THE RECOMMENDED FANTASY AUTHORS LIST - ver. 2.6 CONTENTS: Introduction Part 1 THE LIST (A-C) Part 1 THE LIST (D-I) Part 2 THE LIST (J-O) Part 3 THE LIST (P-V) Part 4 THE LIST (W-Z) Part 5 Total Recommendation Counts Part 5 Changes Since Last Posting Part 5 Finding These Books Part 5 About the List Part 5 Downloading the List Part 5 Credits Part 5 INTRODUCTION The Recommended Fantasy Author List originated in April 1994 in the alt.fan.eddings newsgroup. It was intended to be a quick compilation of a few favorite fantasy authors of some a.f.e. regulars. After more than 150 recommendation lists, it ended up being a bit more than that. The List has maintained ONE of its original attributes - all of the participants share a fondness for the fantasy of David Eddings. Other than that, recommended authors run the gamut from Stephen Donaldson to Terry Pratchett, Mervyn Peake to Lloyd Alexander, and Peter Beagle to Piers Anthony (the last pair is my "sublime to the ridiculous" combination). The list is alphabetic by author. In the case of authors with multiple series, I've attempted to list their works in order of publication. Note that the operative word in the preceding sentence is "attempted." Series are listed with a series title followed by the individual books in the series. The listing will indicate if the titles are part of an on-going series or a limited series (trilogies, tetralogies, and the like), and if the books within the series stand alone. If the series has gone beyond 10 books, the first several books will be listed, and maybe a few others of particular interest. THIS LISTING DOES NOT PRETEND TO LIST EVERY WORK BY EVERY AUTHOR LISTED, nor is it intended to do so. In several cases, only specific books by an author are recommended (although that is generally noted in the comments). Authors who write both science fiction AND fantasy (or books in other genres) only have their fantasy titles listed. You can find many _complete_ author lists, created by the indomitable John Wenn, at the following ftp site: sflovers.rutgers.edu in the directory: /pub/sf-lovers/bibliographies/authorlists On the other hand, if you are looking for a list of virtually every modern fantasy author and all their titles, check out Finn's Fantasy BookList, located at: http://www.mcs.com/~finn/home.html The value-enhanced html version of this list resides at: http://www.sff.net/people/Amy.Sheldon/listcont.htm It includes everything found in the posted plus the list of authors who never got that all-important second recommendation and links to individual author sites. Series titles are enclosed within quotation marks, and book titles within series are separated a semicolon. Comments, if any, follow the listing. Authors/series listed by 10% of the recommenders are marked with an "*". Two "**" means that 20% or more have endorsed the author. The total number of recommendations per author follows the List. Lynn Abbey (b. 1948) "Rifkind series" - Daughter of the Bright Moon; The Black Sword _These came out in the early 80s and are long out of print. A priestess/warrior from a desert culture interacts with a society that has rather more traditional ideas of feminine behavior. There was a real vogue for "tough women warriors" back in the early 80s, and most of them just took a took male warrior and called him "she". This and Robin Bailey's 'Frost' series are among the few showed real writing ability._ "The Walensor Saga" - The Wooden Sword; Beneath the Web _A young sorceress joins forces with a prince against an evil wizard._ "The Siege of Shadows trilogy" - Siege of Shadows _The final two books of this trilogy are hold due to problems with the original publisher (details can be found on the author's web page._ Peter Ackroyd (b. 1949) Hawksmoor _A literary thriller set in 17th century & present- day London. An architect is rebuilding London after the Great Fire, but he's secretly performing satanic rituals in each of the rebuilt churches. These involve murders, which are also occurring our time. The chapters alternate between past and present. "It's weird" says Stevie._ First Light _A literary fantasy. The excavation of a neolithic grave causes the ancient night sky to reappear, along with other strange happenings._ The House of Doctor Dee _Another Ackroyd involving alchemy and magic, and a London both ancient and modern. David enjoys Ackroyd's work, but warns that the pace can be slow._ Lloyd Alexander (b. 1924) "Prydain Chronicles" - The Book of Three; The Black Cauldron; The Castle of Llyr; Taran Wanderer; The High King _Who cares if you have to get them from the children's section of your library - these are great. A young boy of unknown heritage becomes involved in a clash between the forces of good and evil. Loosely based on the Welsh Mabinogin. There are also two or three short story collections out featuring tales about the characters from the Chronicles. Classic series, the concluding volume won the Newbery medal._ "Westmark Trilogy" - Westmark; The Kestrel; The Beggar Queen _Less fantasy than the Prydain Chronicles. _The Kestrel_ in particular brings up the issue of personal morality in war situations, and it doesn't give any easy answers._ "Vesper Holly series" - The Illyrian Adventure; The El Dorado Adventure; The Drackenberg Adventure; The Jedera Adventure; The Philadelphia Adventure _Young adult adventure series set in an alternate world during Victorian times. The hero is a teen- aged female version of Indiana Jones, and the series is great fun._ Poul Anderson (b. 1926) The Broken Sword _One of Anderson's earliest novels, the story of a changeling stolen by an elven lord. _Locus_ calls this 'a fine Norse saga'. It's been reprinted fairly recently, so you should be able to find it._ Three Hearts and Three Lions _A modern man is swept back in time to take his place in a great combat between the gods._ Hrolf Kraki's Saga _Retelling of one of the earliest surviving Norse sagas._ The Merman's Children _Stand-alone taking place in the thirteenth century, when magic is fading away. Four half-human, half-mer children seek their people, torn between their mortal and immortal heritages._ "The King of Ys" - Roma Mater; Gallicenae; Dahut; The Dog and the Wolf _A Roman centurion becomes king of a magical city. The entire tetralogy was reprinted as a omnibus trade paperback from Baen Books in July '96._ "The Last Viking Trilogy" - The Golden Horn; The Road of the Sea Horse; The Sign of the Raven _This trilogy is extremely difficult to find. Anderson is a great SF writer, too. His attention to historical detail comes through in his fantasy offerings (try _The High Crusade_ - it's SF, but one I think even the most adamant fantasy fan would like). The major influence on his fantasy is Nordic myth and legend._ *Piers Anthony (b. 1934) "Kelvin of Rud" - Dragon's Gold; Serpent's Silver; Chimaera's Copper; Orc's Opal; Mouvar's Magic _Straight adventure-fantasy._ "Xanth" - A Spell for Chameleon; The Source of Magic; Castle Roogna; etc. etc. etc. _Humorous. First couple of books are recommended, but it has descended into terminal cuteness and virtual unreadability. Denis managed to enjoy the first 15, but even he admits that it's getting pretty bad now. Series is nearing the 20-book mark._ "Apprentice Adept" - Split Infinity; The Blue Adept; Juxtaposition _Takes place in two different universes, one magic and one not. Anthony returned to this world with a second trilogy that is NOT recommended._ "Incarnations of Immortality" - On a Pale Horse; Bearing an Hourglass; With a Tangled Skein; Wielding a Red Sword; Being a Green Mother; For Love of Evil; And Eternity _There is a general, overall theme, but each book does stand on its own. NOT humorous. Recommenders agree that the first book, _On a Pale Horse,_ is the best (the usual state of affairs in a series written by Piers Anthony)._ *Robert Asprin (b. 1946) "Myth series" - Another Fine Myth; Myth Conceptions; Myth Directions; Hit or Myth; Myth-ing Persons; Little Myth Marker; M.Y.T.H. Inc. Link; Myth-nomers and Impervections; M.Y.T.H. Inc. in Action; Sweet Myth-tery of Life; Something M.Y.T.H. Inc. (forthcoming someday, but don't expect it any time soon) _Humorous. Lotsa puns, lotsa slapstick. Like most long-running series, the recent offerings have been pretty weak. He also has an SF series, "Phule's Company," which also runs along the punny/humor line._ "Thieves World" - Thieves World; Tales From the Vulgar Unicorn; Shadows of Sanctuary; Storm Season; The Face of Chaos; Wings of Omen; many others _Shared World series with various authors, Asprin is originator. Notable as the first series created specifically to be a Shared World. Most of the stories aim for a feeling of gritty realism (translation: dark and depressing). The series seems to have topped out at 12 books._ Robin Wayne Bailey (b. 1952) "Frost Trilogy" - Frost; Skull Gate; Bloodsongs _The warrior and ex-witch Frost wanders in exile with both her daemonic dagger and her mother's dying curse. It's a standard set-up (Tough Female Warrior who is Just As Good As the Boys), but it has some nice twists. Bailey's first fantasy effort, out of print and darn near impossible to find, but Steve likes it much better than Bailey's later work._ "Brothers of the Dragon" - Brothers of the Dragon; Flames of the Dragon; Triumph of the Dragon _A pair of brothers end up in a world of magic, where their martial arts skills are put to the test. Note that the final two books of the trilogy were originally published under the titles _Straight on Til Mourning_ and _The Palace of Souls_._ Shadowdance _A crippled young man is magically given the ability to walk by a witch, but the cost may be greater than he can bear._ Clive Barker (b. 1952) "The Books of the Art" - The Great and Secret Show; Everville _These involve 'the dream-sea of Quiddity', and move away from the strictly horror content of Barker's "Books of Blood" series (although David points out that they still would "not be recommended for juveniles or the faint of heart due to their explicit sex and violence"). Each book does stand alone._ Imagica _Dark fantasy about three people trying to save the world from eternal darkness._ The Thief of Always _Now, this one IS for juveniles, and involves a ten- year-old who gets more than he bargains for when a mysterious stranger offers him an escape from boredom at the Holiday House._ Gael Baudino (b. 1955) Gossamer Axe _An early work, and at least one recommender considers it her best. A musician's lover is kidnapped by the Sidhe, and she must fight to get her back (and yes, the pronouns are correct. The lovers are lesbian, and if that bothers you, you should avoid Baudino's work)._ "Dragonsword series" - Dragonsword; Duel of Dragons; Dragon Death _Another mingling of magic and contemporary folks who end up in an enchanted world._ "The Natil series" - Strands of Starlight; Maze of Moonlight; Shroud of Shadow; Strands of Sunlight _Most of Baudino's work takes place in a modern world touched by magic. Note that her view of life is fairly grim - the humor quotient is flat at zero, and the general happiness quotient isn't much higher._ "The Water! trilogy" - O Greenest Branch; The Dove Looked In; Branch and Crown _Not recommended. One reader remarked 'this book reads like someone told her she should have more humor in her books, so she grimly sat down to write something funny.'_ Spires of Spirit _Stories set in the world of the "Natil" books._ L. Frank Baum (1856-1919) "Oz" - The Wizard of Oz; The Land of Oz; Ozma of Oz; Dorothy and the Wizard of Oz; and so on __The Wizard of Oz_ first saw print in 1900, and Baum wrote 13 more Oz stories before his death. There are currently more than 40 books about Oz, and the land is getting a bit overpopulated. I've only read Baum's novels, and they are fun. Dorothy is quite competent and tough-minded (far more so then Judy Garland was in the film version), and some of the ancillary characters are hilarious (I love Mr. H.M. Woggle-Bug T.E., and Scraps, and General Jinjur)._ Peter S. Beagle (b. 1939) A Fine and Private Place _An early work. It's a love story with (and between) ghosts. Jim says "it is well worth reading" and your FAQmaker agrees._ The Last Unicorn _One of the top ten fantasies of all time. Read this. Bittersweet story of the last unicorn's quest to find out what happened to her fellow unicorns._ The Folk of the Air _Published in the mid 80s, contemporary fantasy set in a city resembling Berkeley, California and featuring a group very like the Society for Creative Anachronism. One of his weaker works. Still, even weak Beagle is worth reading._ The Innkeeper's Song _Beagle returns to fantasy after far too long an absence. Story told through multiple viewpoints, grittier and a bit darker than his early work._ The Unicorn Sonata _25 years after _The Last Unicorn_, Beagle returns with a new fantasy that is initially set in contemporary Los Angeles before moving on to a faerie land of Shei'rah. This is really only a novelette, but the pictures are pretty..._ Greg Bear (b. 1951) "Songs of Earth and Power" - The Infinity Concerto; The Serpent Mage _Before Greg Bear went totally over to SF of the hardest variety, he wrote this fantasy duology. It was recently released as a single volume under the title of _Songs of Earth and Power_ in both the U.S. and U.K._ John Bellairs (1938-1991) The Face in the Frost _Another one of your FAQmaker's personal favorites. Funny, scary, well-written, and fast-paced. The author also has quite a few children's fantasies in print. If you liked _The Last Unicorn,_ you'll like this._ James Blaylock (b. 1950) "Elfin series" - The Elfin Ship; The Disappearing Dwarf; The Stone Giant _John Clute says these books are 'remarkable for [their] geniality and quirkiness, and the general likeability of most o fthe characters, even the unreliable ones.'_ The Last Coin _A stand-alone involving the thirty pieces of silver given to Judas._ The Paper Grail _Blaylock is often mentioned in the same breath as Tim Powers, but his works are very definitely his own. They do share a certain skewed version of reality that can be very entertaining._ James Blish (1921-1975) "After Such Knowledge" - Doctor Mirabilis; Black Easter; The Day After Judgement; A Case of Conscience _The famous SF author brings us the end of the world. _Black Easter_ and _The Day After Judgement_ form a separate magic/horror duology - _Doctor Mirabilis_ is a historical novel about Roger Bacon, and _A Case of Conscience_ is straight SF. As a whole, the series explores whether the search for secular knowledge is inherently evil. _Black Easter_ is by far the strongest book of the group, and can very easily be read as a stand-alone._ Elizabeth Boyer "The World of the Alfar series" - The Elves and the Otterskin; The Sword and the Satchel; The Wizard and the Warlord; The Thrall and the Dragon's Heart _The world in this series is heavily influenced by Nordic myth. I'm told that these are all stand-alone novels._ "Wizard's War" - The Troll's Grindstone; The Curse of Slagfid; The Dragon's Carbuncle; Lord of Chaos _I've been told that these also take place in Alfar, and that the books are NOT standalones._ "Clan of the Warlord series" - The Clan of the Warlord; The Black Lynx _A new open-ended series (at least, that's what I gather from the back cover blurbs)._ Keeper of Cats _A new standalone, taking place in Boyer's usual mythical-Scandanavian setting._ Ray Bradbury (b. 1920) Something Wicked This Way Comes _Everything Bradbury writes is Wonderful (do we detect a teeny bit of bias on the part of our FAQmaker here?) Most of his fantasy is in short story form, but this novel features an unusual (and nasty) carnival that comes to town._ *Marion Zimmer Bradley (b. 1930) "Avalon books" - The Mists of Avalon; The Forest House; The Lady of Avalon (co-author Diana Paxson) _Each of these stands alone. _Mists_ was one of the first books to tell the Arthur story from the female characters' points of view, and, boy, was it successful. _Forest House_ is a prequel to _Mists_, taking place during the Roman invasion of Britain, and _Lady_ takes place between the two._ The Firebrand _Cassandra of Troy gets her turn in the spotlight._ "Witchlight series" - Ghostlight; Witchlight; Gravelight (forthcoming Sept. '97); Heartlight (forthcoming) _New series featuring psychic heroine Truth Jourdemayne. eluki bes shahar will be co-authoring the forthcoming books._ "Darkover series" - Stormqueen; Hawkmistress; The Forbidden Tower; The Heirs of Hammerfell; many many others _THIS IS SF, NOT FANTASY. But, hey, McCaffrey's Pern books made it onto the list, so why not MZB's Darkover? Generally, the books that take place after the lost colony of Darkover has been rediscovered by Earth are more SF in tone, the ones that take place during Darkover's long isolation have a more 'fantasy' feel. I've listed a few of the titles I'm personally familiar with, and consider fantasy-ish in tone. The books all tend to be standalones, although familiarity with Darkover tends to make even the lesser offerings more enjoyable._ Gillian Bradshaw (b. 1956) "Down the Long Wind Trilogy" - Hawk of May; Kingdom of Summer; In Winter's Shadow _Michael liked the first book quite a lot, but he adds 'then the story continues onto the more or less standard Arthurian tale, and I'm not very fond of tragic love stories.'