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Which authors are on your "buy on sight" list
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Lois McMaster Bujold (SF & F)
Jacqueline Carey (SF & F)
Barbara Hambly (F & Mystery)
Patricia McKillip (F)
Robin McKinley (F)
Sean Stewart (F)
Catherynne M. Valente (F & Poetry)
Jo Walton (F & Poetry)
Connie Willis (SF)
Sadly, those are just the living ones. . .

I used to buy Lois McMaster Bujold in hardcover without a second thought, but then she published The Hallowed Hunt (which I thought was disappointing), and went on a fantasy romance kick with the Sharing Knife books (which didn't interest me very much). I bought CryoBurn in hardcover, but if I hadn't been able to do so very cheaply because of a coupon and some rewards bucks from Borders, I might not have.

* George R.R. Martin
* Almudena Grandes
* Arturo Pérez-Reverte
Only the first one writes sci-fi/fantasy; the Spanish authors have written historical fiction, contemporary, newspaper articles... I truly recommend them to anybody who likes good reading.

China Miéville
Neil Gaiman (if it's novels)
Iain M. Banks
A.A. Attanasio
Connie Willis
Neal Stephenson
Patrick Rothfuss (latest addition)
There's some more that are not SciFi/Fantasy authors.
Regards
Caleb

Sigler Scott
Shaun Jeffrey
Paul Elard Cooley
Jake Bible
J.C. Hutchins
Seth Harwood

Katherine Kerr
Neil Gaiman (I love his graphic novels too).
Kim Harrison (at least her Rachel Morgan series)
I tend to get more excited about particular series than particular authors. Although some authors (Neil, I'm looking at you) hit it out of the ballpark more often than others.

Stephen King didnt make the list yet.
Tom Clancy
Charlaine Harris
Douglas Preston
Jonathan Maberry
James Patterson
Kim Harrison
John Grisham
W.E.B. Griffin
I realize not all these are sci fi, but its my list

My automatic purchases include:
Brandon Sanderson
Cherie Priest
Scott Lynch
George R. R. Martin
Patrick Rothfuss
John Scalzi
Joe Abercrombie
Lois McMaster Bujold
Neil Gaiman
Michael J. Sullivan
Robin Hobb
Brian Ruckley
A. Lee Martinez
Janny Wurts
Ted Chiang
And of course,
Guy Gavriel Kay
I'm still working on many of their back catalogues. Honorable mention also goes to David Weber, Joe Hill, classic Stephen King and Elizabeth Bear. I love authors so much! They're my rock stars ;)

George R.R. Martin
Robin Hobb
Laurie R. King
Patrick Rothfuss
Brandon Sanderson
Jacqueline Carey
Diana Gabaldon
J.K. Rowling

Robin Hobb
Scott Lynch
George R.R. Martin
Patrick Rothfuss
Brandon Sanderson

I know the feeling!
Tim Powers
Graham Joyce
Jonathan Carroll
Natsuki Takaya
Thomas Sowell

John Scalzi
Robert Heinlein (have most of the adult works, need to collect the juveniles)
Other than those, I think I'm pretty much satisfied with impulse buying based on back-of-the-book descriptions.

(That said, I do also have a Japanese manga artist whose books I order more or less as soon as they come out.)

Terry Pratchett
Jasper Fforde (just pre-ordered 'One of our Thursdays is Missing'.
Connie Willis
Greg Egan.
It's funny how personal these lists are. Some of the authors whose names appear repeatedly I find to be 'meh', or worse (and I'm sure people will say the same about my list). Its also interesting how universal some authors' names appear to be.

C. J. Cherryh (Fantasy and SF)
Guy Gavriel Kay
Carol Berg
Patricia McKillip
Barbara Hambly
R.M. Meluch
Sarah Zettel
Juliet Marillier
Karin Lowachee
There are huge numbers of books I've enjoyed as much, but year on year, these authors consistently deliver stories of topnotch craftsmanship and quality, and each one has a track record long enough to rely on.
Roger Zelazny had his place on this list, also, before he passed on.
Mainstream authors I've bought on sight throughout their careers include:
Dick Francis
Dorothy Dunnett
and for nonfiction,
Laura Hillenbrand

Richard Rhodes (non-fiction, wrote Making of the Atomic Bomb, have read several others of his. Good reporter)
Andrew Vachss (fell in love with the Burke Books, I dig gritty)
For a while I was getting everything Jerry Ahern, Axel Kilgore, and Jonathan Cain, then I completed the series collections and was done)
Had up to about #50 in the Destroyer series, too.
Carl Hiassen, but gave those up around the time the one with the lottery ticket came out ...

