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Looking for great imaginative fantasy
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Mitch
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Feb 23, 2013 02:02PM

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Two authors who immediately come to mind are Jonathan Carroll and Steve Aylett.
Carroll is a very well respected American author (although I believe he now lives in Vienna) whose novels are fantasies set in the real world. The fantasy elements are bizarre, dreamlike and often disturbing. His writing is simply superb.
Aylett is a British writer whose books are almost indescribably odd. Inventive and riotous are words that seem appropriate and yet insignificant. Along with bizarre. Apparently Fain the Sorcerer is considered one of his less odd, being a pastiche of standard high fantasy, but I've only read some of his other books (such as the Accomplice series) where the weirdness keeps defying expectations.
EDIT:
Also worth mentioning is Graham Joyce. In the similar ballpark to Carroll, as he is a writer of literary quality who tends to set his books in the real world with fantastical elements. Many of his books also have horror / supernatural overtones.


Tamahome wrote: "If you want a graphic novel, Brian K. Vaughan's Saga is very imaginative."
A great choice. A mix of SF and fantasy. A modern classic.
Also in graphic novels I would suggest The Sandman and Bone
Bone is a YA comic that does have appeal for all ages.
The Sandman is definitely a lot darker and not for younger readers.
A great choice. A mix of SF and fantasy. A modern classic.
Also in graphic novels I would suggest The Sandman and Bone
Bone is a YA comic that does have appeal for all ages.
The Sandman is definitely a lot darker and not for younger readers.
Maybe Neil Gaiman might be good, someone has already suggested The Sandman graphic novels but he also does books, maybe American Gods or Neverwhere.

The guy gets pegged as horror and there are some horror elements in his books but he's far more fantasy than horror. These books are like someone's dream got married to an acid trip and then it had a baby who got high on mescaline. They are very good but very crazy imaginative.


Also under older books, The Phantom Tollbooth and The Neverending Story.

Or, if you can track them down, Man of Gold by M.A.R. Barker, or The Shattered World by Michael Reaves.





I didn't expect so many responses. So many of these sound good and I'm having trouble deciding which to read. Champagne problems, I guess.

I've discovered several authors that way.
Examples-
Wild card series edited by George R.R. Martin
Thieves World series edited by Robert Lynn Asprin
The Mammoth Book of Steampunk edited by Sean Wallace


Don't overlook older titles. Books by Lord Dunsany and Hannes Bok, for instance. H.P. Lovecraft's Dream-Quest of Unknown Kadath is a good choice. James Branch Cabell is another one to look at. I don't enjoy his writing, too ironic, but plenty of others do. Clark Ashton Smith straddles the boarder of fantasy and horror. All these authors had a wild immagination and plenty of color.
The H. Rider Haggard stories also have plenty of color, She, The World's Desire, and The People of the Mist lack the wild, psychotic, drug-like stories of the others but still have enough for a good time. Plenty of good reads.
The H. Rider Haggard stories also have plenty of color, She, The World's Desire, and The People of the Mist lack the wild, psychotic, drug-like stories of the others but still have enough for a good time. Plenty of good reads.


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