Aimless, I highly recommend Branderson's other books--each separate world that he writes has a unique magic system, and they can be very fascinating. I still love Allomancy and Hemalurgy the most, but some of his other ones are equally innovative. For quick reads,
Elantris and
Warbreaker are each standalones, and both are shorter than
Mistborn: the Final Empire, so they should not take you long. After those, you should read
The Way of Kings, which as you might know is the first book released out of the planned ten in his
The Stormlight Archives. It has wonderful worldbuilding and characterization, or at least on par with
Mistborn, but with the added prospect of MORE. Branderson might not be the darkest, deepest, or greatest author, but he is both creative and driven, so we get the promise of something new and interesting on a fairly frequent basis with him.
So, yeah. If you liked
Mistborn, I recommend that you read
The Way of Kings ASAP.
UseOfWeapons, I've not read Carey's books yet, but I do have a bit of knowledge about what they're about, and honestly at least from the initial glance it seems as though she wrote them with an agenda (as an intentional counterpoint to the prudish nature of most Western fiction). How well does she weave that into her books, if she truly does have an agenda along those lines? I can see from your "Interests" that you're likely to agree with her on those points, but objectively, does she do a good job combining narrative and agenda? Or does she hit you over the head with it the way Phillip Pullman did in
His Dark Materials?
This post has been edited by a Reindeer: 07 April 2012 - 04:28 PM