_ Mayer Alan Brenner (b. 1956) "Dance of the Gods" - Catastrophe's Spell; Spell of Intrigue; Spell of Fate; Spell of Apocalypse _Ya gotta love a series with a hero named 'Maximillian the Vaguely Disreputable'. READ THIS SERIES, shouts your FAQmaker, it's fast and furious, and fun, and I want the author to make enough money that he keeps getting published._ David Brin (b. 1950) The Practice Effect _A lone fantasy from an SF master. This is definitely Brin-lite, but even minor Brin is enjoyable. A light-hearted adventure in a parallel world where magic takes a strange form (the title pretty much gives it away). The book is a stand alone. It came out a while ago, but was reprinted in 1994, so you should be able to track it down._ C. Dale Brittain (b. 1948) "Tales of Daimbert" - A Bad Spell in Yurt; The Wood Nymph and the Cranky Saint; Mage Quest; The Witch and the Cathedral; Daughter of Magic _Open ended series featuring Daimbert, the Royal Wizard of Yurt. Basically light-hearted adventure, although it is far less dependent on puns and general silliness than the cover art (and titles) would indicate. The most representative adjective for this series would be "charming." There will be another book, tentatively due in 1998._ Voima _A standalone. Pretty much standard adventure/quest, but it has some nice twists, and a trio of likable protagonists. More serious than the Daimbert books._ Count Scar (with Robert Bouchard, forthcoming Sept. '97) _Standalone._ **Terry Brooks (b. 1944) "Shannara" - Sword of Shannara; Elfstones of Shannara; Wishsong of Shannara _The fantasy genre owes Brooks a lot - whether that debt is good or bad depends upon how you feel about the current state of the market. These books were bestsellers when they came out in the early 80's, and they finally proved that Tolkien's popularity wasn't just an aberration, and that fantasy could be much more than a niche market. This is an enjoyable group of books, although the Tolkienesque borrowings of the first book of the first trilogy are even more blatant than most._ "Heritage of Shannara" - Scions of Shannara; Druid of Shannara; Elf Queen of Shannara; Talismans of Shannara _Onward ever onward with the world of Shannara. This group of books is straightforward fantasy quest/adventure._ "Yet Another Shannara Book" - First King of Shannara _Prequel set 500 years before the events of _Sword of Shannara_._ "Kingdom of Landover" - Magic Kingdom For Sale-Sold; The Black Unicorn; Wizard At Large; The Tangle Box; Witches Brew _Open-ended adventure/humor series. Not connected to the Shannara books._ "Trolltown series" - The Sinnissippi Fade (forthcoming) _The first book in a new series that is unrelated to either Shannara or Landover, and it should be appearing sometime in 1997._ *Steven Brust (b. 1955) "Vlad Taltos series" - Jhereg; Yendi; Teckla; Taltos; Phoenix; Athyra; Orca; Dragon (won't be appearing for quite some time) _Featuring the assassin Vlad Taltos. Open-ended action/adventure series taking place in a well- defined, interesting world. Each book is a stand- alone, and the published order (listed above) does NOT follow the internal chronology (despite that, you should try to read them in the published order)._ "Khaavren Romances" - The Phoenix Guards; Five Hundred Years After; The Paths of the Dead (coming sometime in 1998 maybe); The Enchantress of Dzur Mountain (forthcoming); The Lord of Castle Black (forthcoming) _Set in the same world as the Vlad Taltos books, just earlier in its history. These are written in the style of Dumas (remember _The Three Musketeers_?) and are quite enjoyable._ Brokedown Palace _A standalone that takes place in the eastern (human) region of Vlad Taltos' world. It was reprinted by Ace in August, 1996._ Agyar _Dark fantasy told from the title character's point of view. Kate sez, 'Part of the fun is figuring out who and what he is.'_ The Sun, the Moon, and the Stars _Part of the Ace 'Fairy Tale' series (now being published by Tor), which invited various authors to retell a fairy tale for a contemporary adult audience. Very well-regarded, books from the series by Wrede, de Lint & Dean are also on this list. It came back into print in May '96 from Tor._ Freedom and Necessity (co-author Emma Bull) _This is an epistolary fantasy (i.e., the story is told in the form of letters) that is unrelated to any series by either of the co-authors. It is set in 1849 and has garnered some very nice reviews._ Lois McMaster Bujold (b. 1949) The Spirit Ring _A lone fantasy from the creator of Miles Vorkosigan. A well-written adventure taking place in Renaissance Italy, featuring a plucky heroine and a likeable hero._ Emma Bull (b. 1954) The War For the Oaks _Standalone (gosh, it's nice to run into a recent book that doesn't have 900 sequels). Wars in the fairylands spilling over into our world. You can tell Bull is a musician - the band scenes feel *right*. Good book, and well worth looking up._ Finder _Although this is part of the 'Borderlands' shared- world series, it IS a standalone. Very well done, and both Kate and I recommend it highly._ Edgar Rice Burroughs (1875-1950) "Barsoom series" - A Princess of Mars; The Gods of Mars; The Warlord of Mars; Thuvia, Maid of Mars; The Chessman of Mars; The Master Mind of Mars; and so much more _Join John Carter as he travels the wilds of the Martian landscape! The Tarzan books are lots of fun, too._ Octavia Butler (b. 1947) Wild Seed _Fantasy from the Nebula-award-winning SF author. Steve says "It's an alternative history story, with magic thrown in."_ A.S. Byatt (b. 1936) Possession _Standalone. Kate says it 'uses fantasy extensively.' Those of you with a background in English Literature will love this one._ James Branch Cabell (1879-1958) "Biography of the Life of Manuel" - Beyond Life; Figures of Earth; The Silver Stallion; The Music From Behind the Moon; The White Robe; The Way of Ecben; The Soul of Melicent; Chivalry; Jurgen; The Line of Love; The High Place; Gallantry; Something About Eve; The Certain Hour; The Cords of Vanity; From the Hidden Way; The Jewel Merchants; The Rivet in Grandfather's Neck; The Eagle's Shadow; The Cream of the Jest; The Lineage of Lichfield; Straws and Prayer-Books _The imaginary kingdom of Poictesme ties all of these together. Alternate world fantasies. They all stand alone, and the one you are most likely to find is _Jurgen_._ Orson Scott Card (b. 1944) "The Chronicles of the Black Company" - The Black Company; Shadows Linger; The White Rose _Fantasy from the foot soldier's point of view. Gritty and hard-edged, these are not Fantasy Lite_ The Silver Spike _Takes place in the world of the Black Company. It's not about them, but some familiar characters appear._ "Book of the South" - Shadow Games; Dreams of Steel _More of the chronicles of the Black Company_ "The Glittering Stone Trilogy" - Bleak Seasons; She Is The Darkness (forthcoming Sept. '97) _The long-awaited (since 1985!) continuation of the adventures of the Black Company._ "Garrett, P.I. series" - Sweet Silver Blues; Bitter Gold Hearts; Cold Copper Tears; Old Tin Sorrows; Dread Brass Shadows; Red Iron Nights; Deadly Quicksilver Lies; Petty Pewter Gods _The hard-boiled detective in a world full of elves, trolls, and magic. Raymond Chandler fans take note. Open-ended series. There is some slight reference to events that take place in previous books, but all books are basically stand-alone. Roc publishing recently bought 2 more in this series from Cook. This is beginning to suffer from Continuing Series Syndrome, but the books haven't fallen off badly enough to make me stop buying._ "The Dread Empire series" - A Shadow of All Night Falling; October's Baby; All Darkness Met; The Fire in His Hands; With Mercy Toward None; Reap the East Wind; An Ill Fate Marshalling _Listed for completists - none of the recommenders mentioned this series. The darkest (and least commercially popular) of Cook's three continuing series._ Hugh Cook (b. 1956) "Chronicles of an Age of Darkness" - The Wizards and the Warriors; The Wordsmiths and Warguild; The Woman and the Warlords; The Walrus and the Warwolf; The Wicked and the Witless; The Wishstone and the Wonderworkers; The Wazir and the Witch; The Werewolf and the Wormlord; The Worshippers and Way; The Witchlord and the Weaponmaster _These are the titles from the English editions. Only the first couple have been published in the U.S., and they were released under different titles. Excellent series! Books vary radically in tone, ranging from your standard heroes on a fantasy quest to humor/adventure to great events seen through ordinary (or seemingly ordinary) eyes._ Louise Cooper (b. 1952) "Time Master Trilogy" - Initiate; Outcast; Master _The forces of Order and Chaos face off again. However, in Cooper's universe, neither side is unrelievedly good or evil - Chaos and Order are "two sides of the same coin," in the words of the author._ "Chaos Gate Trilogy" - The Pretender; The Deceiver; The Avenger _Set in the same world as the "Time Master" trilogy. It takes place about 60-80 years after the events of the first trilogy._ "Indigo series" - Nemesis; Inferno; Infanta; Nocturne; Troika; Avatar; Revenant; Aisling _The recommender of the "Indigo" series would like to point out that the quality of the books in the series is uneven - some are much better than others_ "Star Shadow trilogy" - Star Ascendant; Eclipse; Moonset (forthcoming) __Moonset_ is already out in the U.K. This is a prequel to the Time Master Trilogy._ *Susan Cooper (b. 1935) "The Dark is Rising" - Over Sea and Under Stone; The Dark is Rising; Greenwitch; The Grey King; Silver on the Tree _Another one that you'll find in the children's section. Arthurian elements, and very good. _Grey King_ took the Newbery Award._ Roberta Cray (b. 1944) The Sword and the Lion _Cray is a pseudonym of Ru Emerson. See her listing for more details._ ---------------------------------------------------------------- Amy Sheldon ais3@po.cwru.edu Benefits Specialist (216) 368-6693 Case Western Reserve University Path: senator-bedfellow.mit.edu!faqserv From: Amy Sheldon Newsgroups: alt.fan.eddings,rec.arts.sf.written,alt.answers,rec.answers,news.answers Subject: Recommended Fantasy Authors List - Part 2/5 Supersedes: Followup-To: poster Date: 28 Apr 1997 09:53:37 GMT Organization: none Lines: 824 Approved: news-answers-request@MIT.EDU Message-ID: References: NNTP-Posting-Host: penguin-lust.mit.edu Summary: Listing of fantasy authors recommended by readers of the alt.fan.eddings newsgroup. Contains descriptive listings on more than 150 authors, forthcoming titles, book news, and numbers of recommendations. X-Last-Updated: 1997/03/17 Originator: faqserv@penguin-lust.MIT.EDU Xref: senator-bedfellow.mit.edu alt.fan.eddings:26561 rec.arts.sf.written:228010 alt.answers:25796 rec.answers:30154 news.answers:100818 Archive-name: fantasy/recommended-authors/part2 Posting-Frequency: monthly Last-modified: 1997/03/17 URL: http://www.sff.net/people/Amy.Sheldon/listcont.htm Version: 2.6 THE RECOMMENDED FANTASY AUTHORS LIST - ver. 2.6 Brian Daley (1947-1996) "Coramonde" - The Doomfarers of Coramonde; The Starfollowers of Coramonde _US soldier in Vietnam is transported into a magical world. Good mix of modern military equipment in a fantasy world, says Jim Lahue._ A Tapestry of Magics _A wandering minstrel is involved in a series of adventures. Most famous for his 'Han Solo' books, Daley also co-wrote (with James Luceno) 'Robotech' books under the pen-name Jack McKinney._ Pamela Dean (b. 1953) "The Secret Country" - The Secret Country; The Hidden Land; The Whim of the Dragon _Another series usually found in the children's section of your library._ The Dubious Hills _Set in the same world as _The Secret Country_, but featuring different characters. An unusual book, this one is not geared toward children._ Tam-Lin _The college setting of this one makes it quite popular with the academic crowd. Stand-alone contemporary retelling of the Tam-Lin legend. Part of the 'Fairy Tale' series._ Juniper, Gentian, and Rosemary (forthcoming July '97) L. Sprague de Camp (b. 1907) "The Reluctant King" - Goblin Tower; The Clocks of Iraz; The Unbeheaded King; The Honorable Barbarian _Classic. Fast-paced heroic adventure with an added dash of humor_ The Complete Compleat Enchanter (co-author Fletcher Pratt) _Great series of novelettes! Published in a variety of configurations, the above title is the U.S. edition that contains all the stories. In the U.K., look for _The Intrepid Enchanter_. Harold Shea travels to a variety of magical worlds, finding love, adventure, and poetry._ The Exotic Enchanter (co-author Christopher Stasheff) _de Camp continues Harold Shea's adventures with a new co-author. There has also been at least one collection of short stories in this series_ John DeChancie (b. 1946) "Castle Perilous sequence" - Castle Perilous; Castle for Rent; Castle Kidnapped; Castle War; Castle Murders; Castle Dreams; Castle Spellbound; Bride of the Castle _Humorous series of books about a castle that contains gateways to different worlds. Adams says that it's 'always good for some laughs.'_ Magicnet _Standalone humorous fantasy about an English professor and a witch fighting an evil hacker/warlock._ Tom Deitz (b. 1952) The Gryphon King _Stand-alone set in Georgia and similar in style to the "David Sullivan" books (although it is NOT part of that series)_ "David Sullivan series" - Windmaster's Bane; Fireshaper's Doom; Darkthunder's Way; Sunshaker's War; Stoneskin's Revenge; Ghostcountry's Wrath; Dreamseeker's Road; Landslayer's Law (forthcoming July '97) _Open-ended series. Celtic myth in rural Georgia. I understand that the recent volumes have also thrown American Indian mysticism into the pot._ "The Soulsmith Trilogy" - Soulsmith; Dreamweaver; Wordwright _Not connected to the David Sullivan series._ Above the Lower Sky; Demons in the Green _Regarding the first book, _Publishers Weekly_ said "War between Orcas and humans, a dolphin-selkie- human alliance and mystical Native American magic are the elements of this fantasy." The second book takes place in the same world._ Charles de Lint (b. 1951) "Jack of Kinrowen" - Jack the Giant Killer; Drink Down the Moon (Omnibus edition with JoK title available from Tor) __Jack the Giant Killer_ was originally published as part of the 'Fairy Tale' series._ "Newford series" - Our Lady of the Harbor; Paperjack; The Wishing Well; Memory and Dream _Standalones taking place in the fictional town of Newford. Most (if not all) of the short stories in the two collections mentioned below take place in Newford also._ "Short story collections" - Dreams Underfoot; The Ivory and the Horn _de Lint's short story collections are a good introduction to the author - if you don't like these, you won't like his novels._ Greenmantle The Little Country Trader _He's written many books, with a fair number only available in small press editions. Most are stand-alone (although related to each other), all are good. The best-known and most productive author in the 'urban fantasy' sub-genre. Often difficult to find in U.S. (this is changing - Tor, his publisher, is showing their good taste and really pushing his work), readily available in Canada & U.K._ Susan Dexter (b. 1955) "Winter King's War" - Ring of Allaire; The Sword Of Calandra; The Mountains of Channadran _Her first work. Out of print, but seems to be fairly easy to find._ "The Warhorse of Esdragon" - The Prince of Ill-Luck; The Wind Witch; The True Knight _Light-hearted adventure. The books are stand-alones, with the warhorse Valadan as the connecting character._ The Wizard's Shadow _Stand-alone (although the ending is left wide open for sequels) about a peddler who makes a bargain with the shadow of murdered wizard. It appears to be set in the same world as the Winter King trilogy._ Gordon Dickson (b. 1923) "The Dragon and the George" - The Dragon and the George; Dragon Knight; The Dragon on the Border; The Dragon at War; The Dragon, the Earl, and the Troll; The Dragon and the Djinn; The Dragon and the Gnarly King (forthcoming August '97) _Open-ended humorous adventure series. If you like him, he also has a ton of SF available. The first book of the series is by far the best, and the only one I can personally recommend in good conscience._ **Stephen Donaldson (b. 1947) "Thomas Covenant - First Chronicles" - Lord Foul's Bane; The Illearth War; The Power That Preserves _VERY highly recommended. This is a powerful trilogy, and you should read it._ "Thomas Covenant - Second Chronicles" - The Wounded Land; The One Tree; White Gold Wielder _The Covenant books can be *quite* grim & depressing, but they are well written and worth your time. Those who love Donaldson's work describe Covenant as a flawed but decent human struggling to come to terms with both his illness and his power. Others with less charity in their souls consider Covenant to be whiny, self-pitying, and a poor excuse for a hero. Give the Chronicles a try & see which category you fall into._ "Thomas Covenant - Third Chronicles" - ?? (forthcoming) _Yep, you read that right. According to the gossip column in _Publishers Weekly_ magazine, Donaldson is working on a third set of Thomas Covenant books. This is still very much in the 'rumored' category, so don't get your hopes up yet. He just finished up a five-book SF series with characters that make the folks in the Covenant books look cheerful and well-adjusted._ "Mordant's Need" - The Mirror of Her Dreams; A Man Rides Through _Several people have remarked that, although the Covenant books weren't their cup of tea, *this* duology was very enjoyable, and nowhere near as gloomy as his usual (although the heroine has more than her share of self-image problems...)