Grimdark Fantasy discussion

74 views
Recommendations > Help!

Comments Showing 1-25 of 25 (25 new)    post a comment »
dateUp arrow    newest »

message 1: by Spaz_OL (new)

Spaz_OL If you like great prose, and are talking about the Map of Time series by Felix J Palma, that gets my personal vote.

And no, IMO, Wheel of Time does not get less juvenile.


message 2: by pisang (new)

pisang - Florian | 66 comments If you like good prose, go for the malazan series. After a song of ice and fire, my new favorite. The beginning is a challenge , but you shall be rewarded.


message 3: by Chris, kingtermite (new)

Chris (kingtermite) | 468 comments Mod
I haven't read it yet myself, but I don't think I've ever heard anybody say anything bad about the Malazan series. It's high on my to-read list.


message 4: by Scott (new)

Scott  Hitchcock (lostinthewarrenofchaos) | 89 comments I love ASOIAF and Malazan but you don't want to read those at the same time. Malazan has 10X the characters to remember and is much more complicated.

Mistborn is also very YA but I enjoyed it. Easy read and not overly complicated but a good world.

Divine Cities I've only read book one but it was good and not over complicated. It is more of an Urban Fantasy piece with a bit of spy and espionage mixed in.

First Law is fun and easy to read. It's definitely GrimDark with a good caustic humor if that's your thing.

Definitely do Malazan as it's my favorite but I just wouldn't do it with another complicated series.


message 5: by Silvana (new)

Silvana (silvaubrey) First Law and Divine Cities 100% Yes
Try Gentleman Bastards Sequence too. A bit on the lighter side but not YA.
And Worldbreaker Saga (Kameron Hurley) for great worldbuilding and strong grey characters from all kinds of gender roles.
I also HIGHLY recommend The Fifth Season by NK Jemisin, I forgot the series name sorry.
For traditional fantasy maybe try Farseer Trilogy and the rest of Realm of the Elderling series by Robin Hobb. Mostly coming of age stories but I would not categorize them as YA.


message 6: by Silvana (new)

Silvana (silvaubrey) Forgot to mention The Black Company trilogy (and the rest of the series) by Glen Cook. Quintessential grimdark!


message 7: by Mel (new)

Mel | 88 comments Or "The Faithful and the fallen" series by John Gwynne. I just finished Wrath and it is great!


message 8: by Tracey the Lizard Queen, First In, Last Out (new)

Tracey the Lizard Queen | 573 comments Mod
You can't go wrong with any of those! Also add to that When the Heavens Fall and sequels by Marc Turner.


message 9: by Levi (new)

Levi (levi66) | 44 comments I'll add "The Dagger & The Coin" series by Daniel Abraham (starts with The Dragon's Path). It's grown-up and complex, while still being accessible.


message 10: by Heather (new)

Heather (bruyere) The Emperor's Blades - not Grimdark, not YA. :) And bonus for being a complete series!


message 11: by Reon (new)

Reon I would agree with Scott, personally I rate Malazan as the best fantasy I read. But reading that one in combination with ASOIAF is really really challenging. For dark I second the First Law and the Black company series, I found the Emperor's Blades (Unhewn Trone) book 1 a little ya but it really turned dark in book 2 and 3. Furthermore I would like to add Raven's Shadow (Anthony Ryan), and Bloodsounder's Arc (Jeff Salyards)

For more traditional fantasy: Memory, Sorrow and Thorn (Tad Williams) and Riftwar (Feist)


message 12: by Silvana (new)

Silvana (silvaubrey) Alternative for Mistborn, try Powder Mage trilogy (Brian McClellan). cool magic system, actionpacked, great characters.

I have not read Stormlight Archive by Sanderson though


message 13: by Stephanie (new)

Stephanie | 6 comments Silvana wrote: "First Law and Divine Cities 100% Yes
Try Gentleman Bastards Sequence too. A bit on the lighter side but not YA.
And Worldbreaker Saga (Kameron Hurley) for great worldbuilding and strong grey charac..."

Yes, I just listened to the Fifth Season and thought it was extremely creative and very different from any other SciFi I've yet read


message 14: by Stephanie (new)

Stephanie | 6 comments Scott wrote: "I love ASOIAF and Malazan but you don't want to read those at the same time. Malazan has 10X the characters to remember and is much more complicated.

