The Sword and Laser discussion
Recommendations for books with immortal character(s)
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I really enjoyed Markus Heitz' The Dwarves series as it contains the 'Alfar' or dark elves. These guys are seriously evil elves and, being elven, live forever. I really liked the different angle to the elves being evil and not all goody-two-shoes and reciting poems and singing songs like in conventional fantasy.

I suppose Zelazny's This Immortal is spoiled by the title. Diaspora by Greg Egan deals with the "uploaded mind" type of immortality.
On the fantasy side, there's the web serial The Zombie Knight, which is about a guy who is granted immortality by the Grim Reaper in exchange for doing some work for him.


The Riverworld series by Philip Jose Farmer. Every person that ever lived on Earth is resurrected on Riverworld and if they get killed they just get resurrected again the next day.
The Lord of the Rings. Elves and others are immortal.
American Gods by Neil Gaiman.


Also, it may be just me, but I'm a sucker for the Thor in comics. There is plenty of "relative immortality" in those and a lot of casual references to events hundreds or thousands of years old, adding to the common place feel of that immortality to the Asgardians. Any decent sized library system will have collections of Thor comics you can get within the system or on inter library loan.


I know that Brandon Sanderson's Elric knock-off Warbreaker has immortal characters, but the story takes place over a short time frame so you don't get a sense of them being ageless.

The Eternal Champion is more of an archetype than one character, they live and die normally.

Trike's suggestion of This Immortal certainly works, as does a lot Zelazny (e.g., the Amber Chronicles, Lord of Light, Creatures of Light and Darkness, Isle of the Dead) ... He was really drawn to characters that had lived long enough to be world-weary beyond normal human measure.

The Baroque Cycle books in particular seem to be difficult for people to get into, though I quite enjoyed the historical fiction. And the common character added a little depth to the story.

The Baroque Cycle books in particular seem to be difficult for peop..."
Enoch Root was my favorite character from Cryptonomicon and when I heard he was in the Baroque Cycle I went out and bought the series but I haven't read them yet. I hope to at least start the series this year.



Zelazny's The Great Book of Amber(Chronicles of Amber) should also fit the bill. Though, super long lived doesn't mean unkillable.
I should probably just set up a key on my keyboard to add "Roger Zelazny's Chronicles of Amber," since it's what I recommend 90% of the time.



On the subject of vampires, The Vampire Tapestry is about an extremely long-lived blood drinker. The author seems to have made a solid attempt at making such a being at least vaguely plausible. That part was interesting to me, although I had some trouble following psychoanalysis practices I had never heard of before and that seemed pseudosciencey to me.

And then there's Orlando by Virginia Woolf. It's not strictly fantasy, but judging by the film (I know, I know ... it's on my to-read list!) it could be of interest to anyone who likes speculative fiction/fantasy.


Dude, there's a list for it? I wonder what other lists exist? Goodreads is like Excel for me. I know I'm probably only seeing and using a small portion of what it is capable of.
Books mentioned in this topic
Wild Seed (other topics)The Boat of a Million Years (other topics)
The Crystal Shard (other topics)
Orlando (other topics)
The Boat of a Million Years (other topics)
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Authors mentioned in this topic
R.A. Salvatore (other topics)C.J. Cherryh (other topics)
Poul Anderson (other topics)
Neal Stephenson (other topics)
Neal Stephenson (other topics)
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I have read the Brent Weeks' Night Angel trilogy and Kevin Hearne's Iron Druid Chronicles. I even have been watching 'Forever' on ABC even though its not very good.
Any suggestions on what I should read next? I would prefer Fantasy, but Sci-Fi is fine too.