_ Diane Duane (b. 1952) "The Tales of the Five tetralogy" - The Door Into Fire; The Door Into Shadow; The Door Into Sunset; The Door Into Starlight (forthcoming) _Mercedes Lackey fans should give this series a try, as most of the folks who recommended this were also big Valdemar fans._ "Young Wizards series" - So You Want To Be a Wizard?; Deep Wizardry; High Wizardry; A Wizard Abroad (U.S. edition due out in '97); The Book of Night With Moon (forthcoming late '97) _Open-ended young adult series. Humorous. They are in the process of being reprinted by Harcourt Brace under their Magic Carpet imprint. _The Book of Night With Moon_ is scheduled for a Christmas 1997 release in the U.S., and will be the first officially "adult" book in the series._ *Dave Duncan (b. 1933) "Seventh Sword" - The Reluctant Swordsman; The Coming of Wisdom; The Destiny of the Sword _His first work. Has some ragged edges, but moves right along._ "A Man of His Word" - The Magic Casement; Faery Lands Forlorn; Perilous Seas; Emperor and Clown _A stableboy sets forth on a quest, and ends up with a (need I say it?) great destiny._ "A Handful of Men" - The Cutting Edge; Upland Outlaws; The Stricken Field; The Living God _Follows the same characters as 'A Man of His Word' series._ "Omar the Storyteller" - The Reaver's Road; The Hunter's Haunt _Described as being 'a little lighter' than Duncan's epic fantasies, this on-going series features Omar the storyteller. The books are completely self- contained, and stand alone._ The Cursed _Stand-alone about a land afflicted by changes brought about by the baleful influence of certain stars. Duncan also has a new book out under the pseudonym Ken Hood titled _Demon Sword_._ "The Great Game" - Past Imperative; Present Tense; Future Indefinite (forthcoming August '97) _This looks interesting - in 1914, a young man suffering from amnesia and accused of murder ends up at Stonehenge, where he is transported to an alternate reality._ Lord Dunsany (1879-1957) The King of Elfland's Daughter _Early fantasy. Dunsany was very influential in the field. The above is probably his most accessible book for modern readers (although I like _The Charwoman's Shadow_ too, but then, I've got a definite fondness for early fantasy). It should be available at most larger libraries_ **David Eddings (b. 1931) "The Belgariad" - Pawn of Prophecy; Queen of Sorcery; Magician's Gambit; Castle of Wizardry; Enchanter's End Game _Eddings' fantasy debut, and, my, was it successful. The forces of dark and light are rushing toward a climatic confrontation, and young farm boy Garion is swept into the battle._ "The Malloreon" - Guardians of the West; King of the Murgos; The Demon Lord of Karanda; The Sorceress of Darshiva; The Seeress of Kell _Continuing the adventures of Garion and Company._ "The Prequels" - Belgarath the Sorcerer; Polgara the Sorceress (forthcoming Fall 1997) _Yep, two more books about our favorite sorcerer and his daughter. These are both prequels to the events of the Belgariad, and should finally answer such burning questions as: Why did Poledra have to pretend she'd died? and How exactly DID the orb get onto the shield?_ "The Elenium" - The Diamond Throne; The Ruby Knight; The Sapphire Rose _Eddings creates a new world and characters. The hero Sparhawk sets off to save his queen and country._ "The Tamuli" - Domes of Fire; The Shining Ones; The Hidden City _More adventures of Sparhawk (Eddings does like to get a lot of use out of his characters). Eddings is by far the most highly recommended author on the List (hardly surprising, as the list originated in the alt.fan.eddings newsgroup)._ E.R. Eddison (1882-1945) The Worm Ouroboros _I've hesitated to add this to the list, since it is an early work in the field (1922), and quite different from what most people expect from fantasy now, but since *Corinne* brought it up...Read it. It's different._ "The Zimiamvian Trilogy" - The Mezentian Gate; A Fish Dinner in Memison; Mistress of Mistresses _Eddison gets a LOT more into philosophy with these. _Mezentian Gate_ is unfinished - the published book contains the chapters he completed and his notes on the ending._ Teresa Edgerton (b. 1949) "The Green Lion Trilogy" - Child of Saturn; The Moon in Hiding; The Work of the Sun _Celtic-inspired fantasy in a complex, well-realized world._ "Kingdom of Celydonn trilogy" - The Castle of the Silver Wheel; The Grail and the Ring; The Moon and the Thorn _More about the world of the "Green Lion" trilogy. Dwayne says the two books he's read are excellent, and I agree, although _Castle_ is a trifle slow- moving in spots. The final book was recently released, and it is a satisfying conclusion to the trilogy._ Goblin Moon; The Gnome's Engine _Jonathan says these are "just awesome - full of intrigue and suspense." Not part of the Celydonn series, the world of these books is built more along Victorian lines._ Rosemary Edghill (b. 1956) "The Twelve Treasures" - The Sword of Maiden's Tears; The Cup of Morning Shadows; The Cloak of Night and Daggers _Series with librarians and elves. Edghill is really eluki bes shahar, and she's published an enjoyable sf trilogy under that name. She also has lots of mysteries and romances out under the Edghill pseudonym._ Phyllis Eisenstein (b. 1946) "Cray the Sorcerer" - Sorcerer's Son; The Crystal Palace _Stand-alones about Cray, a sorcerer._ "Tales of Alaric the Minstrel" - Born to Exile; In the Red Lord's Reach _Two books so far, the first is episodic and has the feel of a short story collection, second is a novel. Alaric is gifted with the magical ability of teleportation._ Ru Emerson (b. 1944) The Princess of Flames _Her first book, and by far her best. Out of print, and hard to find. She's currently doing Shared World stuff._ The Sword and the Lion _Emerson recently published this fantasy under the pen name Roberta Cray. Lengthy stand-alone story taking place in an area reminiscent of the ancient Middle East (Babylon, Sumeria - you know, deserts and lion gods, and dusty walled cities baking under the hot sun). Lots of battles and a young heroine who grows into a great destiny_ Michael Ende (1929-1995) The Neverending Story _Don't judge it by the movies, please, says the recommender._ Jane Fancher (b. 1952) "Dance of the Rings" - Ring of Lightning; Ring of Intrigue _Fancher has several SF novels, but this appears to be her first fantasy. Doug thought the first book was killer, and hopes she writes fast._ **Raymond Feist (b. 1945) "Riftwar Saga" - Magician: Apprentice; Magician: Master; Silverthorn; A Darkness at Sethanon _Fast-paced adventure, and full of action. The first two books were originally published in one volume under the title _Magician_._ "Midkemia series" - Prince of the Blood; The King's Buccaneer _Technically, these two are stand-alone books, although they feature characters and situations introduced in the Riftwar Saga, and set up situations that are due to be resolved in the Serpentwar saga._ "The Serpentwar Saga" - Shadow of a Dark Queen; Rise of a Merchant Prince; Rage of a Demon King (forthcoming April '97); Shards of a Broken Crown (title originally announced as 'The Honor of a Bastard Knight', forthcoming Spring '98) _A new Midkemia series._ Faerie Tale _NOT a Midkemia book. A dark, modern fairy tale._ "Krondor series" - The Trail of Krondor (forthcoming); Return to Krondor (forthcoming) _Novelizations of Feist's 'Krondor' CD-ROM game. Feist is the second most highly recommended author on this list (after Eddings, of course) - his work definitely strikes a chord with most Eddings fans._ Raymond Feist and Janny Wurts "Daughter of the Empire trilogy" - Daughter of the Empire; Servant of the Empire; Mistress of the Empire _Loosely related to Riftwar saga (they take place on the other side of the Rift)._ Lynn Flewelling (b. 1958) "Nightrunner series" - Luck in the Shadows; Stalking Darkness; Traitor's Moon (forthcoming) _A new series about an unjustly imprisoned young man who teams up with a thief._ Alan Dean Foster (b. 1946) "Spellsinger" - Spellsinger; The Hour of the Gate _These are the initial duology. A young man ends up in a world where music has magic. It has become an open-ended series. Foster is an entertaining and competent writer (I've enjoyed his SF books about Flinx and Humanx Commonwealth), however, I've received reports that the later books in this series have fallen off quite a bit in quality._ C.S. Friedman (b. 1955) "The Coldfire Trilogy" - Black Sun Rising; When True Night Falls; Crown of Shadows _Sorta SF, but it takes place on a world where magic works, and it's not a really pleasant place for humans...."Extremely well written, interesting, and a lot different than the typical "sword & sorcery" type book...I would recommend this series to anyone." Her sf novel _In Conquest Born_ has also been mentioned by several recommenders. Doug would like to add the warning that Friedman makes Stephen Donaldson look like a comedy writer, and that depressed persons should avoid these books._ Esther Friesner (b. 1951) Druid's Blood _Alternate world Sherlock Holmes/fantasy pastiche. It gets a bit ragged in places, but on the whole is quite enjoyable. Came out in 1988 as a paperback original and will probably be hard to find._ "Demon series" - Here Be Demons; Demon Blues; Hooray for Hellywood _Open-ended humorous fantasy series. Relies less on horrendous puns then some of the other humorous fantasy authors. Her 'Majyk' series is NOT recommended._ The Sherwood Game _New fantasy. Nathan liked it enough to give Friesner a recommendation, returning her to the list after a six month absence._ Maggie Furey "The Artifacts of Power" - Aurian; Harp of Winds; The Sword of Flame; Dhiamarra (forthcoming April '97 in U.K., Sept. '97 in the U.S.) _I've been waiting for this to get recommended. New tetralogy that's been getting pretty decent reviews. Jonathan says that it is very good fantasy._ Craig Shaw Gardner (b. 1949) "The Cineverse Cycle" - Slaves of the Volcano God; Bride of the Slime Monster; The Revenge of the Fluffy Bunnies _humorous (it's quite punny *ouch*) trilogy set in a parallel universe based on 'B' movies_ "Ebenezum/Wuntvor series" - A Malady of Magicks; A Multitude of Monsters; A Night in the Netherhells; A Difficulty with Dwarves; An Excess of Enchantments; A Disagreement with Death _Standalone humor novels about an incompetent magician and his apprentice_ "Arabian Nights" - The Other Sinbad; The Last Arabian Knight _More humor (do I sense a trend here?)_ "The Dragon Circle" - Dragon Sleeping; Dragon Waking; Dragon Burning _A storm transplants a suburban community into a magical world. Nick is "thrust into a dire sorcerous conflict" that involves the control of an immortal, all-powerful dragon. This trilogy is SERIOUS, folks. Jonathan notes that he was a little nervous about trying this one because it was Gardner's first attempt at an epic, but "I liked it a lot."_ Alan Garner (b. 1934) "Alderley stories" - The Weirdstone of Brisingamen; The Moon of Gomrath _Marvelous author. These are his some of his earliest work, you'll find them in the children's section of your library._ Elidor _Four children must save an alternate world through the use of four symbols of power._ The Owl Service _Echoes of the Mabinogion in a moody and intense novel that totally bewildered me when I was 12, but that I love now._ Randall Garrett (1927-1987) "Lord Darcy" - Murder and Magic; Too Many Magicians; Lord Darcy Investigates _Open-ended series of detective stories set in an alternate England where magic works. Michael Kurland has continued this series with the books _Ten Little Wizards_ and _A Study in Sorcery_._ Randall Garrett and Vicky Heydron (b. 1945) "The Gandalara Cycle" - The Steel of Raithskar; The Glass of Dyskornis; The Bronze of Eddarta; The Well of Darkness; The Search for Ka; Return to Eddarta; The River Wall _Randall developed this series with his wife Vicky, but he did not actually write any of the books due to the effects of his eventually fatal illness_ *David Gemmell (b. 1948) "The Drenai" - Legend; King Beyond the Gate; Quest For Lost Heroes; Waylander; Waylander II; The First Chronicles of Druss the Legend; Second Chronicles of Druss the Legend; The Legend of Deathwalker _The Drenai books are good, solid standalone fantasy adventures that take place in the same world. Gemmell is a retailing phenomenon in England, with a publishing imprint named after his first book. Only the first four Drenai books have been published in the U.S. - the final four won't start appearing in the U.S. until late 1998._ "The Lion of Macedon" - Lion of Macedon; Dark Prince _Fantasy version of the life of Alexander the Great. History purists be warned - Gemmell plays fast and loose with Greek history and mythology. Only available in trade paperback in the U.S._ "The Stones of Power" - Ghost King; Last Sword of Power; Wolf in Shadow (1st U.S. edition Feb. '97); The Last Guardian (1st U.S. edition July '97); Bloodstone (1st U.S. edition June, '98) _The second first two books take place in a vaguely Arthurian past, and the others feature Jon Shannow, and take place in the far future. The connecting feature of the two eras are the Sipstrassi, the stones of power._ Knights of Dark Renown _A stand-alone. It is out in the U.S._ Morningstar _Another stand-alone._ "The Hawk Queen" - Ironhand's Daughter; Hawk Eternal (both are only out in the U.K.) _The Gemmellites don't seem to be particularly enthusiastic about this particular duology (commentary has ranged from the lukewarm to the tepid). Gemmell's work has just started coming out in the U.S. He IS worth looking up - an entertaining author who tells a fast-paced story. Fairly traditional fantasy, with heroic heroes (who have flaws, but overcome them when the chips are down) and dastardly villains._ Dark Moon (forthcoming Oct '96 in the U.K.) The Winter Warriors (forthcoming April '97 in the U.K.) Mary Gentle (b. 1956) "The White Crow sequence" - Rats and Gargoyles; The Architecture of Desire _Gothic fantasy. These books are very loosely related, and definitely stand alone. I haven't read them yet, and I should, because I really enjoy her SF. Thanks to Ray for suggesting these_ Grunts! _I've