Mistborn is also very YA but I enjoyed it. Ea..."
I want to get into Malazan but haven't been able to get into it even after listening to the first 3 hours twice!


message 15: by Stephanie (new)

Stephanie | 6 comments Levi wrote: "I'll add "The Dagger & The Coin" series by Daniel Abraham (starts with The Dragon's Path). It's grown-up and complex, while still being accessible."
Just FYI earlier this year he dropped a fifth book in the series The Spider's War, it was excellent. https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/2...


message 16: by pisang (new)

pisang - Florian | 66 comments I read the chapter review in the malazan group on GR everytime i've finished one. These guys are second time readers. Really helps alot!


message 17: by Heather (last edited Dec 16, 2016 10:13AM) (new)

Heather (bruyere) I have heard a lot of times that Malazan is very complex and confusing. It might be difficult in an audio format.

I can't really see Emperor's Blades as all that YA. Are you sure you've read true YA lately? It's horrible stuff!


message 18: by Ojo (new)

Ojo (elawnika) | 9 comments Please don't read Malazan alongside ASOIAF. After 3 false starts over many months, I've finally gone more than halfway with Gardens of the Moon because I gave it undivided attention. You might want to read Emperor's Blade though.


message 19: by Andrew (new)

Andrew To the original question, WoT does indeed get less juvenile but it will never be on the dark end of the fantasy spectrum. My impression of book one was a resounding "meh" until the last 50 pages, but by books 2-3 I was completely engaged. The use of non-human villains decreases as the series goes on, which to me was a very good thing.

WRT the other series you mentioned, LotR wasn't very enjoyable to me and I haven't read Malazan yet. But Mistborn (fun, action-packed), Divine Cities (philosophical/theological tie-ins), and First Law (dark and well-paced) are all among my favorites for differing reasons. Whoever is giving you reading advice has good taste! Each of those three are on my shortlist of series I recommend to people wanting to get into fantasy.


message 20: by Heather (new)

Heather (bruyere) Does First Law get more interesting going into it? I read the first book and it felt so cliche grim dark. Does more magic come into it?


message 21: by pisang (new)

pisang - Florian | 66 comments Yes. But more chopping, slashing and bashing


message 22: by Heather (new)

Heather (bruyere) Not sure I'm a true Grimdark fan, honestly. That kinda stuff gets boring to me. But, I like you all so much better than my fantasy book club!


message 23: by Silvana (new)

Silvana (silvaubrey) Heather wrote: "I have heard a lot of times that Malazan is very complex and confusing. It might be difficult in an audio format.

I can't really see Emperor's Blades as all that YA. Are you sure you've read true ..."


Only the first book is quite YAish in some parts. I think it's because it's more like coming of age thing with lots of angst? Second book you see the characters growing with their decision making and inner thoughts. Valyn especially.

But still far more readable than complete trash like Throne of Glass and its ilks.


message 24: by Kyle (new)

Kyle Walsh | 4 comments The Stormlight Archive is quality gateway fantasy and highly recommended though not something I'd necessarily read alongside another huge epic. Go with Mistborn or First Law. Both are quick and simple.


message 25: by Sean (new)

Sean Nicley | 1 comments Many good suggestions - my two cents:

First Law series - definitely on the darker grittier side but awesome characters. Go there first.

Lies of Locke Lamorra (Gentleman Bastards) - rollicking fun.

Black Company - very enjoyable, grimdark but the squad humor and interaction is fun.

Night Angel trilogy by Brent Weeks - if you like assassins (which I do!)

Vlad Taltos series (starting with Jhereg) by Steven Brust - I think this series/author is often overlooked, but I have thoroughly enjoyed all of this series. Shorter books, lighter tone in general with much humor but good character development over the series. Vlad is my favorite assassin - a good snarky character that will put a dagger in your eye

Malazan - okay, I'm going to say NOT to read this yet. It is my all time favorite series. I don't want this to come out wrong, but it is not for the uninitiated. It is probably the most heavy obtuse series with a cast of thousands, and hundreds of thousands of years of history, many races, and a story that is not explained. You are just dropped in with no kindly wizard explaining everything around the fire... I have read fantasy for 30+ years, and half way through the first book I was like wtf is going on? So read all the above first, and then sink your teeth into Malazan.


back to top