SciFi and Fantasy Book Club discussion
Recommendations and Lost Books
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Need some Fantasy Help


The Book of Atrix Wolfe by Patricia A. McKillip (though I warn that her prose is gorgeous, and so can be a bit hard to read)
Three Hearts and Three Lions by Poul Anderson, if you can find it




The Deed of Paksenarrion would be my first choice for that sort of thing. The Bristling Wood is the first in a fairly long series, but there are smaller arcs of about 4 books each in it. Also try Camber of Culdi and the entire Deryni series.

I read Fantasy almost exclusively. Check my read shelf and you will find lots of great stories and some not so great.

I see somebody finally mentioned my second favorite fantasy author, Raymond E. Feist. His stuff is great too. The first book of the Riftwar Saga (Magician, which is now broken into two books, Magician:Apprentice and Magician:Master) absolutely blew me away!


Yay!! Another huge Brooks fan. I can't believe I've never seen him live. He lives in my area. I need to pay more attention, I'm sure there are plenty of opportunities.
I've been burned (by Terry Brooks) before by series not being complete before starting, so I'm waiting for the Kingkiller Chronicle series to be complete before I start it.
I read LeGuin and it fell a little flat for me. I guess everybody is different. I know it is a "classic", but it just didn't "do it" for me.




Have you read her "From Elfland to Poughkeepsie"?


amazing.I have read them all at least a dozen times since childhood.


P.D. wrote: "I think the Lord of the Rings is the appropriate primer for the fantasy genre. Anyone who tells me they love fantasy but don’t like Tolkien is viewed with immediate suspicion. There are some excell..."
I have some pretty large issues with LoTR(4/5 is my rating but how much is tinged by nostalgia I don't know, good odds if I read it fresh I would give it a 3/5) especially since both of my friends who I'm normally am in near lockstep opinion with give it a 2/5.
Most adoring love I see of LOTR among my generation is from people who don't read many books. I have heard I don't like fantasy because nobody will do it better then LOTR and I ask them how much fantasy they have read and it's basically none, it's sheer dogmatic belief that it's the best of the genre so their is no point in reading more.
That being said I feel it's an important read and a good primer if a bit difficult, as it popularized many of the fantasy tropes which may just be assumed in more modern books.

If anything, it's more profound than when I read it in my adolescence.

I am one of the people who never read Shannara because of the first volume, I thought it was a poor copy of LOTR and a very bad book. I have however read Brooks' Kingdom for Sale books and liked them.

I suspect Brooks took the advice of "retype a classic novel verbatim" that's often given to young writers, the idea being that you get the feeling of writing superior prose stuck in your brain somehow. He just took it one more step and simply substituted different names.
I don't know when (or, more importantly, how) Brooks' reputation was salvaged from "total hack" to "master storyteller"... perhaps just the fact he has managed to stick around for so long and people like Sanderson and Rothfuss like him for some reason.

I learned pretty quickly to separate authors I like and recommendations they have.
I always knew people who liked Brooks, I never understood it and based off what I remember when I tried reading him in middle school and high school "total hack" sounds about right. I didn't read anything other then a few Shannara books at the insistence of classmates so maybe he got better. Instead of what I would call aggressively mediocre.
edit: I actually asked my two friends again what they would give LOTR overall they said 3/5 not 2/5 so slight correction there...they really need to get on GR so I don't have to remember.


"He was for long my only audience... But for his interest and unceasing eagerness for more I should never have brought [LotR] to a conclusion."
J.R.R. Tolkien on C.S. Lewis


Your mention of Fritz Lieber just dusted a long forgotten memory of how much I enjoyed the Fahfrd & The Grey Mouser stories.


There are other great fantasy reads and series. It sometimes depends on how "gritty" you want the read to be. Where Tolkien (probably my favorite fantasy is LotR) is a very heroic fantasy others tell a good story but are more dark or have much more blood/filth etc. in the story.

Patricia McKillip has a great series of books about a bard that is quite good too.




I have read the all books you mentioned (of course we all have our own tastes and the fact I love a book or not may not effect how you feel about it) and The Deed of Paksenarrion

I'm also a fan of

Anyway had to recommend


Thats for the recommendations. It turns out I already had Riddle-Master on my tbr. I am a little confused about The Deed of Paksenarrion though. It says books #3-5. Do those 3 stand out from the rest of the series?

I read the ones they call 1 and 2 and found them not nearly as good as the trilogy and unnecessary to the story. I'd hate to have them put you off the trilogy as I find it one the best novels (of any type) out there.
There is another series after the trilogy called The Paladin"s Legacy which follows some of the other characters in the trilogy and it's also a good read...though not quite up to The Deed of Paksenarrion in my opinion.

Ok, thank you.

You also might want to try the The Magic Goes Away. The series is very good.
Books mentioned in this topic
The Hobbit, or There and Back Again (other topics)The Lord of the Rings (other topics)
The Deed of Paksenarrion (other topics)
The Warded Man (other topics)
Into the Storm (other topics)
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Authors mentioned in this topic
Stephen R. Donaldson (other topics)Stephen R. Donaldson (other topics)
Katherine Kurtz (other topics)
Roger Zelazny (other topics)
Michael Moorcock (other topics)
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Thanks,
Arthur