heard a lot about this one - I understand it has a lot of black humor. It's been out in Britain for a while, but just appeared in the U.S._ William Goldman (b. 1931) The Princess Bride _A fast-paced, funny romp through every fantasy cliche you can think of (watch out for the rodents of unusual size). Written by an author best known for his screenplays (think _Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid_), which may be why the movie actually does a good job of capturing the tone of the book._ Terry Goodkind "The Sword of Truth" - Wizard's First Rule; Stone of Tears; Blood of the Fold; Temple of the Winds (forthcoming Sept. '97) _Goodkind's debut novel made a big splash, and he quickly followed it up. Mikey REALLY likes _First Rule_ and highly recommends it. Goodkind has sold five books in the series to Tor, so there's at least two more in the pipeline._ Simon Green (b. 1955) Blue Moon Rising _"My favorite new book this year....standard fantasy with enough of a twist to keep me interested," reports Nathan. Your FAQMaster agrees - it moves quickly, the characters are standard types but still manage to be interesting, and it kept me reading straight through to the end._ Down Among the Dead Men; Blood and Honor _Both set in the same world as _Blue Moon,_ but they're not really sequels. "Down" takes place years after, and features a totally different set of characters, while "Blood" is about an actor who must play the double of a prince during a crisis. Action-packed adventure._ "Hawke and Fisher series" - Guard Against Dishonor; Hawke and Fisher; The Bones of Haven; The God Killer; Winner Take All; Wolf In the Fold _Apparently the characters of Hawke and Fisher are VERY similar to the two main characters of _Blue Moon Rising_. This is early Green, and not readily available in the U.S._ Shadows Fall _Simon Green Gets Ambitious. Shadows Fall is the town where legends go to die, and where the apocalypse is about to occur. Not completely successful, but worth reading, and it is always nice to see an author trying to stretch his repertoire. Green is currently in the midst of a galaxy-sweeping space opera._ Twilight of the Empire (forthcoming August '97) _Well, this might be science fiction, but I'm kinda hoping it'll be fantasy. There just aren't that many authors who can be counted on to produce a good blood-and-guts fantasy adventure..._ Gayle Greeno (b. 1949) "The Ghatti's Tale trilogy" - The Ghatti's Tale; Mindspeakers' Call; Exiles' Return _KDR said that this is "like Lackey's Valdemar with cats."_ H. Rider Haggard (1856-1925) "Allan Quartermain books" - King Solomon's Mines; Allan Quartermain; Maiwa's Revenge; Child of Storm; She and Allan; Allan's Wife; Marie; Finished; several others _Allan Quartermain did a lot of traveling before he went to King Solomon's Mines. The novels range from straight adventure to outright fantasy and if you're in the mood for a ripping good yarn, give 'em a try._ *Barbara Hambly (b. 1951) "Darwath Trilogy" - The Time of the Dark; The Walls of Air; The Armies of Daylight _Another 'folks from our world cross into fantastic realm,' but quite well done (especially considering that this was Hambly's first fantasy) with intelligent characters and some interesting twists._ "Darwath series" - Mother of Winter; The Icefalcon's Quest (forthcoming) _Hambly returns to the world of Darwath, the setting of her first fantasy trilogy, after a decade away._ Dragonsbane _Standalone about a witch and hero, and a kingdom that's in a lot of trouble. A good introduction to Hambly's work._ "Windrose Chronicles" - The Silent Tower; The Silicon Mage; Dog Wizard _The first two are basically one book that got split in two due to size. _Dog Wizard_ continues the plot, and leaves a fair amount of dangling threads at the end. This may be turning into an open-ended series_ Stranger at the Wedding (U.K. title - Sorcerer's Ward) _A standalone set in same world as "Windrose Chronicles," but featuring different characters. One of Hambly's weaker offerings._ "Sun Cross duology" - Rainbow Abyss; The Magicians of Night _Wizards cross from their world into ours, and end up in Nazi Germany._ "Sun Wolf/Starhawk" - The Ladies of Madrigyn; The Witches of Wenshar; The Dark Hand of Magic _Although each of these is a separate, self- contained story, they are best enjoyed in order, and _Dark Hand of Magic_ does bring the series to a fairly definite close._ "James Asher Chronicles" - Those Who Hunt the Night; Traveling With the Dead _Hambly does the vampire routine. And she does it quite well - in fact, _TWHtN_ took the _Locus_ fantasy novel award the year it came out._ Bride of the Rat God _Lots of fun - 1920's Hollywood and Chinese magic._ Lyndon Hardy (b. 1941) "Magics series" - The Master of Five Magics; The Secret of the Sixth Magic; The Riddle of the Seven Realms _It was recently reported that Hardy has left off novel writing and gone back to doctoring, so fans of this series will have to be content with these three._ Deborah Turner Harris (b. 1951) "Mages of Garillon series" - The Burning Stone; The Gauntlet of Malice; Spiral of Fire _Appeared in the late eighties, and not easy to find. Dan says that _The Burning Stone_ is "one of the best fantasy world creations that I've come across."_ "Caledon series" - Caledon of the Mists; Queen of Ashes; The City of Exile (forthcoming August '97) _Harris is co-author (with Katherine Kurtz) of the Adept series._ Harry Harrison (b. 1925) "The Hammer and the Cross trilogy" - The Hammer and the Cross; One King's Way; King and Emperor _Mystical visions of Norse and Christian mythologies are combined with an alternative history of the ninth century in this new fantasy trilogy by SF stalwart Harrison. It's getting very good press, and our very own Donal recommends it highly._ Simon Hawke (b. 1951) "Wizard of 4th Street" - Wizard of 4th Street; Wizard of Whitechapel; Wizard of Sunset Strip; Wizard of the Rue Morgue; Samurai Wizard; Wizard of Santa Fe; Wizard of Camelot; Wizard of Lovecraft's Cafe _Open-ended partly-humorous series of loosely related books. His other series, "The Reluctant Wizard," was noted as being 'humorous, but not so great' He also has a series set in the Dark Sun AD&D Campaign World._ Robin Hobb (b. 1952) "The Farseer Trilogy" - Assassin's Apprentice; Royal Assassin; Assassin's Quest _This is very good. A royal bastard is being trained as an assassin, and is drawn deeply into court politics and intrigue. It's being advertised as the first work of a new author, but if you really like it, you won't have to wait to try more of her work. Hobb is a pseudonym for Megan Lindholm, and she has a fair number of works out under her own name._ P.C. Hodgell (b. 1951) "Chronicles of the Kencyrath" - God Stalk; Dark of the Moon; Seeker's Mask _First two were published in mass-market paperback. Current works are only available through Hypatia Press, a small press in Oregon (they also have the first two books available - call them at 1-800-738- 2660). They also have several of her shorter stories (set in the same world) available as chapbooks. Hodgell is a cult favorite over on r.a.sf.w., and is reportedly at work on a fourth book._ Robert Holdstock (b. 1948) "Mythago Wood Cycle" - Mythago Wood; Llavondys; The Hollowing; The Bone Forest; Gate of Ivory, Gate of Horn (forthcoming) _Different. Those of you interested in mythology and archetypes should enjoy these. All standalone, although you really should read _Mythago Wood_ to understand what is going on._ Ancient Echoes _Holdstock describes this as "a cross between an altered-state situation and _Mythago Wood_, plus some magical realism, some very Old Testament and...some wonderful special effects."_ Tom Holt (b. 1961) "Duology" - Goatsong; The Walled Orchard _Michael describes these as being a bit more serious than Holt's other works, and a bit less erratic._ Expecting Someone Taller _Uh oh, here comes Gotterdammerung..._ Flying Dutch _These two were specifically mentioned, but he's written a fair number of books now, mostly humorous, all taking a myth/legend and putting an odd spin on it. He's a lot more popular in England than he is in the U.S._ Daniel Hood "Sorcerer Liam series" - Fanuilh; Wizard's Heir _Apparently an open-ended series. I keep a pretty close eye on the fantasy shelves, but I have to admit that these are totally unfamiliar._ William Horwood (b. 1944) "The Duncton Chronicles" - Duncton Wood; Duncton Quest; Duncton Found; Duncton Tales _Well, it's about moles....but Stevie says "it's also about good vs. evil, religion and self- discovery." The first was published almost a decade before the final three, and general consensus is that it is the best of the lot._ "Willows sequels" - The Willows in Winter; Toad Triumphant _Sequels to Kenneth Grahame's _Wind in the Willows_. These are receiving good notices, so those with fond memories of Grahame's work should feel safe in trying these out._ Robert E. Howard (1906-1936) "Conan the Barbarian" - Conan; Conan of Cimmeria; Conan the Freebooter; Conan the Wanderer; and so on _Back from Cimmeria, the *Original* Barbarian Swordsman! Howard had only published 2 novels & a pile of short stories about Conan when he committed suicide at the age of 31, but he left behind a trunk full of material that has been compiled, combined, reconfigured, and added to by various authors and editors (including L. Sprague deCamp and Robert Jordan)._ Tanya Huff (b. 1957) "The Novels of Crystal" - Child of the Grove; The Last Wizard _Huff's earliest work, about the last wizard in a world that fears and despises her._ The Fire's Stone _Competent stand-alone about a thief, a swordsman and a wizard. There's a love triangle that isn't resolved quite as you might expect._ Sing the Four Quarters; Fifth Quarter; No Quarter _Krista really enjoyed first novel of this series, and is looking forward to _Fifth Quarter_. _Sing_ stands alone, but books two and three tell a continuing story, and must be read in order. Huff also has a horror/mystery series, all with "Blood" in the title._ Barry Hughart (b. 1934) "Master Li and Number Ten Ox series" - The Bridge of Birds; The Story of the Stone; Eight Skilled Gentlemen _Open-ended series set in ancient China. HIGHLY recommended by your FAQ maker (especially the first one). Alas, the final book is just about impossible to find (believe me, I've been looking - anyone got an extra copy they want to peddle?)._ Robert Don Hughes (b. 1949) "Pelman the Powershaper" - Prophet of Lamath; The Wizard in Waiting; The Power and the Prophet _Trilogy about a land that has been divided by a two-headed dragon. Jim's read these, too, and he liked them._ "Wizard and Dragon" - The Forging of the Dragon; The Faithful Traitor; 1 more yet to come _Continuing the story of the land introduced in the first trilogy. Hughes is back in the States and writing Christian fantasies (he was in Africa doing missionary work), but there is no word on when or if he plans to complete the "Wizard and Dragon" trilogy._ THE RECOMMENDED FANTASY AUTHORS LIST - ver. 2.6 Brian Jacques (b. 1939) "Redwall series" - Redwall; Mossflower; Mattimeo; Mariel of Redwall; Salamandastron; Martin the Warrior; The Bellmaker; The Outcasts of Redwall; The Pearls of Lutra _These are fun. I buy them for my niece, and always read them myself before I give them to her. Redwall is an Abbey run by a group of mice, and this series of standalone books details their adventures. They are geared toward the children's market (and are incredibly popular - ask your local children's librarian about how quickly they fly off the shelves)._ John Jakes (b. 1932) Mention My Name in Atlantis _Before John Jakes hit the big time with his 'Kent Family Chronicles', he turned out an incredible number of novels and stories in a variety of genres. Among them were the 'Brak the Barbarian' sword and sorcery series and this amusing parody. It is long out of print, but it turns up often at used bookstores._ Michael Jeffries "Loremasters of Elundium trilogy" - The Road to Underfall; Palace of Kings; Shadowlight _Written in a consciously mythic style with minimal characterization (you can pretty much tell the what each individual's personality will be by their name - yeah, 'Proudpurse' is the venal and villainous chancellor), this series turned out to be a lot more interesting than I thought it would be. Give it a try._ The Knights of Cawdor _Standalone set in the world of Elundium._ "Heirs to Gnarlsmyre" - Glitterspike Hall; Hall of Whispers _New series, unrelated to the Elundium books._ Diana Wynne Jones (b. 1934) "The Dalemark Sequence" - Drowned Ammet; Cart and Cwidder; The Spellcoats; The Crown of Dalemark _Young adult standalone novels all taking place in Dalemark. The first three books all stand alone, and can be read in any order, but the final book ties them all together, and will be best enjoyed if you've read all of the others._ "Crestomanci books" - The Lives of Christopher Chant; Charmed Life; Witch Week; The Magicians of Caprona _Stand-alones that all have the magician Crestomanci involved somehow._ "The Magician Howl series" - Howl's Moving Castle; Castle in the Air _The second book of this one is hard to find in the U.S. - Books of Wonder in New York stocks most of Jones' work, and they are good place to look if you can't find a fix anywhere else._ The Homeward Bounders _Standalone about a boy doomed to wander between worlds._ Archer's Goon A Sudden Wild Magic _This one is fairly recent and is being marketed as an adult book, making it the most widely available book of hers in the U.S. Alas, it is also one of her weakest offerings, so look up any of her other books before you decide on her abilities._ Time of the Ghost (published Sept. '96 in the U.S, but it's been out for more than a decade in Britain) _Most of Jones' work is geared toward the Young Adult market, but don't let that stop you. I particularly liked _Archer's Goon_, _The Homeward Bounders_ and _Howl's Moving Castle_, Eriond likes _Dogsbody_ the best, but he reads everything of hers he can find (so do I)._ J.V. Jones (b. 1963) "The Book of Words trilogy" - The Baker's Boy; A Man Betrayed; Master and Fool _Denis thought this was the best new trilogy he'd read in 1996._ The Barbed Coil (forthcoming Sept. '97) _A stand alone that looks like it will be set in a world similar to that of the Book of Words._ **Robert Jordan (b. 1948) "The Wheel of Time" - The Eye of the World; The Great Hunt; The Dragon Reborn; The Shadow Rising; The Fires of Heaven; Lord of Chaos; A Crown of Swords; plus at least three more _Jordan recently stated that he thinks it should take about three more books to complete the series, but he isn't making any promises. Many a.f.e. regulars are passionately devoted to this series. Huge (all the books are 500+ pages), sprawling, and madly complex._ The Conan Chronicles _For the Joradanites who need a fix while awaiting the next volume of The Wheel of Time, this omnibus edition collects Jordan's Conan novels._ **Guy Gavriel Kay (b. 1954) "The Fionavar Tapestry" - The Summer Tree; The Wandering Fire; The Darkest Road _Bad Things Can Happen To Good People in Kay's books. Be forewarned, but read them anyway. This is yet another take on Arthurian legend._ Tigana _A standalone about a land under a particularly nasty curse, and the inhabitants' fight to end it. Complex, very well written. Your FAQmaker tried it after receiving numerous glowing recommendations, and now adds her voice to the chorus_ A Song for Arbonne _Another excellent standalone from Kay. The fantasy world is loosely based on medieval France (specifically Eleanor of Aquitaine's Court of Love)._ The Lions of Al-Rassan _Kay's latest, set in a time and place reminiscent of Moorish Spain. Wow, do I like his stuff - great characters, marvelous story, vivid world. He just gets better and better. The fantasy content of Kay's work is shrinking, and it is virtually non-existent here. Kay has just started on a new book (no details on the content as yet) which should see print sometime in 1998._ Marjorie Kellogg (b. 1946) "The Dragon Quartet" - The Book of Earth; The Book of Water _Presumably this will finish up with books of Air and Fire. Kellogg also wrote some very good SF back in the 80's._ Patricia Kennealy-Morrison (b. 1946) "Keltiad series (a.k.a. The Tale of Aeron)" - The Silver Branch; The Copper Crown; The Throne of Scone _What would have happened if the Celts had escaped from Atlantis to Ireland, and then on to outer space?