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Favourite Sci-Fi / Fantasy Books of all time... What's yours?

I'm gonna add a few more authours into the mix:

William Gibson:
His ability to extrapolate what shady people will do with new technology is just about unmatched, in my opinion

Lauren Beukes:
Really cool, often dark, takes on classic sci-fi thriller concepts. I highly recommend "The Shining Girls" which is about a time-travelling serial killer

well, there's a reason why the whole cyberpunk genre was basically fleshed out by Gibson...

William Gibson is awesome if only for this one quote:

“Before you diagnose yourself with depression or low self-esteem, first make sure that you are not, in fact, just surrounded by assholes.”
 
William Gibson is awesome if only for this one quote:

“Before you diagnose yourself with depression or low self-esteem, first make sure that you are not, in fact, just surrounded by assholes.”

...has anyone put that on a poster? I kind of want that framed and hung on the wall over my desk.

Seriously though, ever feel like there's too much to read and not enough time? I'm working my way through some classics right now. Dante's Inferno, a history of Henry V by Christopher Allmand, and one of Tom Holt's novel collections. If you've never read it, try to find a copy of Holt's Faust Among Equals, if only for the scene where the giant wheel of cheese rolls over some demons.
 
I found this series riveting and the concept well constructed:
Daemon and Freedom comprise a two-part novel by the author Daniel Suarez about a distributed, persistent computer application, the Daemon, that begins to change the real world after the original programmer's death.
 
Just seen some activity on this thread, totally forgot to check in after almost a year.

So after not reading any fantasy whatsover for about six years (2014-2020), I went pretty hard last year during the initial lockdown period, and after a short break I am on a serious binge again right now. Pretty dialed in on settings with hard magic systems currently (essentially magic following strict rules and acting almost like additional forces of nature, interacting with real laws of nature like gravity in predictable, reproducable ways, that are known to the magic users in those settings).

Already mentioned in this thread, +1 for the Cosmere from Brian Sanderson. I started with the Mistborne trilogy, which was great. Went on to Warbreaker, amazing trope subversion, lol. Then Stormlight Archives, yeah that's the really amazing stuff right there. Some nice unusual ingridients added to the magic system and great character writing. Going where it hurts, but keeping very good care to not overdo it.

Lightbringer universe by Brent Weeks. Five books, first one is "The Black Prism". Mages that can create matter from light, type of "material" depends on the color of light they can manipulate. Classic coming-of-age story for the main character, but again 2-3 nice trope subversions and also told from the point of view of several vastly different characters.

Powder Mage universe by Brian McClellan. Two trilogies (Powder Mage/Gods of Blood and Powder), first book is "Promise of Blood". 18./19. century style line warware with musketeers, field artillery, limited use of cavalry? Titular powder mages that use black powder as the source of their power and can manipulate it do deadly effects? Also another kind of mages that are more traditional elemental mages, stupidly powerful but not immune to a bullet to the brain? Also gods. But not really gods. What is a god? Normally not a fan of fantasy settings that are too "modern", but this is just great. Nice cast of characters, with some unusal choices for the second trilogy.

Dresden Files universe by Jim Butcher. A hefty 17 books at this point, first one is "Storm Front". "Philip Marlowe meets Buffy, the Vampire Slayer." It's a review quote for the first book, and it's not even kidding. Not hard magic, pretty much going all in on pentagrams, summoning/protection circles, blood magic, power of names etc., but rules and limits still apply. I only read the first book so far, but it was amazing. Magic is a part of the world, but it's not really known, or let's say people are not really accepting the existence of magic yet. It's just on the cusp of becoming part of everyday life. Set in the early 90s in Chicago, following Harry Dresden, paranormal investigator and the only wizard in the telephone book. As an avid Shadowrun fan I am very interested to see where the author takes this. Also using first person narrative, which I am a big fan of. Going to start the second book tomorrow.
 
J
Lightbringer universe by Brent Weeks. Five books, first one is "The Black Prism". Mages that can create matter from light, type of "material" depends on the color of light they can manipulate. Classic coming-of-age story for the main character, but again 2-3 nice trope subversions and also told from the point of view of several vastly different characters.
i have also read this one. it is very good
 
Hmm. I know I've mentioned them before, but Glen Cook's The Black Company is a great take on the fantasy mercenary company in a 'magic messed with everyone' kind of grimdark setting. He put out a new volume in the series recently, though it wasn't my favorite of the lot.
 
I don't remember if I've mentioned this yet or not, but Brandon Sanderson's Stormlight Saga is great.
 
