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September 12th, 2007, 06:05 PM
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Lieutenant General
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Re: OT: good fantasy books
Interesting thread, I'm obviously a fantasy reader myself and with an opinion
I like Martin, Erikson and Jordan very much and those 3 are the best series I know
I think Magician (Feist) is the best single volume you can have and if I had to pick 1 book on a deserted island this would be it. Other series of Feist are nice, often the thicker the books the better the series (yes last series are less good )
Hobb is good, not as good as the first 3 I mentioned but all books are of same (good) quality, no below avarage books or mini's like Feist has done.
The prince of nothing series is good too, I like it very much.
I think Goodkind isn't all that, it started nice but the way he keeps just finding something new in each book makes them almost look like separate books instead of a series and I dislike that (I hope you all get what I mean by this.)
The black company I do not know but considering the reactions I'll look for it
C.S. Friedman is very high in some lists but IMHO just mediocre.
Eddings is nice to read one of his first series, but if you read all it is very much alike. The newer books are even less good.
Not to impressed with Donaldson
And I SO MUCH want to find a book with the original Conan story in one cover.. but dun even know which ones that would be and I've not even found one here in the Netherlands
Hmm K.J. Parker and Fencer.. that rung a bell too.. I have the first book here in dutch and liked it VERY much.. too bad I never saw anything of it again.. maybe look for it in english.. never knew there where more books of it
already.
I want to put R.A. Salvatore on the list too, not most brilliant of writing but DRZZT and Artemis Entreri must be some of my most favorite characters of all time
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September 12th, 2007, 06:06 PM
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First Lieutenant
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Re: OT: good fantasy books
Song of Ice and Fire were great for low magic books, lots of combat, intrigue and a good "world". Valyrian steel, minor dragons, and nebulous evil bits.
Personally I like the dragonlance model, group of friends turn hero, get powerful, save world. Unfortunately its been done to death so its the rare version that sticks out.
Discworld model is nice, build a "world" and just tell stories in it. If the concept is good enough, the stories can be hit or miss but still positive re: forgotten realms/sanctuary.
My take on fantasy is that by being unreal it opens up a lot of options. It can combine elements of all the major genres without being pigeonholed: Love, sex, intrigue, murder, mystery, horror, military, government, coming of age, politics, "save the world", one hero/multiple hero, etc. Whatever those 7 great themes that find themselves repeated through history are, one fantasy book can encompass them all.
"Magic" can be construed in whatever way floats your boat. High magic, no problem. Low magic, you bet. Forgotten magic, ancient technology, magic vs technology, magic and technology, even stories lacking magic but referring to old magic are feasible.
Most fantasy books are just kludges of other plotlines, with fantastical characters or plot devices. A good portion of them could be easily set in the real world, they'd just be boring.
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September 12th, 2007, 06:11 PM
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First Lieutenant
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Re: OT: good fantasy books
In regards to the Black Company, I'm a big fan of military fantasy. Erikson's are good, Martin has some good bits although I think the intrigue and politics are the main focus, John Ringo has a kind of post-apocalyptic series that is great, and Chris Bunch has a nice trilogy.
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September 12th, 2007, 07:19 PM
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Second Lieutenant
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Re: OT: good fantasy books
Quote:
Mr_Matt said:
Out of curiosity what do you look for in a fantasy? I find it impossible to find a good original fantasy these days. Everything is Orcs, Elves and wizards(BORING). Dominions is like the only fantasy game without those and I absolutely praise it because of that. Although, it has dwarves... grr
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Writing is tough (I've tried). Good luck with that.
What do I look for? Tough to answer, because it's tough to generalize about writing. No sooner do you swear off adolescent coming-of-age fantasies with magic and swords than Gene Wolfe writes The Wizard Knight and you have to take it all back and admit there's something left in the subgenre.