_ "The Tale of Arthur" - The Hawk's Gray Feather; The Oak Above the Kings; The Hedge of Mist _Her earlier books were (and still are) published under the name "Patricia Kennealy". She is deeply interested in Celtic myth, and, yes, 'The Tale of Arthur' is about THAT Arthur. Trivia buffs will be fascinated to know that Patricia Kennealy was kinda sorta married to late Jim Morrison of The Doors (there is some quibbling about the validity of the marriage ceremony they went through)._ Blackmantle (forthcoming Sept. '97) _Anyone know if this will be related to any of her other series?_ *Katharine Kerr (b. 1944) "Deverry" - Daggerspell; Darkspell; The Bristling Wood ('Dawnspell' in the U.K.); The Dragon Revenant ('Dragonspell' in the U.K.) __Daggerspell_ has recently been re-released in the U.S. The new edition has been re-edited by the author, however this consisted mainly of tightening some passages and some grammatical cleanup. NO scenes were added or taken out. _Darkspell_ has also been reissued by Bantam Spectra, and it too has been re-edited by the author, and, according to Katharine Kerr, "...there are 5 or 6 changes to the action along the way..." Sarcyn's character undergoes the most significant changes. A *fine* author - her readers (and that includes the FAQmaster) recommend her highly._ "The Westland Cycle" - A Time of Exile; A Time of Omens; Days of Blood and Fire ('A Time of War' in the U.K.); Days of Air and Darkness ('A Time of Justice' in the U.K.) _More about Deverry._ "The final Deverry tetralogy" - The Red Wyvern (forthcoming Oct. '97); The Black Raven (forthcoming); 2 more _The final tetralogy that will complete the story of Deverry. She intersperses SF novels with her fantasy output, and they're worth reading, too._ Stephen King (b. 1946) The Eyes of the Dragon _Good standalone fantasy (there are so few of those out there these days...) I enjoyed it, and I am *not* a Stephen King fan._ "Dark Tower series" - The Gunslinger; The Drawing of the Three; The Waste Lands; Wizard and Glass (forthcoming late '97, maybe) _Eriond says this is a great series that is improving as it goes along. "It's about a gunslinger who's seeking his father's murderer, picks up an "adopted" son and three companions, and is slowly losing his mind." Eriond also says to skip _The Gunslinger_ - "it's wretched! You don't really need to read it to understand [the series]" (although another recommender strongly disagrees with him). The fourth book is tentatively scheduled for late '97, but I wouldn't expect it until '98._ Richard Knaak (b. 1961) "The Dragonrealm" - Firedrake; Ice Dragon; Wolfhelm; Shadow Steed; The Shrouded Realm; Children of the Drake; Dragon Tome; The Crystal Dragon; The Dragon Crown _Light reading of the 'Dragonlance' variety (in fact, Knaak has three DragonLance novels under his belt), but it is a totally separate series._ Frostwing _Standalone about an immortal sorcerer haunted in his dreams by the gargoyle Frostwing, who knows the truth about him. (Corrected capsule description courtesy of the author, who presumably has a better idea than Paul on what the book is about)._ King of the Grey The Janus Mask _Two more fantasy standalones._ Dutchman _A new variation on the Flying Dutchman, taking place in Chicago._ The Horse King (forthcoming March '97) *Katherine Kurtz (b. 1944) "Deryni Chronicles" - Deryni Rising; Deryni Checkmate; High Deryni _The first published Deryni books. Although these are not first in the internal chronology of the series, Kurtz herself has recommended that new readers start with these. Takes place in a Wales-like alternate world where a portion of the population (the Deryni) have magical abilities_ "Camber of Culdi" - Camber of Culdi; Saint Camber; Camber the Heretic _Jumps back in time to examine the history that lead to the world of the "Deryni Chronicles."_ "The Histories of King Kelson" - The Bishop's Heir; The King's Justice; The Quest for Saint Camber _Picks up where the "Chronicles" left off._ "Heirs of Saint Camber" - The Harrowing of Gwynedd; King Javan's Year; The Bastard Prince _Apparently, Bad Things *Regularly* Happen to Good People in the later books of Katherine Kurtz. Her fans are quite dedicated, and she has a newsgroup at alt.books.deryni._ King Kelson's Bride (forthcoming June, 1997) _A standalone continuation of the Deryni saga. Kurtz is reportedly hard at work on it, but at this point the "Fall 1997" publication date stills falls into the realm of wishful thinking._ Two Crowns for America _A non-Deryni book. This one takes place in an alternate history colonial America._ Katherine Kurtz and Deborah Turner Harris (b. 1951) "The Adept series" - The Adept; The Lodge of the Lynx; The Templar Treasure; Dagger Magic; Death of an Adept _Set in modern day Scotland, Kheldar says "I recommend them to everybody, not just readers of Sci-Fi/Fantasy." Harris also has several books of her own out, listed under her name._ Ellen Kushner (b. 1955) Swordspoint _She is reported to be working on a sequel to this one._ Thomas the Rhymer _A stand-alone based on the Scottish ballad. Kushner has also edited several excellent fantasy short story collections_ **Mercedes Lackey (b. 1950) "The Valdemar Books" - titles follow _Each of the following is a separate series, but they all take place at various points in the history of the world of Velgarth (which contains the country of Valdemar). There is also at least one stand-alone (_By the Sword_) about Valdemar. Her fans are as dedicated as the Jordanites and they have their own newsgroup at alt.books.m-lackey_ "The Last Herald-Mage" - Magic's Pawn; Magic's Promise; Magic's Price _Introduces the Herald-Mages and their equine Companions._ "Vows and Honor" - The Oathbound; Oathbreakers _A sorceress and a swordswoman are bound together with a blood oath that may be impossible to fulfill._ "Queen's Own" - Arrows of the Queen; Arrow's Flight; Arrow's Fall _The story of Talia, the herald to the Queen._ "Mage Winds Trilogy" - Winds of Fate; Winds of Change; Winds of Fury _Princess Elspeth of Valdemar becomes caught up in the Tayledras' war against an evil mage._ "Mage Wars Trilogy (co-authored by Larry Dixon)" - The Black Gryphon; The White Gryphon; The Silver Gryphon _The early history of the land of Valdemar._ "Mage Storm Trilogy" - Storm Warning; Storm Rising; Storm Breaking _The most recent series. Valdemar and Karse are old enemies, but they are forced into an alliance when they are both threatened by a greater foe._ "Diana Tregard Investigations" - Burning Water; Children of the Night; Jinx High _Supernatural mysteries, featuring Diana Tregard._ "Bardic Voices" - The Lark and the Wren; The Robin and the Kestrel; The Eagle and the Nightingale _The books in this series do stand alone. NOT part of the Valdemar series._ "Bardic Choices" - A Cast of Corbies (co-author Josepha Sherman) _A new series in the Bardic Voices world._ The Fire Rose _A standalone. A 'Beauty and the Beast' style tale set in pre-earthquake San Francisco._ Firebird _A standalone, based on Russian folktales. As you can see, Lackey is a wildly prolific author, co- authoring books with everyone under the sun._ Stephen Lawhead (b. 1950) "The Pendragon Cycle" - Taliesin; Merlin; Arthur; Pendragon; Grail (forthcoming July '97); Avalon (forthcoming) _Once again, we return to Camelot..."The quality disintegrated after the first two books - _Arthur_ was disappointing..." according to one recommender._ "The Dragon King Trilogy" - In the Hall of the Dragon King; The Warlords of Nin; The Sword and the Flame "The Paradise War" - The Song of Albion; The Silver Hand; The Endless Knot _Doug noted that even though he isn't particularly a fan of celtic fantasy, these books really appealed to him._ Byzantium _'Joining a select band of monks to present a book to the Holy Roman Emperor himself, Aidan jouneys to the farthest reaches of the known world,' sez the advertising released by HarperPrism publishing._ *Ursula K. Le Guin (b. 1929) "Earthsea" - A Wizard of Earthsea; The Tombs of Atuan; The Farthest Shore; Tehanu _Your FAQmaker says: Read these. _Tehanu_ was written 15 years after _The Farthest Shore_ - it's very different in tone from the first three, and several recommenders specifically DIDN'T recommend it (But I do. I'll tell you what to do - wait until you are at least 25 before reading _Tehanu_. Age seems to be the real separating factor between those who like it and those who don't). These books are true classics of the genre, beautifully written, tightly plotted, and engrossing._ Fritz Leiber (1910-1992) "Fafhrd and the Grey Mouser" - Swords and Deviltry; Swords Against Death; Swords in the Mist; Swords Against Wizardry; Swords Against Lankhmar; Swords and Ice Magic; Knight and Knave of Swords _Ya wanna know who _invented_ the term 'Sword & Sorcery'? This is the guy. The series is made up of short stories, novellas, novelettes, and one novel (the final book). The above-listed 7 books contain all the stories, arranged in chronological order, with _Swords and Deviltry_ featuring the Hugo-award winning "Ill Met in Lankhmar." Note that the final two books (_Swords & Ice Magic_ & _Knight & Knave of Swords_) show, IMHO of course, a real drop in quality._ Madeleine L'Engle (b. 1918) "The Time Trilogy" - A Wrinkle in Time; A Wind in the Door; A Swiftly Tilting Planet _The first book stands alone (and won all kinds of awards - it deserved them). L'Engle has added another book to the trilogy titled _Many Waters_ (it features the twins), and some of the characters have also made cameo appearances in her other books. They're in the young adult section of your library._ *C.S. Lewis (1898-1963) "Chronicles of Narnia" - The Magician's Nephew; The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe; Prince Caspian; The Voyage of the Dawn Treader; The Horse and His Boy; The Silver Chair; The Last Battle _Classic! Look for them in the children's sections. Most bookstores will have boxed sets available. Note that _The Magician's Nephew_ was actually the 6th book written, and for many years in the U.S. the series was printed with it as book six. However, Lewis preferred that the books be read in the above order, and recent reprints have respected his wishes._ "The Space Trilogy" - Out of the Silent Planet; Perelandra; That Hideous Strength _Lewis' adult version of a Christian-allegory fantasy._ Astrid Lindgren (b. 1907) Ronia Robber's Daughter _Well, she didn't ONLY write about Pippi Longstocking. Denis says this is an enjoyable young adult fantasy._ The Lionheart Brothers _Two young brothers become involved in a struggle to free two beautiful valleys from a tyrant and his dragon._ Mio, My Mio _A young prince tries to free children that are kidnapped by an evil knight with an iron claw instead of a hand. Christina informs me that Lindgren is loved by children from ages 5 to 95._ R.A. MacAvoy (b. 1949) Tea With the Black Dragon _Out of print, but worth looking up. This was her first book - its sequel (_Twisting the Rope_) is nowhere near as good._ "Damiano trilogy" - Damiano; Damiano's Lute; Raphael _Fantasy in Renaissance Italy_ "Lens of the World trilogy" - Lens of the World; King of the Dead; Belly of the Wolf _MacAvoy is fond of creating heroes who remain stubbornly innocent to the point of idiocy. Some readers find this annoying (yeah, I'm one of them), but she is a good writer, and always tells an interesting story._ George R.R. Martin (b. 1948) "Song of Ice and Fire trilogy" - A Game of Thrones; A Dance with Dragons (forthcoming Nov. '97) _I don't normally touch a trilogy until all the pieces are published, but I broke my rule on this one. Martin is a veteran of the SF field, and this is an excellent fantasy with complex characters and a magnificently baroque setting._ *Julian May (b. 1931) "The Saga of the Pliocene Exiles" - The Many-Colored Land; The Golden Torc; The Nonborn King; The Adversary _Set six million years in the past. I'm told this is kinda like 'elves and dinosaurs.' It is related to May's SF series, "The Galactic Milieu," so if you like her you've got more books to look for._ **Anne McCaffrey (b. 1926) "Dragonriders of Pern" - Dragonflight; Dragonquest; The White Dragon _Yeah, they're SF, but they're included here by popular request. Lots more have been published since the first trilogy, and they've gotten more and more SFnal as they've gone along._ "Harper's Hall trilogy" - Dragonsong; Dragonsinger; Dragondrums _Geared more toward the Young Adult market, your FAQmaker considers this trilogy to be the most fantasy-based of the Pern books._ Dan McGirt (b. 1967) "Jason Cosmo" - Jason Cosmo; Royal Chaos; Dirty Work _Open-ended humorous adventure series featuring a woodcutter turned hero through a case of mistaken identity. Kalten really really likes this series._ Nancy McKenzie "Guinevere duology" - The Child Queen; The High Queen _A new world's record! This first novel just showed up in bookstores in July '94, and immediately got 2 recommendations (and a couple more rolled in since). Yeah, it's Guinevere and Arthur AGAIN, but it looks like it may be worth reading anyway_ Dennis McKiernan (b. 1932) "The Iron Tower Trilogy" - The Dark Tide; Shadows of Doom; The Darkest Day _Well, McKiernan wanted to write a sequel to 'Lord of the Rings', but the Tolkien estate refused permission. So he recreated Middle Earth in "The Iron Tower Trilogy" with just enough differences to keep from violating copyright and has continued from there. A decent writer, and his later books about the world of Mithgar are much more original and quite enjoyable_ "Silver Call duology" - Trek to Kraggen-Cor; The Brega Path _This was intended to be one book, so you definitely don't want to read it unless you have both parts in hand._ Tales of Mithgar _11 short stories set in Mithgar._ Dragondoom The Eye of the Hunter Voyage of the Fox Rider The Dragonstone Into the Forge (forthcoming Sept. '97) _These books stand alone, but take place in Mithgar, the world of the "Iron Tower" trilogy. McKiernan's latest book, _The Caverns of Socrates,_ is SF_ Patricia McKillip (b. 1948) The Forgotten Beasts of Eld _Received the World Fantasy Award when it was published in 1975. A marvelous novel and highly recommended. It recently (July '96) was returned to print in the U.S. by Harcourt Brace under their "Magic Carpet" imprint. Hooray!