If C.J. Cherryh comes out with any more sequels to Cyteen, I'd probably buy them even though Regenesis was disappointing. Or any sequels to Downbelow Station, or that were otherwise in the Alliance/Union universe. (Cherryh is SF&F but I only read her SF.)
Patrick Rothfuss
Brandon Sanderson
Scott Lynch
Jim Butcher
Peter V. Brett
Joe Abercrombie
Think that covers all the ones I'll just buy regardless of what it is...
eta: Martin too, I guess. But only for ASoIaF.
Brandon Sanderson
Scott Lynch
Jim Butcher
Peter V. Brett
Joe Abercrombie
Think that covers all the ones I'll just buy regardless of what it is...
eta: Martin too, I guess. But only for ASoIaF.

George RR Martin
Tad Williams
Robin Hobb
Jim Butcher
Janny,
I read a lot of Dick Francis as a kid, I got introduced via the Reader's Digest condensed books that my mom had.

George RR Martin
Tad Williams
Robin Hobb
Jim Butcher
Janny,
I read a lot of Dick Francis as a kid, I ..."
Wow, period. I cannot imagine a Dick Francis book, condensed. He wrote with such spare, vivid clarity. Great author. You always came away from his reads with more knowledge about something - and what a keen observer of human nature.
A great book is great, no matter what genre.

CJ Cherryh
Janny Wurts
Juliet Marillier
Julie E Czerneda
Ursula K. Le Guin
Stephen Lawhead
Stephen Baxter
Samuel R. Delany
Brent Weeks (so far)
Jack McDevitt
Neil Gaiman
David Weber
Cory Doctorow
All new Star Wars and Star Trek books

R.M. Meluch (who is not on Goodreads, apparently)
I got sucked in with the Merrimack series, and now can't help myself from picking up whatever else I find (usually in the used bookstores because they're all older).

Catherynne M. Valente
China Miéville
Connie Willis
Sergei Lukyanenko (Сергей Лукьяненко) (This is assuming something new is actually translated into English.)
Terry Pratchett and Steven Brust and Margaret Atwood and Haruki Murakami belong on this list, but I'm not actually caught up on reading everything they've done so far, so I've declared a moratorium on their work until I do catch up. Well, excepting Murakami's 1Q84, which I'll mostly likely be unable to restrain myself from buying the minute it's translated. (It's due "sometime" this year, but in one volume in English, instead of as a series.)
Edit to add: I also only listed living authors.

R.M. Meluch (who is not on Goodreads, apparently)
I got sucked in with the Merrimack series, and now can't help myself from picking..."
Janine, here he is: R.M. Meluch
(I couldn't get the "add book/author" thingie to find him, either. It's apparently fussy sometimes.)

At one time, L.R. Wright until she passed away, Laurell K. Hamilton, until I got a bit tired of her books... John Wyndham and Alistair MacLean

R.M. Meluch (who is not on Goodreads, apparently)
I got sucked in with the Merrimack series, and now can't help myse..."
She....grin.
INCREDIBLE books, and yes, it is HARD to make her name highlight. She writes beautifully. Her Myriad series is wonderful, fun space opera with vivid characters. For her serious work, I was blown away by Jerusalem Fire.
Great to see some people around here know and enjoy this author. Shows some good taste in this group ;) I have always felt she is greatly under appreciated.

Terry Pratchett
Jasper Fforde (just pre-ordered 'One of our Thursdays is Missing'.
Connie Willis
Greg Egan.
It's funny how personal these lists are. Some of the authors whose names ap..."
Great minds think alike -
Mine are
Terry Pratchett
Neil Gaiman
Jasper Fforde
I'll pre-order anything by them - I also recently found and love Connie Willis
Good idea for a discussion since seeing what others with similar tastes enjoy is a good way to find new authors finding new authors

And I think Bujold's SF is still buy on sight for me. Just not the fantasy.

