caladanbrood;191587 said:
Fevre Dream - George RR Martin
Not only is this his best book, but it showed that vampires don't all have to flow out of the pen of Lauren K Hamilton. Thank god. Maybe there is hope for that particular sub-genre yet, even if he did write it more than a decade ago.
A quarter-century ago now. The book came out in 1982.
My list:
2010: Odyssey Two by Arthur C. Clarke
My first adult SF novel, which I read when I was nine or ten years old. The reason I'm still reading SF&F now.
The Lord of the Rings by JRR Tolkien
Although I'd read some fantasy before, SF had been my first love until I read this at age sixteen. It changed a lot of opinions I'd developed about the genre.
War and Peace by Tolstoy
Huge and insightful war epic, which began my interest in historical literature and widened my appetite for densely-written texts.
A Storm of Swords by George RR Martin
The best epic fantasy novel written in the last fifty years. Paced to perfection with moments of gut-wrenching betrayal and pain mixed with exhilarating battle sequences and rare moments of triumph. Also features the best swordfight in epic fantasy. Ever. And a killer final chapter as well.
The Nine Hundred Days by Harrison E. Salisbury
The best history text I've ever read, a harrowing account of the bloody Siege of Leningrad by the Wehrmacht's Army Group North during WWII (where nearly one-half the city's population starved to death and the remainder survived on a few grams of bread a day for months on end). No other book I've read shows what savagery human beings are capable of, or what humans are capable of when it comes to survival in the face of overwhelming horror.
The Reality Dysfunction by Peter F. Hamilton
Big, brash, bold, different and a furious page-turner, mixing elements of space opera, thriller, horror and economic theory. Hamilton creates a plausible but still colourful image of humanity six centuries from now and unleashes a genre-bending does of horror upon them. The two sequels are nearly as good, but suffer from pacing problems, whilst the first novel is perfectly judged. Plus the best jungle combat sequences since
Predator.
The Wasp Factory by Iain Banks
Demented, horrific and outrageously funny (the battle with the psychotic rabbit in a minefield is a Monty Python-inspired highlight), Banks' debut novel is simply unfeasibly good and affecting, with an interesting last-minute twist.