_ The Throme of the Erril of Sherill _Her first published fantasy, and it's hard to find, but well worth looking for. A revised edition came out in the mid-80's._ "The Riddlemaster of Hed" - The Riddlemaster of Hed; Heir of Sea and Fire; Harpist in the Wind _Excellent trilogy. Your FAQmaker sez: Get these and read them. Beautifully written._ The Changeling Sea _A young-adult standalone, with a young peasant girl saving a prince. Lyrical and moving._ Something Rich and Strange _A standalone, part of Brian Froud's Faerielands series of novels based on his illustrations. Very atmospheric, quite short, involving a contemporary couple living on the western seacoast and their encounter with magic._ The Book of Atrix Wolfe _Standalone about a powerful wizard whose attempt to stop a war has unexpected (and disastrous) results._ "Cygnet" - Sorceress and Cygnet; Cygnet and Firebird _The first book in this series is well equipped with McKillip's usual lyric prose, but the plot is a bit, um, obscure. Enjoyable, but not her best work._ Winter Rose _Another small gem from McKillip. Faerie and reality meet, with results that may be fatal for Rois Melior's sister Laurel._ Robin McKinley (b. 1952) Beauty _Charming retelling of Beauty & the Beast. Her first novel-it's out of print now, but worth looking for. Do NOT confuse it with Sherri Tepper's _Beauty_ - they are VERY different books._ "Damar series" - The Blue Sword; The Hero and the Crown _She only wrote two books set in Damar (and they are standalones), and has since gone on to other subjects._ The Outlaws of Sherwood _Guess who this one's about._ Deerskin _I like McKinley, but most of her work is fairly lightweight. This isn't. Based on the uncensored version of Perrault's classic fairytale 'Donkeyskin', it tackles the subject of incest_ A Knot in the Grain and Other Stories _Short story collection. Two of the five stories in the book mention Damar._ The Rose Cottage (forthcoming Sept. '97) _It has been way too long since a new book came out from McKinley. This is being peddled to the Young Adult market, so you'll need to leave the sf section of your bookstore to find it._ A. Merritt (1884-1943) The Moon Pool _A complicated lost-race fantasy that begins with a monster in a pool in Micronesia._ The Ship of Ishtar _Generally considered his best book, this is about a man who travels into a magical world and falls in love with the captain of ship of Ishtar._ The Dwellers in the Mirage _Another lost-race tale, this one has two versions, one with a happy ending, one without. Merritt was one of the pioneers of the sf and fantasy field. His books are now out of print, but they were popular enough that you should be able to find them at a good library._ L.E. Modesitt Jr. (b. 1943) "Recluce" - The Magic of Recluce; The Towers of the Sunset; The Magic Engineer; The Order War; The Death of Chaos; Fall of Angels; The Chaos Balance (forthcoming '98) _This is open-ended - books are listed above in the order they were published, and does NOT follow the internal chronology of the series. You should try to read _The Magic of Recluce_ first (some of the plot twists are more effective if you aren't aware of how magic works in Recluce), and _The Death of Chaos_ is a direct sequel to _tMoR_. However the other books all stand alone and can be read in any order._ "Dutch Republic series" - Of Tangible Ghosts; The Ghost of the Revelator (tentative title, forthcoming '98?) _Fantasy taking place in alternate universe that features ghosts and an East India Company that stayed the dominant economic power in the world._ "Song and Magic" - The Soprano Sorceress; The Spellsong War (working title, forthcoming) _A trilogy that will introduce a world where magic is accessed through music._ Elizabeth Moon (b. 1945) "The Deed of Paksenarrion" - Sheepfarmer's Daughter; Divided Allegiance; Oath of Gold _Rousing adventure about the soldier and hero Paksenarrion. Moon has said that among the themes she worked on in the books was "the cost of courage, the cost of being a hero." She has written two prequels to the trilogy, _Surrender None_ and _Liar's Oath_, which are quite a bit darker in tone, and several of the recommenders have advised against reading them. Lately Moon has been mainly producing SF._ *Michael Moorcock (b. 1939) "Elric" - Elric of Melnibone; The Fortress of the Pearl; A Sailor on the Seas of Fate; The Weird of the White Wolf; The Vanishing Tower; The Revenge of the Rose; The Bane of the Black Sword; Stormbringer _There is also at least one book of short stories about Elric (I'm taking the word of one correspondent about where the two later books - tFotP and tRotR - fit in the cycle. I've only read the original sextet)._ "Runestaff (Hawkmoon)" - The Jewel in the Skull; The Mad God's Amulet; The Sword of the Dawn; The Runestaff _If you don't like the way this tetralogy ends, be sure and track down the 'Count Brass' trilogy, which brings all the characters back for another go 'round._ "Count Brass" - Count Brass; Champion of Garathorn; The Quest for Tanelorn _The Runestaff/Count Brass books are my favorites in the Eternal Champion cycle. Dorian Hawkmoon suffers less from angst than the Moorcock's usual Tortured Hero._ "Corum" - The Knight of Swords; The Queen of Swords; The King of Swords; The Bull and the Spear; The Oak and the Ram; The Sword and the Stallion _Moorcock's entire (well, just about entire - there are a few bits & pieces that the rights weren't available) Eternal Champion cycle is being reprinted in 14 omnibus volumes by White Wolf Publishing_ "John Daker (Erekose)" - The Eternal Champion; Phoenix in Obsidian ('The Silver Warriors' in earlier U.S. editions); The Dragon in the Sword _All of these books -plus others- comprise the 'Eternal Champion' cycle. Quality varies, and hard core fantasy fans won't like some of the liberties Moorcock takes with the genre, but if you like 'em, there sure are a LOT of 'em to keep you busy._ The War Hound & The World's Pain _Takes place in the 30-Years War time frame. Jim considers it to Moorcock's best non-Eternal Champion book (although, if you ask Moorcock, he'll tell you that ALL of his books are part of the Eternal Champion cycle)._ C.L. Moore (b. 1911) Jirel of Joiry _Series of short stories from the 30's and 40's. Jirel was the first of the Barbarian Swordswomen. Moore's Northwest Smith stories are fun, too._ John Morressy (b. 1930) "Iron Angel series" - Greymantle; Ironbrand; Kingsbane; The Annihilator _Early work of his, and hard to find. Eric says the Kedrigern books pale in comparison to these - they are much more in the epic fantasy vein. _The Annihilator_ is a prequel to the first three._ "Kedrigern" - A Voice for Princess; The Questing of Kedrigern; Kedrigern in Wanderland; Kedrigern and the Charming Couple; A Remembrance for Kedrigern _Humorous series about the wizard Kedrigern and his wife Princess. The books do stand alone, but the story follows a definite progression, with the final book bringing the series to a close._ William Morris (1834-1896) Well at the World's End The Wood Beyond the World The Water of the Wondrous Isles _For the historically minded among you. VERY early fantasy (we're talking late 1800's here). None are currently in print, but the first two were reprinted as part of Ballantine's Adult Fantasy series in the 70's, and so they do turn up at used book stores. You can also try the library._ Talbot Mundy (1879-1940) "Tros of Samothrace" - Tros of Samothrace; Avenging Liafail; The Praetor's Dungeon; Queen Cleopatra; The Purple Pirate _Takes place in the Roman Republic. Mundy died in 1940, and unfortunately, this series hadn't been completed at the time. Out of print for a good many years, you may be able to find these at the library or used book stores. I've read some of his other fantasy/adventure series (the "Jimgrim" books - there's 11 of those), and they're quite a lot of fun, too._ H. Warner Munn (1903-1981) "The Merlin Family Saga" - Merlin's Ring (combined volume containing 'King of the World's Edge' and 'The Ship from Atlantis'); Merlin's Godson _Globe-and-time spanning adventures of Merlin and his godson Gwalchmai. Now out of print, they were part of Ballantine's Adult Fantasy series, so they shouldn't be too difficult to track down._ John Myers Myers (1906-1988) Silverlock _Cult favorite. Chock full of allusions to history, literature, and popular culture, plus lots of songs. There is a thematic sequel, _The Moon's Fire-Eating Daughter_, of which the general consensus of opinion is that it is deservedly obscure._ Andre Norton (b. 1912) "Simon Tregarth" - Witch World; Web of the Witch World _The duology that started the Witch World. Readers who were introduced to Witch World through the later books are often surprised by the SF trappings of these books. The villains use high-tech weapons, the witches' powers are treated as psi rather than magic, and Simon arrives via a machine that opens doors to parallel worlds._ "The Children of Simon Tregarth" - Three Against the Witch World; Warlock of the Witch World; Sorceress of the Witch World _Simon Tregarth's kids get a trilogy of their own, and the Witch World is thoroughly launched. It was also with these books that Norton made the choice to move the Witch World strictly into the fantasy genre._ "Witch World series" - Year of the Unicorn; The Crystal Gryphon; Gryphon in Glory; The Jargoon Pard; Zarsthor's Bane; The Warding of Witch World; many more _It went from an Open-Ended Series to a Shared World, but the first 20 or so books are all Andre Norton's. And they're good, too. Most are stand- alones. Particular favorites that were specifically mentioned are _Year of the Unicorn_ and _The Crystal Gryphon_, and Stephen casts his vote for _The Jargoon Pard_._ "The Halfblood Chronicles (with Mercedes Lackey)" - Elvenbane; Elvenblood _Unrelated to the Witch World books, these involve a world where humans are enslaved by elves, and a prophecy about a half-breed who will lead the humans to freedom. At least two more books are due in this series._ Mirror of Destiny _A non-Witch World standalone about a wise woman's apprentice seeking to avert a war between humans and the inhabitants of a mystical forest._ ---------------------------------------------------------------- Amy Sheldon ais3@po.cwru.edu Benefits Specialist (216) 368-6693 Case Western Reserve University Path: senator-bedfellow.mit.edu!faqserv From: Amy Sheldon Newsgroups: alt.fan.eddings,rec.arts.sf.written,alt.answers,rec.answers,news.answers Subject: Recommended Fantasy Authors List - Part 4/5 Supersedes: Followup-To: poster Date: 30 May 1997 10:19:39 GMT Organization: none Lines: 680 Approved: news-answers-request@MIT.EDU Expires: 14 Jul 1997 10:18:48 GMT Message-ID: References: NNTP-Posting-Host: penguin-lust.mit.edu Summary: Listing of fantasy authors recommended by readers of the alt.fan.eddings newsgroup. Contains descriptive listings on more than 150 authors, forthcoming titles, book news, and numbers of recommendations. X-Last-Updated: 1997/05/27 Originator: faqserv@penguin-lust.MIT.EDU Xref: senator-bedfellow.mit.edu alt.fan.eddings:27512 rec.arts.sf.written:232549 alt.answers:26525 rec.answers:31095 news.answers:103664 Archive-name: fantasy/recommended-authors/part4 Posting-Frequency: monthly Last-modified: 1997/05/26 URL: http://www.sff.net/people/Amy.Sheldon/listcont.htm Version: 2.6 THE RECOMMENDED FANTASY AUTHORS LIST - ver. 2.6 Mervyn Peake (1911-1968) "The Gormenghast Trilogy" - Titus Groan; Gormenghast; Titus Alone _A classic. Bizarre and hypnotic, Peake creates an astonishing world in the first two books. The third book should be avoided. It was written after Peake became ill, and it is very different in tone (and ability) than the first two._ Meredith Ann Pierce (b. 1958) "The Darkangel Trilogy" - The Darkangel; A Gathering of Gargoyles; The Pearl of the Soul of the World _Excellent fantasy that is unfortunately hard to find. U.S. readers can purchase it as a single volume from the Science Fiction Book Club. Fans of Patricia McKillip may want to make a special effort to track this down._ "The Firebringer Trilogy" - The Birth of the Firebringer; Dark Moon; The Son of Summer Stars _Very good young adult series about unicorns. In _Firebringer_ "...the unicorn society is well- developed for the length and reader-age of the books: they have their own mythology/historical songs, religion, enemies..." says Heather_ Richard Pini (b. 1950) & Wendy Pini (b. 1951) "Elfquest series" - Elfquest: The Quest Begins; Elfquest: Journey to Sorrow's End; many others _Graphic novels (you know - comic books for adults who don't want to admit they still read comic books). This has turned into a shared world series._ Tim Powers (b. 1952) The Drawing of the Dark _Powers' earliest fantasy, and I'm told that it is back in print. A different look at the Arthur legend (in 16th century Vienna, of all places)._ The Anubis Gate _All of Powers' books are great, but this is my favorite. The book that made his reputation. A wild romp through time with gypsies, Dog Faced Joe, a hideously evil clown, Egyptian gods, dopplegangers, a disguised heroine, Samuel Coleridge and oh so much more. Try it._ On Stranger Tides _Blackbeard and voodoo - oh my!_ The Stress of Her Regard _Those muses certainly are jealous mistresses..._ Last Call _The Fisher King in Las Vegas._ Expiration Date _Yet Another Neat Book. This takes place in a modern Los Angeles much like our own, except that ghosts exist there._ Earthquake Weather (originally listed as 'Extreme Unction' forthcoming Oct. '97) _Characters from both _Last Call_ and _Expiration Date_ will appear in this novel. According to his editor, Powers "begs to inform the world [that this] is the only time anyone will ever see anything remotely resembling a series from him."_ **Terry Pratchett (b. 1948) "Discworld" - titles follow _Your FAQmaker loves these books, and so do enough other a.f.e. readers to make him an official Highly Recommended Author. Humorous series, over 15 books now, and recent books are as good as the first. The books divide up based on their main characters, but can all standalone (except the original Rincewind duology)._ "Rincewind" - The Color of Magic; The Light Fantastic; Sourcery; Eric; Interesting Times _The first two are the duology that introduced Discworld. Rincewind is an incredibly incompetent wizard who gets mixed up with Discworld's first tourist._ "Granny Weatherwax" - Equal Rites; Wyrd Sisters; Witches Abroad; Lords and Ladies; Maskerade (1st U.S. ed. Oct. '97) _Granny and her fellow witches are the favorites of many Pratchett fans. Unlike Rincewind, Granny is FRIGHTENINGLY competent._ "Death" - Mort; Reaper Man; Soul Music; Hogfather (out in the U.K., out who-knows-when in the U.S.) _Yes, Death is a regularly appearing character, with a horse named Binky and taste for curry._ "Carrot" - Guards, Guards; Men At Arms; Feet of Clay _And then there's Carrot, the six-foot-tall dwarf (he's adopted), who's come to Ankh-Morpork to make his fortune..._ Moving Pictures; Pyramids; Small Gods _These are all standalones about Discworld, and all good._ Jingo (forthcoming Nov. '97 in the U.K.) _Ankh-Morpork and Klatch are about to go to war. I wouldn't be surprised if Rincewind was involved somehow, although I haven't heard anything to indicate that._ Good Omens (with Neil Gaiman) _NOT a Discworld book, this one is about the End Of The World. It is due to be reprinted in the U.S. in 1996._ Byron Preiss (b. 1953) and J. Michael Reaves (b. 1950) Dragonworld _Preiss is best known as an editor and publisher, but he produced a fantasy in the late 70's that Keith really likes. Apparently there is also a game based on this book, so it may be more readily available than its 1979 publication would indicate._ Howard Pyle (1853-1911) The Story of King Arthur and His Knights _Classic retelling of Arthur by the famous illustrator. Despite being 90 years old, this book is readily available in libraries, and in the U.S. Dover Publications has a lovely trade paperback edition with Pyle's original illustrations. He wrote several other books covering further tales, and he also has a great retelling of the Robin Hood story._ **Melanie Rawn (b. 1954) "The Dragon Prince Trilogy" - Dragon Prince; Star Scroll; Sunrunner's Fire _This and the following trilogy take place on the same world._ "Dragon Star Trilogy" - Stronghold; The Dragon Token; Skybowl _Doug sez, "When I finished this series I felt a real sense of loss. Her description of some of the female characters in the series made me almost fall in love with them, and the use of magic as she describes it is new and innovative."