The following books are part of my list. In no particulair order:

- The Hobbit and Lord of the Rings. I started in The Silmarillion but lacked the will to stumble through the first couple of chapters so gave up on that.
- the series 'De Roodburcht', 'Het Zuidland' and 'Het Moswoud' I read as a child, probebly my first fantasy books. I only recently found out that these are the Dutch translations of the Redwall series :oops:
- during my study I read about two-third of the Shannara series. Still very fond of the Stories, maybe I'll re-read them sometime(what I rearely do with books)
- my little brother was into The Ranger's Apprentice when the Dutch versions came out, so after him I read all of those. The last 2 of the serie where harder to get through but overall a nice serie set in fictional medieval scene.

That is it for now. I'll think about all other books I read and which fit the theme ;)

Grrr, Imrahil

Last week I have purchased my very own copies of the Lord of the Rings (in Dutch) at a second hand store for 3 euros total :):)

20220420_093705.jpg 20220420_093721.jpg

Grrr, Imrahil
 
Whilst I really like Lord of the Rings, I always find myself preferring the Hobbit. I guess it helps it is less a world at stake plot and there feels a lot more grey morality with all of the characters.
100 % agree.

A few people have mentioned the kingkiller series. I don't get it. Not to say that you can't enjoy it, just that I didn't. I read the name of the wind, and genuinely can't think of any reason to continue that series. Luckily, neither can Rothfuss.


Here are a few authors that I recommend reading anything they have written.

Robert Rankin

Niel Gaiman

Terry Pratchett

Douglas Adams

A few series and books that I liked as a child:

The Oz series by Frank L. Baum

The Chronicles of Narnia

Enders Game

The Dragonlance Series

The Master of Five Magics

But mostly I liked reading horror books and anthologies. If you can find the Skin Trade, it had a few short stories from various authors, with the title story being a short werewolf story by George R.R. Martin.
 
A few people have mentioned the kingkiller series. I don't get it. Not to say that you can't enjoy it, just that I didn't. I read the name of the wind, and genuinely can't think of any reason to continue that series. Luckily, neither can Rothfuss.

Ha!

I have to say that I'm a fan and I'm very much hoping he does FINALLY get done with writing the last one. :)

Here are a few authors that I recommend reading anything they have written.

Robert Rankin

Niel Gaiman

Terry Pratchett

Douglas Adams

A few series and books that I liked as a child:

The Oz series by Frank L. Baum

The Chronicles of Narnia

Enders Game

The Dragonlance Series

The Master of Five Magics

But mostly I liked reading horror books and anthologies. If you can find the Skin Trade, it had a few short stories from various authors, with the title story being a short werewolf story by George R.R. Martin.

Thanks for the additions!

I'm totally with you on Neil Gaiman, Chronicles of Narnia, Enders Game (somehow I never really got into the series, I read Enders Shadow and didn't want to continue after that).

I'll have to try Robert Rankin, Dragonlance (somehow I think I might have read SOMETHING on that series, but can't remember it) and the Master of Five Magics sounds interesting!
 
somehow I think I might have read SOMETHING on that series, but can't remember it) and the Master of Five Magics sounds interesting!
Dragonlance is a D&D thing, so if you are familiar with those games, you will have a glancing knowledge at least.

Master of the five Magics was an inspiration to The Kingkiller magic system, as well as an influence on Avatar the Last Airbender. So at least you know it's in good company!
 
Dragonlance is a D&D thing, so if you are familiar with those games, you will have a glancing knowledge at least.

Master of the five Magics was an inspiration to The Kingkiller magic system, as well as an influence on Avatar the Last Airbender. So at least you know it's in good company!

Dragonlance is awesome. My favorite series in that setting is Commander Kang and the First Dragonarmy Engineering Corps. Draconian Engineers are awesome, especially when it involves making a catapult for the sole purpose of flinging your minotaur commanding officer at the enemy! :D

If you have not run across him, Tom Holt does a typically British-Humor modern-day fantasy series. He also writes historical-ish fiction under the pseudonym K.J.Parker. I recommend Sixteen Ways to Defend a Walled CIty and the two sequels. They are kind of grim though - no happy endings here.
 
have not run across him, Tom Holt does a typically British-Humor modern-day fantasy series. He also writes historical-ish fiction under the pseudonym K.J.Parker. I recommend Sixteen Ways to Defend a Walled CIty and the two sequels. They are kind of grim though - no happy endings here

I am going to look for some of his stuff this weekend.
 
I am going to look for some of his stuff this weekend.

My favorite Tom Holt modern fantasy book is Faust Among Equals, but Expecting Someone Taller is good too. He's also got a mini-series within that where modern-day people buy land and settle in totally-not-Middle-Earth, shaking up the status quo.
 
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