Subject: Oh, someone else has heard of it?
Author:
Posted on: 2011-01-25 00:50:00 UTC
I can't wait to get back home and read the other books.
Subject: Oh, someone else has heard of it?
Author:
Posted on: 2011-01-25 00:50:00 UTC
I can't wait to get back home and read the other books.
This is one of those amazing threads where one can influence the entertainment choices of their fellow humans. I am fast running out of Stephen King novels to read, and am looking for stuff to read once I've finished off his writings.
No, I have not read any Discworld novels, and though I would like to, my local library system has exactly one (The Colour of Magic) which I promise I will read eventually.
I am incredibly open to suggestions. I've even read and enjoyed terrible books like Twilight and Eragon, only in hindsight realizing how bad they are. The point is, I'll likely enjoy anything recommended to me.
Brent Week's Night Angel trilogy is pretty great, though he gets a few of the weapon descriptions wrong. (Though I'm apparently the only one I know who's noticed that.)
In a similar vein are Steven Brust's Vlad Taltos novels. They can be read one of two ways: You can start with Jhereg, and read them in publication order, or you can start with Taltos and read them in chronological order. The series makes sense either way.
Also recommended if you like fantasy is Jim Butcher's Codex Alera series.
Alternatively, if you're more of a Sci-Fi fan, Spider Robinson is a must, especially his Callahan's Cross-Time Saloon series. Incidentally, if you find The Callahan Touch, Callahan's Legacy, and/or The Free Lunch, will you let me know where yo found them? Those are the only three I've not read yet.
If you enjoyed the Hunger Games, I recommend Battle Royale, a Japanese novel that the Hunger Games obviously drew a lot of inspiration from. It's been translated into English multiple times now, and is a great read, if a little dark.
I would recommend The First/Second/Final Chronicles of Thomas Covenant the Unbeliever by Stephen R. Donaldson. It gets pretty dark at places, but it is quite good.
The only problem is that the last book in the Final Chronicles is not yet out.
Some of my favorites have been mentioned already, but here are a couple I haven't seen yet:
1. Anything by Charles de Lint, who writes fantastic urban fantasy short stories and novels. His stuff is interesting because it's all set in the same world, and sometimes different stories share characters, but it's not necessary to read anything in order. It's all one big tapestry you can move over as you will.
2. The Temeraire series by Naomi Novik. It's set during the Napoleonic wars, but with dragons. Each dragon has a captain he imprints on at hatching (similar to Pern, yes, but without the telepathy or any guarantee that the pairing will be a healthy one), and when they are big and well-trained enough, they and their captain and crew fight in Britain's (or whichever country's) Aerial Corps. The dragons are intelligent and can speak, but the level of intelligence varies by breed and individual.
I'll also second the recommendation for the Death Gate Cycle. I'm not a huge fan of the authors' better-known Dragonlance series, but they really did well with DGC. It's much more their own creation; far and away less derivative of the basic D&D scenario, though some familiar races may appear. Well, sort of. You'd have to see for yourself. *g*
~Neshomeh
Gone by Michael Grant, any Neil Gaiman, and the Hunger Games.
I read the first hunger games. Isn't Michael Grant the dude married to KA Applegate who co-wrote Animorphs?
For straight fantasy, I usually turn to Garth Nix's Old Kingdom Trilogy. The books (Sabriel, Lirael, and Abhorsen) are a great read. Also, the "Age of Fire" series by E.E. Knight are fantastic. The main characters are dragons, and the world-building is often times breathtaking.
I'm a big reader of what would be considered "urban fantasy", and highly recommend the Kitty Norville series by Carrie Vaughn, as well as the Mercy Thompson and Alpha and Omega series by Patricia Briggs. If you like well-written novels about werewolves, vampires, and how they would interact in our modern-day world, you'll love these.
If you like a little steampunk with your fantasy, read "The Parasol Protectorate" series by Gail Carriger. They're fast paced, a great read, and fun to boot. I mean, how can you not like a vibrant and engaging protagonist whose main weapon is a brass-tipped parasol?
Yes, Age of Fire! And here's me thinking I was the only one who read those books...
I think my favorite character is Wistala. The fact that I'm a bookhound has nothing to do with it, of course. ;)
Well, I pretty much recommend anything by Neil Gaiman. Tamora Pierce, too; just make sure you read the different series in order, otherwise it won't make as much sense. (Chronological order of the sets are the Song of the Lioness quartet, The Immortals Quartet, the Protector of the Small quartet, and Daughter of the Lioness, which is just two books. She's also still writing another series in the same universe, the Beka Cooper series, which is sort of a prequel series to the others.
On principle, I also must recommend the Redwall series, the Artemis Fowl series, and Lloyd Alexander's Prydain Chronicles. There's also a book series by Margaret Weis and Tracy Hickman, called the Death Gate Cycle, which is rather good. I'm still in the middle of reading it myself.
You'll notice a pattern here. I practically never read anything that's not fantasy.