_ "Exiles Trilogy" - The Ruins of Ambrai; The Mageborn Traitor; The Captal's Tower (forthcoming) _New trilogy set in a different world from the "Dragon" books._ The Diviner's Key (forthcoming Dec. '97) _I have no idea what this one is about._ Mickey Zucker Reichert (b. 1962) "The Last of the Renshai" - The Last of the Renshai; The Western Wizard; Child of Thunder _This is a trilogy, so you'll want to have all the books in hand before you start reading._ "The Bifrost Guardians" - Godslayer; Shadow Climber; Dragonrank Master; Shadow's Realm; By Chaos Cursed _Loosely based on Norse mythology._ The Legend of Nightfall _Standalone fantasy. Sorcerers are a wicked bunch in this world, and they obtain more power in a particularly nasty way._ "The Renshai Chronicles" - Beyond Ragnarok; Prince of Demons; final book forthcoming _Start of a new trilogy that continues the Renshai story. The balance between Law and Chaos hinges on the finding of an heir to the Bearnian throne._ Anne Rice (b. 1941) "Vampire Chronicles" - Interview with the Vampire; The Vampire Lestat; Queen of the Damned; Tale of the Body Thief; Memnoch the Devil _Horror/fantasy series. "Vampire" books are mainly about the bisexual vampire Lestat and his lover Louis who are struggling with their vampirism and their apparent immortality. Be warned - they're fairly graphic, both sexually and violently (although nowhere near the latest splatterpunk offerings from Poppy Z. Brite & her ilk.) These are usually classified as horror, but Rice is popular enough that I'm forced to give them a mention on the list._ "Chronicles of the Mayfair Family" - Witching Hour; Lasher; Taltos _More of Rice's usual mixture of dark fantasy, sex (kinky and otherwise), and pseudo-intellectual conversation between shallow (but fashionable!) immortals. Your faqmaster does not particularly care for this author._ Jennifer Roberson (b. 1953) "Chronicles of the Cheysuli" - Shapechangers; The Song of Homona; Legacy of the Sword; Track of the White Wolf; A Pride of Princes; Daughter of the Lion; Flight of the Raven; A Tapestry of Lions _The Cheysuli are shapechangers, and I believe that the books in this series can stand alone._ "Tiger and Del series" - Sword Dancer; Sword Singer; Sword Maker; Sword Breaker; Sword Born (forthcoming); Sword Sworn (forthcoming) _These were all reprinted in Jan. '96 by Daw Publishing (except for the two that haven't been published yet), so if you're missing any of them, keep your eyes open_ Lady of the Forest _Robin Hood, from Maid Marian's point of view_ Lady of the Glen (forthcoming) Michael Scott Rohan (b. 1951) "Winter of the World trilogy" - The Anvil of Ice; The Forge in the Forest; The Hammer of the Sun _A blacksmith gets to save the world._ "Spiral series" - Chase the Morning; The Gates of Noon; Cloud Castles _We're living in the Core, but if you look at the world just the right way, you can sail out into the Spiral, where all times and places mingle._ Lord of the Middle Air (forthcoming) _Stand-alone historical fantasy, taking place in the Scottish borderlands in the 13th century. It's out already in the U.K., but I don't have a date yet for the U.S. release._ Maxie's Demon (forthcoming April '97 in U.K.) _Another standalone, but no details beyond that yet._ A Spell of Empire (with Allan Scott) _The young wizard Volker joins three other travelers on a dangerous journey._ Joel Rosenberg (b. 1954) "Guardians of the Flame (1st series)" - The Sleeping Dragon; The Sword and the Chain; The Silver Crown _One of the first of the 'Gamers jump for real into a fantasy world' series, and one of the best._ "Guardians of the Flame (2nd series)" - The Heir Apparent; The Warrior Lives _Continuing the first series with a new generation._ The Road to Ehvenor; The Road Home _Set in the world of "The Guardians of the Flame" and featuring many familiar characters - this story features Walter Slovotsky_ "D'shai" - D'Shai; Hour of the Octopus _Open-ended fantasy/detective series. In the same vein as Glen Cook's 'Garrett' books, only more of an homage to Rex Stout rather than Raymond Chandler_ "Keepers of the Hidden Ways" - The Fire Duke; The Silver Stone _A new series from Rosenberg, once again involving people from our world crossing over into another. This world is Norse-based, with lots of daring deeds and sword fighting._ Christopher Rowley "Bazil Broketail series" - Bazil Broketail; A Sword for a Dragon; Dragons of War; Battle Dragon; The Wizard and the Floating City; Dragon at the End of the Worlds _Open-ended series. The first book is about a boy and his dragon who rescue a princess. Rowley also has several sf series going._ Sean Russell "Asian duology" - The Initiate Brother; Gatherer of Clouds _Oriental mysticism in a strong first novel (and this is very definitely one book, split in two only because 1,000+ page novels are hard to hold.)_ "Moontide and Magic Rise duology" - World Without End; Sea Without a Shore _Marvelous books. Sean Russell is tremendously talented. I'm looking forward to more of his work. This is fantasy of the 'lush verbiage and magnificently realized world' variety - sword and sorcery fans might not be quite as enthusiastic._ Beneath the Vaulted Hills (forthcoming August '97) _Oh goody, something new on the horizon from Mr. Russell._ Fred Saberhagen (b. 1930) "The Books of the Swords" - The First Book of Swords; The Second Book of Swords; The Third Book of Swords _The initial trilogy._ "The Books of the Lost Swords" - Woundhealer's Story; Sightblinder's Story; Stonecutter's Story; Farslayer's Story; Coinspinner's Story; Mindsword's Story; Wayfinder's Story; Shieldbreaker's Story _Each of the "Lost Swords" titles is actually preceded by 'The First Book of Lost Swords:', 'The Second Book...' etc. I believe that most of the "swords" books can be read as stand-alones_ "Empire of the East" - The Broken Lands; The Black Mountains; Changeling Earth _A prequel to the 'Swords' books, taking place in the same world._ "Dracula books" - The Dracula Tapes; The Holmes-Dracula File; An Old Friend of the Family; Thorn _More tales of Dracula_ Merlin's Bones _Yet Another Version of Arthur and Company_ *R.A. Salvatore (b. 1959) "Icewind Dale" - The Crystal Shard; Streams of Silver; The Halfling's Gem _Introduces Drizzt Do'Urben, a dark elf who has turned his back on his bloody heritage._ "Dark Elf Trilogy" - Homeland; Exile; Sojourn _Continues Drizzt's story._ "Dark Elf Trilogy II" - Legacy; Starless Night; Siege of Darkness _"Icewind Dale" & "Dark Elf" and "Dark Elf II" take place in the TSR Forgotten Realms setting. I've had several people mention that 'Dark Elf II' shows a real drop in quality, although several others loved it as much as the first two trilogies._ Passage to Dawn _A final Drizzt story from Salvatore, as he finishes out his contract with TSR._ "The Cleric Quintet" - Canticle; In Sylvan Shadows; Night Masks; The Fallen Fortress; The Chaos Curse _Another TSR series - this one follows a young man as he grows from a raw acolyte to a powerful priest._ "The Spearwielder's Tales" - The Woods Out Back; The Dragon's Dagger; Dragonslayer Returns _Open-ended fantasy series that ISN'T part of any of the TSR gaming worlds._ "The Crimson Shadow Trilogy" - The Sword of Bedwyr; Luthien's Gamble; The Dragon King _New series about a young lord and a halfling battling to free Eriador from the grip of the tyrannical Wizard-King Greensparrow._ The Demon Awakens (forthcoming May '97) _Presumably this will start a new series._ Elizabeth Scarborough (b. 1947) Song of Sorcery; The Unicorn Creed; Bronwyn's Bane; The Christening Quest _More humor. I read these long ago, and I don't really remember much about them, but I _think_ they are all standalones that take place in the same world with some of the same characters. These are all long out of print_ "The Fairy Godmother stories" - The Godmother; The Godmother's Apprentice _An overwhelmed social worker in modern Seattle gets a (slightly inept) fairy godmother. The publicity blurb calls it "a tale of modern magic"_ Michael Shea (b. 1946) Nifft the Lean _Dark series of short stories. Republished in a limited hardcover edition by Darkside Press in November '94. Shea is reportedly working on a new book about Nifft. If you can find this, try it (although I should note for the queasy that, although it has been years since I last read it, there are several scenes from Nifft's trip to Hell that tend to replay on dark and lonely evenings...)_ Josepha Sherman The Shining Falcon _Corinne says that if you like the Slavic influence of Stephen Brust and the heroines of Robin McKinley, try this book. Other, more recent fantasies by Josepha Sherman include:_ King's Son, Magic's Son A Strange and Ancient Name The Shattered Oath; Forging the Runes (forthcoming) Sharon Shinn (b. 1957) The Shapechanger's Wife _Lovely first novel. There isn't a whole lot of plot, but the writing is beautiful, and Shinn is definitely an author to watch. Currently she's working on an sf trilogy._ Robert Silverberg (b. 1936) "Majipoor Chronicles" - Lord Valentine's Castle; Majipoor Chronicles: A Novel; Valentine Pontifex; The Mountains of Majipoor; Sorcerers of Majipoor (August '97); Lord Prestimion (forthcoming 1998) _This is another series that pushes the boundaries between SF and fantasy, but since Nathan brought them up, I'll list 'em. The first book is great fun, but I haven't been as impressed with the subsequent books._ Clifford Simak (1904-1988) The Fellowship of the Talisman _A effective fantasy from one of SF's Grand Masters. If you enjoy this, be sure to look up his many works of science fiction._ Dan Simmons (b. 1948) The Song of Kali _Simmons first novel, this is described by the _Encyclopedia of Science Fiction_ as showing Calcutta 'as a moral and psychic cesspool, into which the protagonists...sink very deeply indeed as unleased evil...threatens to flood the 1980s.' Hey, it was KATE that recommended this, not me._ Midori Snyder "Oran trilogy" - New Moon; Sadar's Keep; Beldan's Fire _The land of Oran has been ruled by the tyrant Fire Queen Zorah for two hundred years. Her four granddaughters seek to come into their own powers and free the land._ Zilpha Keatley Snyder (b. 1927) "Green Sky Trilogy" - Below the Root; And All Between; Until the Celebration _Peaceful world is torn apart when its government is revealed as being a scam. Cyradis liked it a lot. You'll generally find it in the children's section of the library. Snyder has written many stand-alone Young Adult books, including the fantasies _Black and Blue Magic_, _The Witches of Worm,_ and _The Changeling,_ as well as mysteries and novels. I have very fond memories of her from my long-ago adolescence._ Christopher Stasheff (b. 1944) "Warlock series" - Escape Velocity; The Warlock In Spite of Himself; King Kobold Revived; The Warlock Unlocked; The Warlock Enraged; The Warlock Wandering; The Warlock is Missing; The Warlock Heretical; The Warlock's Companion; The Warlock Insane; The Warlock Rock; Warlock and Son _Open-ended humorous adventure series that is now beginning to focus on descendents of the original hero, Rod Gallowglass (see following listings). The rationale of this series is really fairly science- fictional, but the tone is fantasy, and you'll generally find them marketed as fantasy_ "The Warlock's Heirs" - M'Lady Witch; The Quicksilver Knight _The adventures of the three younger children of Rod and Gwen Gallowglass._ "Rogue Wizard" - A Wizard in Absentia; A Wizard in Mind; A Wizard in War; A Wizard in Peace _Another open-ended series in the 'Warlock' universe. These feature Magnus, Rod's oldest son. Note that Stasheff's books have focused more on adventure and less on humor as the series has progressed._ "A Wizard in Rhyme" - Her Majesty's Wizard; The Oathbound Wizard; The Witch Doctor; The Secular Wizard _Open-ended series. Matt Mantrell is transported into an alternate world where rhymes have magical powers._ "The Star Stone" - The Shaman; The Sage; another forthcoming _Another new series. This has no connection to his Wizard or Warlock series, and is more serious in tone._ Francis Stevens (1884?-1939) The Citadel of Fear _A lost-world tale from the 1920s._ Claimed _An elemental being recovers an ancient artefact._ Caroline Stevermer (b. 1955) The Serpent's Egg _Out of print and so hard to find as to be almost legendary, this mock Elizabethan fantasy gets raves from the few who have managed to track it down._ Sorcery and Cecilia (with Patricia Wrede) _Amusing stand alone. A combination of regency romance, adventure, and fantasy. Hard to find, it is (if I remember correctly) an epistolary novel, with the action described in the letters exchanged between the two main characters._ A College of Magics _Takes place in an Edwardian-period world that has magic, too. Witty, amusing, and a very enjoyable little period piece. Plus, it stands alone, so you're not committing yourself to nine zillion sequels._ Mary Stewart (b. 1916) "Merlin Trilogy" - The Crystal Cave; The Hollow Hills; The Last Enchantment; The Wicked Day _One of the earlier Arthur novelizations. It was quite popular, and should be easy to find in the library. These focus on Merlin and aim more at the historical rather than magical. The fourth book retells the story from Mordred's point of view, and isn't all that good._ The Prince and the Pilgrim _Just published in January 1996, this is set in Arthur's England, but isn't part of her earlier Arthurian series._ Sean Stewart (b. 1965) Nobody's Son _Standalone that looks at what happens to the hero of lowly birth _after_ the 'happily ever after.'_ Cloud's End _The latest from Stewart._ Judith Tarr (b. 1955) "The Hound and the Falcon" - The Isle of Glass; The Golden Horn; The Hounds of God _Corinne describes this as "a truly brilliant series set in Richard the Lion Heart's England bordered on the Elflands"_ Alamut; The Dagger and the Cross _Standalones set in the same world as "The Hound and the Falcon" trilogy_ "Avaryan Rising" - The Hall of the Mountain King; The Lady of Han-Gilen; A Fall of Princes; Arrows of the Sun; Spear of Heaven _The story of a war between kingdoms in a world of mages_ A Wind in Cairo Ars Magica Lord of the Two Lands Throne of Isis _Hey, it's Cleopatra!_ Eagle's Daughter Pillar of Fire _This takes place in the Middle East during Moses' time._ King and Goddess Queen of Swords _Tarr's specialty is historicals with just a dollop of magic. The size of the dollop varies, and many of her books are sold as straight historicals._ Roger Taylor "Chronicles of Hawklan" - The Call of the Sword; The Fall of Fyorlund; The Waking of Othlund; Into Narsindal _Not available in the U.S., this series has been described as "a pretty good read" and "highly recommended"_ Dreamfinder _Set in the same world as Hawklan_ Whistler _A standalone_ "Nightfall series" - Farnor; Valderin _This is also set in the same world as Hawklan, and is about a priest who must fight a dark power that has entered a colleague. Paul highly recommends it_ Ibyren _A standalone. "Count Ibyren, fighting a guerilla war after being driven from his lands, is suddenly swept away from his people to an unknown world and destiny."_ Sheri Tepper (b. 1929) "The Land of True Game" - King's Blood Four; Wizard's Eleven; Necromancer Nine (1st series) Jinian Footseer; Dervish Daughter; Jinian Star-Eyed (2nd series) The Song of Mavin Manyshaped; The Flight of Mavin Manyshaped; The Search of Mavin Manyshaped (3rd series) _Series made up of three separate trilogies. Her earliest work - can be difficult to find. Ace is reprinting this series in the U.S. in trade paperback format, with the first trilogy due out in June '96)_ "The Marianne Trilogy" - Marianne, the Magus, and the Manticore; Marianne, the Madame, and the Momentary Gods; Marianne, the Matchbox, and the Malachite Mouse _I believe that the books in this rather light- hearted trilogy are actually fairly independent of each other._ Beauty _Now primarily known as a SF author, Tepper returns to her roots and gives a very different slant on the fairy tale Sleeping Beauty. Sardonic and grim are descriptive terms I've heard about this one_ Patrick Tilley (b. 1928) "The Amtrack Wars" - Cloud Warrior; First Family; Iron Master; Blood River; Death Bringer; Earth Thunder _Donal says these are good, so I'll certainly be giving them a try. Its just that I can't seem to find them anywhere...Apparently, only the first couple were published in the U.S. Going by commentary on the Net, these are about a post- apocalyptic society with magic and suchlike. In the U.S., the second book was titled _Sand Burrower_._ **J.R.R. Tolkien (1892-1973) The Hobbit _Prelude to _The Lord of the Rings_ - should be read prior to starting them, but it isn't absolutely necessary. Written as a children's book, and some readers find it a little simplistic (not me!)_ "The Lord of the Rings" - The Fellowship of the Ring; The Two Towers; The Return of the King _Oh, come on now - how can you claim to be a fantasy fan and not read this? If not for tLotR, Eddings would still be writing about deer hunting. THE classic work of fantasy._ The Silmarillion _From Tolkien's writings on the background of the world of tLofR, this is more of a history than a story_ The Tolkien Reader _Anthology of poetry and short stories.
