Abyss, on 25 June 2010 - 04:57 AM, said:
Dresden Files series by Jim Butcher. Many excellent suggestions upthread but this one will rock you. Each book is like a Hollywood blockbuster in 3-400 pages and while the first ones' okay, the second is better, the third is awesome and it only gets better.
worrywort, on 25 June 2010 - 07:26 AM, said:
Yah, with the Dresden books I was hooked by the second book. Handling all those different kinds of werewolves really showed an above-average dedication to handling supernatural lore with enthusiasm and ambition. And he manages to keep the stakes high while maintaining variety and inventive action.
One stand alone fantasy I forgot to mention was Jonathan Strange & Mr. Norrell. It's a long, strange Victorian style novel that's part fairy tale part alternate history. If you're a pretty patient reader, and enjoy the style of the writing, it really pays off.
I recently read
Grave Peril (just finished
Dead Beat) and I personally didn't find it all that thrilling. To me it was weaker than
Storm Front even. Crucify me for my blasphemy if you must, but there was a lot of 'if only I'd acted faster' whining from Harry, the 'villain' wasn't nearly as interesting or as good a mystery as the mad sorcerer manipulating the weather or the rampaging super werewolf we'd seen previously (by this I mean the Nightmare, not the one pulling the strings), and it wasn't nearly as funny as the first two. In a lot of the interaction Harry was just being a dick to the 'bad guys' (such as Ferrovax), getting the crap kicked out of him and feeling sorry for himself. Thankfully though, the awesome factor cranks up a notch after that.
Jonathan Strange and Mr. Norrell is a really good book, made better by the fact it's standalone. However, I think a lot of people would be put off by the style - sort of like the 18th century 'comedy of manners' type of novels (such as Austen). Plus it takes a long time to get going, and Norrell is just a egomaniacal dick in the beginning, so it's hard to relate. The footnotes really make you want to meet Jonathan Strange as well, so it was frustrating that it took a couple hundred pages for him to even make an appearance (even though he's even more of a dick than Norrell

). Still, marvellous book if you are a patient reader.
Now, more must reads...
Steven King's
The Dark Tower
Sean Russell's
The Swan's War (most probably haven't heard of it, but vastly underrated series in my mind)
Guy Gavriel Kay's
Sarantine Mosaic
Tim Powers'
Anubis Gates
Jim Butcher's
Codex Alera
Alan Campbell's
Deepgate Codex
Phillip Pullman's
His Dark Materials
Matthew Woodring Stover's
Heroes Die (and to a
slightly lesser extent the rest of the
Acts of Caine novels)
Roger Zelazny's
Amber Chronicles
Brandon Sanderson's
Mistborn/
Elantris
Anne Mccaffrey's
Pern novels (although perhaps a bit stale by now)
Robert Holdstock's
Mythago Cycle?
Any of Fritz Lieber's stuff is also fantastic.
Wow, that's a sizeable chunk of my fantasy reading. Got a bit carried away there.
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