Well I’m craving something in this genre but I’m a bit overwhelmed and underwhelmed at the same time. So many titles and yet I’m not sure what to read. Maybe you can help?

I’m looking for something in a high fantasy setting. I’m not too keen on heavy politics and war driven plots (though, I can read that ). What really gets me is interesting characters, good action and magical creatures.

I’ve loved anything Discworld and I’ve also enjoyed the First Law books by Abercrombie.

I’m finding that Tolkien, Sanderson and George RR Martin appear on every fantasy list I come across, so if you do recommend something I’d appreciate it be something other than that.

1 point

Assassin’s Apprentice trilogy by Robin Hobbs

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3 points

Fairy Tale by Stephen King is a refreshing take on classic fantasy themes!

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5 points

David Gemmell’s Legend.

He was from a rough upbringing and thought he was going to be dying of cancer and wrote a book about an aged hero of old who was now past his prime.

It was a misdiagnosis and he went on to write a lot more.

They are all excellent, and different enough from what you normally end up reading in the genre to be worth a look. There’s a bit of a more rawness to his books I really enjoy.

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2 points

David Eddings? I read him way back when I was a kid (~35 years ago). Think the series was called The Belgariad or Belgarion. The first 3-6 books were fun in a light yet captivating, magicy, fantasy way.

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3 points
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I second this! There are two series in the world: The Belgariad and The Mallorean. Both are really good, and there’s two standalone books that are intended to be read after both series called Belgarath the Sorcerer and Polgara the Sorceress.

The books are pretty much classic high fantasy, and each one is a fairly quick read!

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The Powder Mage trilogy is kind of fun. The setting is more late 18th/early 19th century than medieval, and it is far from perfect, but a bit of French revolution era fantasy with magic and gods and stuff never hurt anyone.

China Miéville’s New Crobuzon series must qualify as fantasy somehow. It’s New Weird, but you have weird magic and grotesquely weird fantasy races living in a fantasy world, so it must count. Also, because Miéville is some flavor of trotskyist you get a fantasy world written from some kind of Marxist perspective, but because it is a fictional world where Stalin never existed you don’t have to read 50 pages about how every successful socialist revolution was never real.

What I’ve read of Robin Hobb has been fun, but it’s been more than a decade so take that recommendation with a pinch of salt.

You could also hate read David Eddings, a child abusing drunk of a hack author who hated the genre of fantasy and all of its readers. That’s what I’m doing, because I want to examine my childhood idol more closely. This is a bad idea and will not improve your life in any way, but it is something you could do.

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4 points

Thanks for the suggestions. I’m curious about the last paragraph. You see, I found an Eddings audiobook and I started with it, considering I’ve seen the name recommended here a few times. I’ve been thinking it’s well written but also really really boring. Is this why you say he hated the readers? Have you figured why he achieved idol status for you during your childhood?

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He got into writing fantasy because he thought the people who read fantasy would read absolutely anything. He wanted to get as much money as possible for as little effort as possible, and since he didn’t consider fantasy to be real literature he figured it would be easier than adventure books about rock climbing, which he had written before, because he had to do literally no research. Reading them as an adult it is obvious that they are very lazily written. Every character has a personality that can be boiled down to a single adjective like “grumpy”, “sneaky”, “funny”, or in one very annoying case “having an axe”. This lazy writing however means that because the characters never really have much to say about anything things can move at an incredibly fast pace. This is what I liked as a child.

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3 points

Fast!? I’ve gone through over 2/3 of the first book and I was thinking the worst so far had been the slow pace. I do agree the characters haven’t said much but I figured it was because they were keeping things a secret from the MC. Thanks for sharing your perspective though!

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