So I'll answer twice but maybe it's the same answer, twice. First, it shouldn't be derivative. It should be its own thing. Erikson's massive Malazan series isn't like anything that came before it, not really. Brust writes about elves, but they ain't Tokein's, or D&D's, or anyone else's. And when you pick up China Mieville, you probably haven't seen anything like it, ever. So, for fantasy, originality is key. (I mean, look at Patricia McKillip. Every darn book, she uses wizards, elves, dragons, forests, castles, and somehow she turns each one into a work of art, because she puts them together like no one else. Plus, her prose is absolutely beautiful.)
The other way to say that answer is to paraphrase a quote from Wolfe as related by Brust (I can't find the reference): the key to writing is to show the reader something cool, over and over. Skip the parts that aren't cool.
OK, and a third, less philosophical answer: as I get older, I find that characterization matters more and more. Doesn't have to be "realistic", just richely detailed, interesting, and believable within the story.
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September 12th, 2007, 09:25 PM
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General
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Re: OT: good fantasy books
Did you write a book, djo?
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September 13th, 2007, 12:53 AM
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Corporal
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Re: OT: good fantasy books
Ok, everyone here seems to be going over the same stuff, so let me add something new.
I would suggest, with most of my heart and a lease on my soul, the work of David Gemmel. Seriously, it is magical.
A relatively new auther that has grabbed me is Jim Butcher. His Dresdan Files stuff is good, and i really have enjoyed his new series, The Alera Codex. The first two are a little off, the second fixing the first one's mistakes but loseing the first ones sucesses, but the third brings everything good about the other two into a brilliant novel.
L.E. Moddessitt Jr. is a good writer, but each book is a 50/50 chance of genius or boredom. I really liked "THe Magic Engineer", but everyone is different.
Micheal Stackpole is hard to describe because his stuff starts out good, but it tends to get sidetracked.
Cook has been mentioned but I would like to concur. The Black Company is fantastic and his new books (Instrumentalities of the Night) are pretty good.
I would also like to express my opinions on Robert Jordan and Martin. One major point of a good writer is the ability to kill a developed character. Jordan and Martin are the two extremes in this. Jordan can't let them die and Martin kills them off like they're nothing. Something in between is the sweet spot, but both authers are still good, they just annoy me so.
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September 13th, 2007, 05:47 PM
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Second Lieutenant
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Re: OT: good fantasy books
Quote:
PashaDawg said:
Did you write a book, djo?
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I've started once or twice but never got beyond a handful of chapters. I have written short stories, novelettes, and novellas. Only one was good enough to submit, but it was rejected by the few magazines I sent it to.
I am only somewhat better at writing fiction than I am at playing Dominions.
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September 13th, 2007, 09:27 PM
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General
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Re: OT: good fantasy books
Sad to say, I'm going to be reading a lot lately, my hard drive died, so all I have is my work computer, and I can't play Dominions on that
Has anyone read the series of books the movie Night Watch is based on? I guess the originals are in Russian (as is the movie). I'm going to be checking them out.
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September 13th, 2007, 10:48 PM
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First Lieutenant
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Re: OT: good fantasy books
I read "Night Watch", not impressed. Clunky writing, shaky premise. Good portion of that may be due to translation, but meh.
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September 15th, 2007, 02:16 PM
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Corporal
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Re: OT: good fantasy books
Nice thread
Call me strange, but I found that reading one-off fantasy novels tend to be a bit weak in the background department.
So I tend to read historical mystery novels and RPG sourcebooks as a sort of "imaginative fertilizer", to better set the stage and tone of fantastic story-telling.
Both of these sources of writing DEMAND a level of precision and detail that I typically don't find in novels, due to space and plot constraints.
Unfortunately, you can't stop the story and ask for clarification in a novel. No Pause, Zoom or Rotate here, folks.
Specifically, I recommend the historical mysteries written by Stephen Saylor, Barry Hughart and the Brother Cadbury series.
For RPG Sourcebooks, you can't go wrong with Exalted, Ars Magica, ICE Middle-Earth, Earthdawn and Warhammer RPG.
And then, there's Samurai Cat...
Edit: And The Redeemer... both of which greatly contributed to my appreciation for gratuitous violence
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