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Books you grew up with
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Tricia
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May 10, 2012 04:40AM

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I began with The Chronicles of Narnia, Black and Blue Magic, A Wrinkle in Time, The Hobbit, LOTR, Marion Zimmer Bradley's Darkover series, Anne McCaffrey, Tanith Lee, then onto Sheri S Tepper, Gene Wolfe, then Pratchett, and the list keeps growing...

In the 1990s I started writing my own fantasy tales, and never really tackled Tolkien or the Narnia series (although I watched 2 Narnia movies, LOL)...
I also love fantasy illustrators, but that's probably off topic! :-D
I read the Dragonlance books. I'm not sure if I've rated them on GR yet. Many books to catch up with. They were fun, D&D style. In fact, early D&D modules (which I played as a spaced-out teenager, in darkened, smoky rooms) were based on them.

Jaq wrote: "I think that's what has kept me from giving them priority, I never got into gaming. Most of my friends are gamers and I enjoy an occasional round of MtG, but dungeon games are too involved for me a..."
I wouldn't be interested now, but as a teenager, it was a great escape. :)
Is this the book, Nishi? >
The Wolf King
I wouldn't be interested now, but as a teenager, it was a great escape. :)
Is this the book, Nishi? >



The Little Prince is a classic. Just beautiful. I enjoyed the first four books of HP, haven't read the last two yet. Not sure if I've even rated them on GR. One day when I have more time...


They are definitely classics now (HP), and yes, I think it well deserved.
The book that I credit with really starting me on Fantasy was
The Hobbit by J.R.R. Tolkien. My dad bought the Rankin & Bass Illustrated version and read it to me when I was about 5 and I was hooked from that point on. Some others that I would say helped to build on the foundation of my love of fantasy would be
The Book of Three by Lloyd Alexander, Endless Quest books from TSR, and, later on,
Dragons of Autumn Twilight by Margaret Weis and Tracy Hickman and
The Sword of Shannara by Terry Brooks.




I was a kid in the 50s. I was awash in bad scifi, cautionary tales about the monsters that nuclear weapons were going to unleash on the world. Fantasy was mostly of the "Brothers Grimm" or "Mother Goose" variety, which didn't appeal to me at all. Then, my enlightened fifth grade teacher (I told somebody 4th grade elsewhere, that was a mistake) opened my eyes to Jules Verne. It probably didn't hurt that all those great old movies based on his books were coming out about the same time: Journey to the Center of the Earth; 20,000 Leagues; Master of the World; the Lost World. I have yet to find anything to compare with a fantasy theme in the hands of a master. Thanks for asking, this is a fun thread...
Books mentioned in this topic
The Hobbit, or There and Back Again (other topics)The Book of Three (other topics)
Dragons of Autumn Twilight (other topics)
The Sword of Shannara (other topics)
The Wolf King (other topics)