Building a SciFi/Fantasy Library discussion
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Linda

You can download the opening three chapters of Book I Cloak of Magic from my website http://www.shehaios.co.uk so if you really don't get on with it all you will have lost is your time!
My readers tell me it is a story that takes them into an alternative world, catches them up and makes them feel as if they are living in my world - Shehaios- with the characters.
I expect to be announcing the publication date for Book 2 Staff of Power any day. I'm working on Book 3!
I would be very interested to know what you thought if you were prepared to try it.
Sue




http://www.cardshark.com/content/view...



A great starting point is "The Crystal Shard." While this book is 4th in the Legend of Drizzt series, it is actually R.A. Salvatore's breakout novel and first published. The first three books then go back to describe Drizzt' dark legacy and origins and were written after books 4-6.
Salvatore has also created many other shorter series, the most notable being the Demon War series.
Salvatore is definitely my favorite author of all time. There is not an author I enjoy reading more than Salvatore.
Fantasy is my favorite genre so this is not a light statement. I too love Tolkien, C.S. Lewis, Rowling, Robert Jordan, George R.R. Martin, Feist, Brooks, Weis & Hickman, Ed Greenwood, etc.






I have read Martin's series, and the latest is still sitting on my stack of to be reads. But, I am starting to get bored with it.
I just finished a fascinating book, "Ysabel", by Guy Gavriel Kay. It has gotten mixed reviews. But, as a student of the history and mythology of Gaul, it is a wonderfully compelling historical fantasy.

As an aside, I haven't gotten bored with Martin's series so much as I've lost momentum with it... he's taking so long to get the next book out that it's harder to get excited about it, especially knowing that the next book (whenever it finally comes out) isn't the last one, and who knows how long it will take for him to finish the series, or if he even will! I don't have the same worries with Erikson--he's been putting them out at a steady pace and I've found the quality to be pretty consistently high (I have the latest but haven't had time to read it yet, so I'm not including that in my judgment).




It's a four book series, but only the first two are published so far...

I also loved the Robin Hobb Assasin/Fools books and I've heard good things about her Liveship Traders series.
Tanya Huff's Four Quarters series
Just about *anything* by Mercedes Lackey
Jacqueline Carey's Kushiel series


Mistborn (Brandon Sanderson)
Name of the Wind (Patrick Rothfuss)
The Crown Conspiracy (Michael Sullivan)
In full disclosure the last one is my husband's book but it fits in perfectly with the other two.


There's a lot of good fantasy out there and I'm not complaining, but most of it is character driven and doesn't pay much attention to world building. Not like Hobb does.

Its a great new take on magic, a quick/fun read, and has the best representation of elves I have ever read. Give it a try!
However, stop after book three; sadly the next books in the series, set several generations in the future, have forever tainted the series for me. Such a disappointment!
Books mentioned in this topic
Dreamsbane of Tamalor (other topics)To Light a Candle (other topics)
The Outstretched Shadow (other topics)
When Darkness Falls (other topics)
The Lies of Locke Lamora (other topics)
More...
Books/Authors I love:
C.S. Lewis--Narnia
Tamora Pierce--Circle of Magic
J.K. Rowling--Harry Potter
Madeleine L'Engle
Lois Lowry
Sarah Micklem--Firethorn
J.R.R. Tolkien--Lord of the Rings
My problem: Perhaps because I have given my whole heart to Tolkien's LotR, any world/book that resembles his formula is difficult to jump into. I almost feel too exhausted to memorize an entirely new set of rules and histories. Is there a book/series that hits the right notes without sounding like an echo?