux and Anchor * The Birth of Flux and Anchor * Children of Flux and Anchor I also really enjoyed The Saga of the Well World (7 books) |
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