I buy almost all my books online, so it´s mostly a matter of pre-ordering. And I got to admit that a lot of authors which used to be buy everything sort of disappointed and I gave up on buying before reading tons of reviews. My current buy everything list is
- Ted Chiang - and it is really everything, up to 25 euros for a short story.
- George RR Martin - if only. Apart from Wild Cards and anthologies.
- Connie Willis - though maybe I will rethink it, I was disappointed in this latest duology.
- Patricia McKillip
- Robin McKinley
- Megan Whalen Turner, nominally YA; but it´s better fantasy than almost all fantasy novels
- Terry Pratchett - apart from spinoffs, like guidebooks and comics
- Neil Gaiman - I quit at Anansi boys, but was reconverted by The Graveyard Book-
- Ellen Kushner
- Frances Hardinge - again nominally YA but IMO much more interesting complex fantasy than most fantasy novels
- N.K. Jemisin - ok, just two books, and on the strength of just two books there were lots of authors which qualified way back then and no longer do, but still looking to buy her next few books.
- Neal Stephenson
sadly Kage Baker has past away. She was also somebody whose books I looked forward to.John M. Ford as well.
Authors which are not instant decisions, but where there is a big likelihood of me ending up buying the new ones
- Iain M Banks, though I have given up for now on his non-sf novels.
- Martha Wells
- C.S. Friedman
- Sean Stewart
- Sarah Monette - whatever new name will be. Flawed, but each sucessive book was IMo getting better.


(and I can't believe how many books I've added to my TBR list because of your posts! thank you)
![Ed [Redacted] (ed__)](https://images.gr-assets.com/users/1429513592p1/3968676.jpg)
William Gibson
Charles Stross
Joe Abercrombie
Richard K. Morgan
Neal Stephenson
And the newest addition based on only one book so far
Ian Tregillis
I suppose I should add GRRM because I will instantly buy any of his new fiction (should there ever be any more published) I am not inclined toward Wild Cards nor will I buy any of the anthos he edits without taking a look at the author lists and reviews.

R.M. Meluch (who is not on Goodreads, apparently)
I got sucked in with the Merrimack series, and now can't help myse..."
R.M. Meluch is not a he. Her name's Rebecca. I remembered seeing that some time ago, but I checked on Wikipedia. You can also go to her website and click on the Navajo Loom link where you'll see a picture of her.

That way it would be easier for future reference if someone is looking for new Sci-Fi or fantasy authors to explore.

Weirdly, whether or not someone is a buy-on-sight decision depends almost as much on the publishing industry as on whether or not I like the author. I know now that sales determine whether or not the publisher keeps or drops an author, so those whose books I feel strongly about, I buy. A while ago Ace tried to kick Moira J. Moore to the curb mid-series; they changed their mind, but I'm uncertain if it was due to readerly outcry or because her editor went to bat for her. (I know the former happened and I think the latter did but I'm not sure.) So I will always buy her books. (Note: if I thought her books were becoming terrible I would stop. I'm not crazy. Or so I like to think. :)
Mark Del Franco (fantasy) is kind of a similar case. I am curious enough about where the series is going to keep buying the books, especially since my library seems to have stopped buying this series. (Though I am thinking of pruning the first three from my collection soon, since the library has them and space is an issue for things that aren't my very favorites with lots of re-read value.) As long as he's being published in paperback I'll pick him up. (Speaking of the Connor Grey series and not the Laura Blackstone one; the latter didn't push my buttons enough.)
Once an author is a hardcover-first author I'm fairly likely to decide that they don't need my sale (in HC, anyway) to keep their books coming out. This particularly applies if I feel like the quality of the books is defining. (I liked the way Laurell K. Hamilton's Merry Gentry series started, but I feel like it went downhill soon after the beginning. And I don't think Kim Harrison's Hollows series went downhill precisely, but I do think I wasn't enjoying it enough to keep buying them once the series switched to hardcore. I get them from the library now.)
Though of another buy-on-sight: Galen M. Beckett (fantasy). (But only his Invarel series under this name, not the other stuff he's done as Mark Anthony.)

Steven Erikson, Joe Abercrombie, China Miéville, Neil Gaiman, Jim Butcher
I have lately purchased books byJohn Scalzi, Juliet Marillierand Scott Lynch which look like promising additions to the list.
About 10 years ago I would have said George R.R. Martinbut now I just dont trust him to finish the series, so I wont get it until it is done.

Books mentioned in this topic
Feed (other topics)Downbelow Station (other topics)
Jerusalem Fire (other topics)
Anathem (other topics)
Cyteen (other topics)
More...
Authors mentioned in this topic
John Scalzi (other topics)China Miéville (other topics)
Juliet Marillier (other topics)
Scott Lynch (other topics)
Joe Abercrombie (other topics)
More...
Mine would be:
Sci-fi - Iain M Bank, Peter F Hamilton and Alastair Reynolds
Fantasy - Brent Weeks
Who would be your "buy on sight" authors?