Read it. Love it. Worship Lilac (*fangirl squee* *metaphysical Gibbs-slap to self*)
And I also suggest the Hunger Games : D
It's a really awesome but not very well-known series by.. *checks* Gayle Greeno. The first book, and admittedly the only one I have read so far, although the other two are waiting for me at home, is called Finders Seekers. It's kind of sci-fi disguised as fantasy, a bit like Dragonriders of Pern.
And it has giant telepathic cats!
I can't wait to get back home and read the other books.
I read the series several years ago, so my memories aren't very clear, but I enjoyed it, and the sequels, too. It's good stuff.
I wonder if you've also heard of Irene Radford's "Dragon Nimbus" series. They're another sci-fi-as-fantasy type set-up, though it's mostly fantasy in the early novels. The sci-fi comes more into play in the later "Stargods" series. There are dragons (Her Dragons Are Different), flying cats, and magic. I don't know if they're the best books ever, but they're certainly fun (and badfic-free, since the author forbids it).
~Neshomeh
Sounds cool, I'll try and find it.
To Labranum and Techo-Dan:
I haven't read anything on either of your lists. They certainly look interesting though. Thanks!
Guvnor of Space
Full of swears and horrifying acts of violence, but if you read Stephen King that shouldn't bother you. I don't think I can adequately describe why I like his stuff, but he's my current favourite.
I like pretty much anything written by Anne McCaffrey. Her Pern series is always a good bet and there are, I'm pretty sure, more than thirty books in that one series alone, so it will keep you busy for a while.
I like Xanth novels by Pierce Anthony. They have a sort of plot thread that tenuously winds through all of them, but the way they are written really does not require you to read them in order.
I liked the first few novels in the A Wizard In Rhyme series by Christopher Stasheff, but it jumps the shark after about the 4th or 5th one.
There is the Han Solo Trilogy and the Corellian Trilogy and the X-Wing Series that are all very good in Star Wars without really requiring you to invest heavily in the Extended Universe.
Oh! I can't believe I didn't think to mention this one sooner. Wen Spencer. Amazing writer. I read her Ukiah Oregon series (Hmm, I don't think I can sum this one up quickly other than AWESOME!) and instantly fell in love. She has two other series one starts with Tinker (urban fantasy with Elves, mechanics, and much more!) and and the other one starts with A Brother's Price (kind of dystopian future). I haven't the last two, but I've heard enough discussion of them and seen enough excerpts to know that they will also be very good when I do get around to them.
I liked Tom Clancy's Jack Ryan series. I haven't had time to read them lately. They are too long to read in a day or two with my kids running around distracting me. They are wonderfully complicated books.
The Sherlock Holmes stories by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle. Very good and after you read them you can watch the Granada TV series of them. :)
Artemis Fowl is good, up until the last book.
Then there are stand-alones and classics. Watership Down; The Children of The New Forest; (not a stand alone, but I've never read the rest)--A Wrinkle in Time; The Ear, The Eye and The Arm (One of my all time favorites); The Iceberg Hermit; Carry on Mr. Bowditch
I have read all the Star Wars books you have recomended. As a matter of fact, the first "adult" Star Wars novels I ever read were the Han Solo Trilogy. Awesome Books
Ann McCafferty- I've read some of her stuff, but the only one that really grabbed me was "The City Who Fought." And that was Co-Authored.
Tom Clancy has the same problem as Stephen King. Other than "Cardinal in the Kremlin," "Clear and Present Danger" and whatever he's come out with since "Teeth of the Tiger," I've read (and enjoyed-mostly) all of his stuff. Still, now you've reminded me to getting around to finishing him up too.
Artemis Fowl-I'm now three books behind on him. Good reminder.
I've also read "A Wrinkle in Time," and "The Ear the Eye and the Arm." Three times. It was my favorite stand-alone book in sixth grade.
That's less than half of the stuff on this list. Thanks for putting your time into this. I have a lot to read now.
Snow Crash, by Neal Stephenson is a great read - Douglas Adams meets William Gibson. The rest of Stephenson's stuff is also quite good, if you're a math nerd.
Now that I've already mentioned him, William Gibson does good stuff. It's a lot more heavy philosophy than Stephenson's more approachable works.
Yet another author I really enjoy is Jim Butcher - the Dresden Files are great noir urban fantasy.
As far as sci-fi goes, Kim Stanley Robinson's Red Mars, Green Mars, and Blue Mars are rather epic. Stephenson also wrote some sci-fi, The Diamond Age is definitely worth reading. Louis McMaster Bujold's Vorkosigan Saga is also rather awesome, and available for free (legally!) here.
On the fantastic side, I'm a fan of Mercedes Lackey. She can be hit or miss at times, but she writes incredible characters. I'd suggest staying away from the Phoenix series, as they're on the miss side of the picture.
If you read nothing else of his, read William Gibson's Neuromancer. It is practically THE seminal work for all other cyberpunk fiction. It is a bit dense at times, but you won't regret it.
If you're feeling more in a steam mood, check out Gibson and Sterling's The Difference Engine. It was the novel that established Steampunk as a genre rather than a theme that kind of cropped up from time to time since the 1950s.