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The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo The Millennium trilogy is read by Simon Vance and I doubt I would've read these if not for him
Terrier The Beka Cooper/Provost's Dog trilogy was very well done, one of my favorites by Tammy Pierce
Hood The King Raven trilogy by Stephen Lawhead is excellent
The Cuckoo's Calling The Cormoran Strike books are fantastic, and Robert Glenister narrates wonderfully
A Game of Thrones The Song of Ice and Fire-- Roy Dotrice deserves all the awards for the gazillion voices he creates for these books

Outlander - the incomparable Davina Porter
Odd Thomas - David Aaron Baker
and the sleeper:
Swim the Fly - Nick Podehl

The First Man in Rome haven't read past the first book yet though

Brother Cadfael, by Ellis Peters; go for the versions read by either Stephen Thorne or Patrick Tull. Mysteries set in medieval England. Start with One Corpse Too Many, then go back to A Morbid Taste for Bones.
Seconding the recommendations of both Gail Carriger's series

Another would be: The Spellman Files.

The Nero Wolfe series by Rex Stout and read by Michael Prichard--John first mentioned these and I followed shortly.
Agatha Christie's Hercule Poirot read by Hugh Fraser.
Scumble River mysteries by Denise Swanson... this is a cozy mystery series set in a small town in Illinois with a school psychologist as a protagonist.
Maisie Dobbs Mysteries series by Jacqueline Winspear set in the time between World Wars in England.
I also second CatBookMom's recs with extra hurrahs for the In Death/Eve Dallas series.
Oh, and any series by Molly Harper and read by Amanda Roncone... Nice Girls Don't..., Naked Werewolf... and Halfmoon Hollow.
I follow over seventy series so I guess I could go on but this will do for a start.

Do you ever get mixed up ?"
Actually, no, possibly because the series I follow are fairly different from one another. But even similar series have a different enough feel to keep them separate.
Three series I didn't mention earlier but really love are The Dresden Files by Jim Butcher read by James Marsters, The Rivers of London/Peter Grant by Ben Aaronovitch and read by Kobna Holbrook Smith, and The Alex Verus series by Benedict Jacka and read by Gildart Jackson. These are all urban fantasy yet still quite distinct from one another. Oh, and while quite different, another series is The Iron Druid Chronicles by Kevin Hearne and read by Luke Daniels. Love all of these.

Any suggestions?

John's recommendation of the John Ceepak/Danny Boyle mystery series, starting with Tilt-a-Whirl would seem to fit


White Cat
Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone
Unwind
Rot and Ruin
Hounded
Bloody Jack: Being an Account of the Curious Adventures of Mary "Jacky" Faber, Ship's Boy
The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo
Angus, Thongs and Full-Frontal Snogging
The Monstrumologist
Cinder
Still Life
The Cuckoo's Calling
Black Cherry Blues

Some of these are mystery series, but not cozy:
Lee Child: Jack Reacher
Robert Galbraith aka J. K. Rowling: Cormeran Strike
Tarquin Hall: Vish Puri, Most Private Investigator
Christopher Healy, Todd Harris: The League of Princes
Craig Johnson: Walt Longmire Mysteries
Laurie R. King: Mary Russell and Sherlock Holmes
Scott Lynch: The Gentleman Bastards
G. M. Malliet: Max Tudor
Marissa Meyer: The Lunar Chronicles
Naomi Novik: Temeraire
Douglas Preston, Lincoln Child: Pendergast
Jodi Taylor: Chronicles of St Mary’s
Marie Bostwick: The Cobbled Court Series
Charles Finch: Charles Lenox Mysteries
Spencer Quinn: Chet and Bernie Mysteries
Andrea Camilleri: Inspector Montalbano Mysteries begin with The Terracotta Dog
Dorothy Gilman: Mrs. Pollifax
John D. MacDonald: Travis McGee
Charlotte MacLeod: Peter Shandy series
Elizabeth Peters: Amelia Peabody
C. J. Sansom: Matthew Shardlake/A Novel of Tudor England
Anthony Trollope: The Chronicles of Barsetshire and The Palliser Novels

I recommend P.G. Wodehouse or John Kendrick Bangs. Those are some absolutely wonderful classics. You can get them mostly for free from librivox too!

Jeanie, I have very similar tastes to yours, as I like almost all the same series you listed! I'll look up the ones I don't recognize.

John Ringo has a couple series that have enhanced the space opera genre: Posleen series and the Looking Glass series.


A couple that I love that haven't been mentioned are: C J Box "Joe Pickett" series and also David Rosenfelt's "Andy Carpenter" series.
Since my tastes are very similar to Miss Susie's I'll have to try Gail Carriger's Souless series, though I'm not normally into paranormal.

I adore the Aubrey/Maturin series. Another series I love is The Dragonriders of Pern. When I read that the Temeraire series was Aubrey/Maturin meets Dragonriders of Pern, I had to read it. I loved the first several books, disliked the one that took the action to Australia, and then liked what came next... some action is very similar to what Jack Aubrey sailed into.

A couple that I love that haven't been mentioned are: C J Box "Joe Pi..."
The Parasol Protectorate, Soulless being the first in that series by Gail Carriger, is a wonderful pastiche of Austen, Romance, paranormal, and Jules Verne. The narration is superb. I found the next few books a little too Perils of Pauline for my taste at times, but it can be a fun romp.

The Runelords (8 books) by David Farland
though I must admit the final book (8) in this series is a letdown.
The Lost, The Circle and Paradise series (all tie together) by Ted Dekker
Excellent yet dark series....rather terrifying and I kept looking over my shoulder for spooks.
I would like to find historical type series but I guess series are easier in fiction....that's ok but sometimes it's nice to learn a thing or two. I rather consider any of Edward Rutherfurd's books to be a linked series even though the others are "stand alone."
There are many moral type series available but IMHO the best are in the YA or even children's classifications.

Thank you Robin for your post. I will look into O'Brian's series.

The other not yet mentioned is Alan Gordon's Fools' Guild series set in Europe and the middle East in the 1200s. He has really researched his history.
vorkosigan i







And you'll find an equal number of enthusiasts for the Jim Dale version.

Books mentioned in this topic
In the Bleak Midwinter (other topics)Speaks the Nightbird (other topics)
Hard Magic (other topics)
The Runelords (other topics)
The Princes of Ireland (other topics)
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Authors mentioned in this topic
Michael J. Sullivan (other topics)Robert McCammon (other topics)
Edward Rutherfurd (other topics)
David Farland (other topics)
Stephen King (other topics)
More...
Soulless by Gail Carriger narrated by Emily Gray
Her Royal Spyness by Rhys Bowen narrated by, Katherine Kellgren
Just to name a couple