Subject: What's on your bookshelf?
Author:
Posted on: 2023-05-27 23:06:52 UTC

A few weeks back, I saw the question: counting up the books on your bookshelves, who are the top five most-represented authors (excluding collected editions)? Being, well, me, I didn't want to just guess, so I went round and counted. ^_^

I've assumed "collected editions" means "the complete works of X", so have included simple omnibus editions and treated them as multiple books. I've excluded the kids' bookshelves as far too chaotic, and anything I've boxed up and put aside (sorry, Star Wars EU!), but have included the Kindle. I've also extended it to top 10, because... I have lots of time on my hands?

10 - Ken Macleod (13 books). Socialist Scottish sci-fi. Mostly series, but Newton's Wake is a fun standalone.

9 - Diane Duane (also 13). The entire Young Wizards series, two of them twice. This urban fantasy YA series starts with So You Want To Be A Wizard.

8 - David & Leigh Eddings (14). I own more, but have put a lot of them away. Epic fantasy; my favourite is The Redemption of Althalus.

7 - T. Kingfisher / Ursula Vernon (18). Younger fantasy, or horror, depending which name she's using. Mostly Kaitlyn's collection, but A Wizard's Guide to Defensive Baking is a fun one.

6 - Jim Butcher (20). The entire Dresden Files. Adult urban fantasy; the first couple are a bit ropey, I think I started with Summer Knight.

5 - Timothy Zahn (22). Excellent sci-fi author who loves his twists. Writes Grand Admiral Thrawn for Star Wars. Outside that, I recommend Night Train to Rigel.

4 - Rick Riordan (24). Percy Jackson and the Olympians and all its spinoffs. Start at the beginning with The Lightning Thief.

3 - Dan Abnett (25). This surprised me. All Warhammer 40K books - Gaunt's Ghosts and Eisenhorn-Ravenor. Apparently there's a lot of them. I think the three Eisenhorn books are usually found as an omnibus, conveniently titled Eisenhorn.

2 - JRR Tolkien (45). I mean, what did you expect? Multiple copies of LotR, Hobbit, and Silm, plus all the Histories and various non-Middle-earth writings. Uh... start with The Lord of the Rings?

1 - Sir Terry Pratchett (100). I kept finding more! We have three side-by-side bookshelves in our living room, and Pterry runs across the middle row of all three and down to the next. Best known for the Discworld (I'd start with Wyrd Sisters or Guards! Guards!), but his standalone works are also excellent. Check out Nation sometime.

So that's me! Very heavy on the long-series authors, which makes sense given the question. Doesn't include several of my favourite authors (Rosemary Sutcliffe & Susan Cooper, for instance), but again... that wasn't the question!

I'd love to see other people's lists! You can do anything from just your top 5 "most books" authors, with no numbers or details, to... well, this. I'm not picky. ^_^

hS

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