Due to the INCREDIBLE popularity of _Lord of the Rings,_ virtually every scrap of paper that Tolkien doodled on has found its way into print, which is why you will find many other Tolkien works besides the above._ Trillium series by Marion Zimmer Bradley, Julian May, and Andre Norton "Trillium" - Black Trillium (by all three); Blood Trillium (by Julian May); Golden Trillium (by Andre Norton); Lady of the Trillium (by Marion Zimmer Bradley); Sky Trillium (by Julian May) _An interesting mutation of the 'shared world' idea. The first book was written by all three, further books are being written by the individual authors._ Harry Turtledove (b. 1949) "Videssos Cycle" - The Misplaced Legion; An Emperor for the Legion; The Legion of Videssos; Swords of the Legion _Legion from Republican Rome meets Byzantine empire. "Highly recommended" sez Mark_ "The Tale of Krispos" - Krispos Rising; Krispos of Videssos; Krispos the Emperor _Continuing the story of Videssos with a prequel to the "Cycle" tetralogy_ "The Time of Troubles" - The Stolen Throne; Hammer and Anvil _Start of a new series, prequel to "The Tale of Krispos"_ Agent of Byzantium _Basil Argyros, spy for an alternate-history Byzantine empire, in series of adventures that originally appeared as separate novelettes. There are some hints of magic, but this is basically alternate-history SF._ The Case of the Toxic Spell Dump _Humor/adventure taking place in an alternate Los Angeles where magic works._ Gail Van Asten "Roland series" - Charlemagne's Champion; The Dark Sword's Lover _Fantasy series featuring the knight Roland._ The Blind Knight _Van Asten's first novel, a post-Arthurian fantasy._ Jack Vance (b. 1916) "Lyonesse trilogy" - Suldren's Garden; The Green Pearl; Madouc _Best known for his SF, Vance is an interesting writer in any genre._ "Dying Earth series" - The Dying Earth; The Eyes of the Overworld; Cugel's Saga; Rhialto the Marvelous _The first two are genuine fantasy classics, and Cugel the Clever is a great character (hey, I like rogues). These are all stand-alones._ Paula Volsky The Luck of Relian Kru _"Almost as good as its title," according to one recommender. Out of print and very difficult to find._ "Sorcerer Trilogy" - The Sorcerer's Lady; The Sorcerer's Heir; The Sorcerer's Curse _About the leader of a wizard's guild and his descendents. Takes place in the world of Relian Kru, and are also out of print._ The Gates of Twilight _Two enemies brave a revolution and apocalyptic magic to open the long sealed portal between heaven and earth._ The White Tribunal (forthcoming Sept. '97) _New standalone._ ---------------------------------------------------------------- Amy Sheldon ais3@po.cwru.edu Benefits Specialist (216) 368-6693 Case Western Reserve University Path: senator-bedfellow.mit.edu!faqserv From: Amy Sheldon Newsgroups: alt.fan.eddings,rec.arts.sf.written,alt.answers,rec.answers,news.answers Subject: Recommended Fantasy Authors List - Part 5/5 Supersedes: Followup-To: poster Date: 30 May 1997 10:19:38 GMT Organization: none Lines: 687 Approved: news-answers-request@MIT.EDU Expires: 14 Jul 1997 10:18:48 GMT Message-ID: References: NNTP-Posting-Host: penguin-lust.mit.edu Summary: Listing of fantasy authors recommended by readers of the alt.fan.eddings newsgroup. Contains descriptive listings on more than 150 authors, forthcoming titles, book news, and numbers of recommendations. X-Last-Updated: 1997/05/27 Originator: faqserv@penguin-lust.MIT.EDU Xref: senator-bedfellow.mit.edu alt.fan.eddings:27511 rec.arts.sf.written:232548 alt.answers:26524 rec.answers:31094 news.answers:103663 Archive-name: fantasy/recommended-authors/part5 Posting-Frequency: monthly Last-modified: 1997/05/26 URL: http://www.sff.net/people/Amy.Sheldon/listcont.htm Version: 2.6 THE RECOMMENDED FANTASY AUTHORS LIST - ver. 2.6 Karl Edward Wagner (1945-1994) "Kane series" - Darkness Weaves with Many Shades; Death Angel's Shadow; Bloodstone; Dark Crusade; Night Winds; The Book of Kane _This open-ended series is from the mayhem and magic school of fantasy. Kane is for those who like their sword and sorcery "dark". Wagner was a good writer, and Kane is an interesting creation. Karl Wagner died 10/14/94 at age 48, and will be missed by the fantasy community._ Evangeline Walton (1907-1996) "The Mabinogi" - The Prince of Annwm; The Children of Llyr; The Song of Rhiannon; The Island of the Mighty _This may be hard to find, but it's included for the more serious fantasy fan. Heavily researched, classic retelling of the Welsh folklore cycle known as the Mabinogion. Many fantasy authors have mined this for themes._ Freda Warrington (b. 1956) "Blackbird novels" - A Blackbird in Silver; A Blackbird in Darkness; A Blackbird in Amber; A Blackbird in Twilight _Nathan found that the first book held his attention, and he's working his way through the rest of the series. These aren't available in the U.S. She also has at least one horror series out._ Lawrence Watt-Evans (b. 1954) "The Lords of Dus" - The Lure of the Basilisk; The Seven Altars of Dusarra; The Sword of Bheleu; The Book of Silence _This is a limited series, and should be read in order._ "Ethshar series" - The Misenchanted Sword; With a Single Spell; The Unwilling Warlord; Blood of a Dragon; Taking Flight; The Spell of the Black Dagger _Open-ended series. I'm told that the Ethshar books are standalones and can be read in any order. The above is the order they were published in._ **Margaret Weis (b. 1948) & Tracy Hickman (b. 1955) "Dragonlance Chronicles" - Dragons of Autumn Twilight; Dragons of Winter Night; Dragons of Spring Dawning _The series that turned TSR into from a gaming company that published tie-ins to a real publisher. Still in print, and still selling well._ "Dragonlance Legends" - Time of the Twins; War of the Twins; Test of the Twins _EVERYONE who recommended these books included a warning that other Dragonlance books by other authors should be avoided. There is also a book of short stories titled _Dragonlance: The Second Generation_. All but two of the stories are reprints from other Dragonlance collections._ "Dragonlance Chronicles IV" - Dragons of the Summer Flame _They're baaaaack. Weis & Hickman return to the world of Dragonlance with a new novel that takes the characters and stories from the novella collection _Dragonlance: The Second Generation_ and continues onward ever onward with them._ "More Dragonlance Books (by Weis & Don Perrin)" - The Doom Brigade _"A tale of two enemies - dwarves and draconians - and how they must cooperate to survive a bitter war." Presumably this takes place before the events of _Summer Flame__ "Darksword Trilogy" - Forging the Darksword; Doom of the Darksword; Triumph of the Darksword _A non-Dragonlance limited series. Denis doesn't like this particular series._ "More Darksword books" - Legacy of the Darksword (forthcoming July '97) _Weis and Hickman return to the world of the Darksword._ "Rose of the Prophet Trilogy" - The Will of the Wanderer; The Paladin of the Night; The Prophet of Akhran _The Epic Tale of the Great War of the Gods!_ "Death Gate Cycle" - Dragon Wing; Elven Star; Fire Sea; Serpent Mage; The Hand of Chaos; Into the Labyrinth; The Seventh Gate _This is a limited series - be sure and have all seven books, and read 'em in order._ Angus Wells (b. 1943) "The Kingdoms" - Wrath of Ashar; The Usurper; The Way Beneath _Wells' first fantasy triology under his own name._ "Godwars" - Forbidden Magic; Dark Magic; Wild Magic _"Kingdoms" and "Godwars" are not related to each other or to his most recent novel. Richard likes "Godwars," but Michael prefers "The Kingdoms" trilogy (Richard asks me to point out that he hasn't read "The Kingdoms" yet, which makes it difficult for him to compare them)_ Lords of the Sky _To quote Carolyn Cushman of _Locus_ magazine: "For once, a sprawling medieval fantasy epic that's self- contained!"_ "Exiles series" - Exile's Children; Exile's Challenge _Completists should note that Angus Wells co- authored (along with Robert Holdstock) a series in the late '70's under the name 'Richard Kirk' about Raven, the Swordmistress of Chaos_ Martha Wells (b. 1964) The Element of Fire _Excellent debut fantasy. A complex, fast-moving plot, intelligent characters, a well-thought-out world - this one's a keeper. Wells has sold two more books to Avon, one of which will be set on this world, but about 150 years later (and it will not be a sequel to _Element_)._ City of Bones _Another winner. Not related to her first book, it takes place in a desert world. Action and adventure, a great setting, excellent characterization - I actually bought this one in hardcover, and am glad I did._ T.H. White (1906-1964) The Once and Future King _THE classic retelling of the Arthur legend. And, yeah, it's the source of both Disney's _The Sword in the Stone_ and Lerner & Lowe's _Camelot._ The original quartet of novels are being reprinted in England._ Mistress Masham's Repose _Did you ever wonder what happened to those Lilliputians that followed Gulliver back to England?_ Jack Whyte "The Camulod Chronicles" - The Sky Stone; The Singing Sword; The Eagle's Brood (forthcoming Sept. 1997); The Saxon Shore (forthcoming) _Return yet again to the days of King Arthur...this retelling intertwines the Roman Empire of the fifth century and Arthurian legend. These are apparently already out in Canada as a series with the overall title of "A Dream of Eagles". Tor (the U.S. publisher) is advertising it as a six book series._ Elizabeth Willey "Kingdom of Argylle" - The Well-Favored Man; A Sorcerer and a Gentleman; The Price of Blood and Honor _It looks like this is scheduled to be an open-ended series. The first book features a kingdom created out of Chaos by the family patriarch, young Prince Gwydion left as regent after his parents have debunked, a royal family made up of warriors and magicians all busily plotting and counter- plotting...Elizabeth calls this 'the best new author's book I've read in years' and recommends it very highly. I enjoyed it, too, but one Net-wit's comment that it should have been titled _Nice Princes in Amber_ does capture a lot of the book's flavor. The second and third books are prequels to the first._ **Tad Williams (b. 1957) Tailchaser's Song _Williams' first fantasy novel - Tailchaser is a cat._ "Memory, Sorrow & Thorn" - The Dragonbone Chair; Stone of Farewell; To Green Angel Tower _At first glance, very similar to "The Belgariad"- immature-boy-grows-to-fill-heroic-role. Williams' vision is a bit darker, however, and the secondary characters get a lot more fleshing out. Slow moving at points, but worth your time. Paperback version of _To Green Angel Tower_ is published in two volumes._ Child of an Ancient City (with Nina Kiriki Hoffman) _Stand-alone young adult novel._ Caliban's Hour _Takes up where Shakespeare left off. Caliban shows up years later to take his revenge on Miranda. Williams' next will be a 4-volume SF series with the overall title of "OTHERLAND." According to Katharine Kerr, he has 'sworn a mighty vow that he'll never write about Osten Ard [the world of "MS&T"] again'._ Philip Williamson "The Firstworld Chronicles" - Dinbig of Khimmur; The Legend of Shad's Tower; From Enchantry; Moonblood; Heart of Shadows; Citadel _British author. He doesn't have an American publisher yet. Jonathan said "Awesome!" But is he awesome enough to justify overseas shipping charges?_ Gene Wolfe (b. 1931) "The Book of the New Sun" - The Shadow of the Torturer; The Claw of the Conciliator; The Sword of the Lictor; The Citadel of the Autarch _This is a single novel broken into four parts. Intricate and ambitious, it takes place on a Dying Earth and follows the complex destiny of Severian._ The Urth of the New Sun _A sequel to "The Book of the New Sun"._ "The Soldier series" - Soldier of the Mist; Soldier of Arete _These novels are about Latro, a warrior in a land similar to Classical Greece who has a peculiar form of amnesia. One recommender noted that these are a bit more accessible than the New Sun books._ Patricia Wrede (b. 1953) Snow White and Rose Red _Retelling of the classic fairytale, set in Elizabethan England. Part of the very highly regarded 'Fairy Tale' series_ "Lyra series" - Shadow Magic; Daughter of Witches; The Harp of Imach Thyssel; Caught in Crystal; The Raven Ring; Shadows over Lyra (forthcoming Nov. '97) _Open-ended series (the books truly are stand-alone and can be read in any order) set in a world of many different cultures and religions, as well as three non-human races._ The Seven Towers _A standalone, unrelated to her other series._ "The Enchanted Forest Chronicles" - Dealing with Dragons; Searching for Dragons; Calling on Dragons; Talking to Dragons _Open-ended series that has a lot of fun with usual fairytale conventions. You'll find it in the young adult section. I especially recommend this to anyone who is looking for books for adolescent girls (and then be sure to read it yourself)._ "Mairelon series" - Mairelon the Magician; Magician's Ward (forthcoming June '97) _Set in an alternate England where magic works, lots of intrigue. Setting is related to the one in Stevermer's books._ *Janny Wurts (b. 1953) Sorcerer's Legacy _Early standalone, first published in 1982 (it may be her first published work). Good luck in trying to find it._ "The Cycle of Fire" - Stormwarden; Keeper of the Keys; Shadowfane _Her first trilogy. This was recently reprinted and should be widely available_ The Master of the White Storm _A standalone._ "The Wars of Light and Shadow" - The Curse of the Mistwraith; The Ships of Merior; Warhost of Vastmark (NOTE: U.S. hardcover edition of 'The Ships of Merior' INCLUDES 'Warhost of Vastmark' - the paperback edition is two separate books); Alliance of the Light (forthcoming Sept. '97) _Best known for her collaboration with Raymond Feist on the "Empire series" and her paintings, Wurts is a fine author in her own right_ That Way Lies Camelot _Short story collection_ Jonathan Wylie "Servants of the Ark" - The First Named; The Centre of the Circle; The Mage-Born Child _Wylie is a pseudonym for Mark and Julia Smith (and _Shadowmaze_ was published in the U.S. under their real names)_ "The Unbalanced Earth" - Dreams of Stone; The Lightless Kingdom; The Age of Chaos _'Servants' and 'Unbalanced Earth' are loosely related, with the events of 'Servants' coming first. These two trilogies were published in the U.S. by Bantam, but are currently out of print._ Dreamweaver _Stand-alone. Wylie has written one other stand- alone (_Shadowmaze_) which is NOT recommended._ "Island and Empire trilogy" - Dark Fire; Echoes of Flame; The Last Augury _One recommender considers this trilogy the best of the three. It is the story of a tiny island's fight for independence from the cruel Xantic Empire. This work hasn't found a U.S. publisher yet (so far as I can find), so most of us are going to have to hunt for these. Thanks to Tarja for getting me the titles in this trilogy_ Other Lands _A new stand-alone. This came out in Britain in June '95, and isn't out in the U.S. "A comatose Michael Glover somehow calls to his lover for help, and to save him she must break through to another, fantastic world."_ Chelsea Quinn Yarbro (b. 1942) Ariosto _Subtitled 'Ariosto Furioso, A Romance for an Alternate Renaissance'. Yarbro is best known for her series about the aristocratic vampire Saint- Germain._ Jane Yolen (b. 1939) "The Pit Dragon Trilogy" - Dragon's Blood; Heart's Blood; A Sending of Dragons _Excellent young adult trilogy._ The Wild Hunt _Young adult stand-alone that includes Herne the Hunter, the White Queen, and two boys who live in a strange old house alone._ "The Books of Great Alta" - Sister Light, Sister Dark; White Jenna; The One-Armed Queen (forthcoming) _Tor is reprinting the initial duology as a trade paperback omnibus in the Spring of 1997. The third book will take place in the same universe, but is a stand-alone. Although this is classified as 'adult fantasy', many libraries take one look at the author's name and automatically stick it in their young adult (or children's) department, so look for it there._ Briar Rose _Yolen's entry in the "Fairy Tales" series. This involves the tale of Sleeping Beauty and the Holocaust._ *Roger Zelazny (1937-1995) "Amber - 1st series" - Nine Princes in Amber; The Guns of Avalon; The Sign of the Unicorn; The Hand of Oberon; The Courts of Chaos _Great fun. Corwin searches first for his memory, then for revenge, and finally for the key to save the multiverse._ "Amber - 2nd series" - Trumps of Doom; Blood of Amber; Sign of Chaos; Knight of Shadows; Prince of Chaos _The 2nd series shows definite signs of exhaustion, and Merlin is not the man his father Corwin was. Do note that although _Prince of Chaos_ was supposed to be the series end, enough dangling plot threads were left to knit a sweater._ Roadmarks _There's a highway through time (built by dragons), and there's a wreck waiting to happen at the last exit for Babylon...._ "Dilvish stories" - Dilvish the Damned; The Changing Land _I'd really like to say more about Zelazny, but I'm still upset about his far-too-early death. Just read his books. Even his minor efforts are worthwhile, and the SF he wrote in the sixties is magnificent._ Paul Edwin Zimmer (b. 1943) "Dark Border series" - The Lost Prince; King Chodo's Ride; A Gathering of Heroes _The first two are a duology, which Scott found to be 'okay'. He really enjoyed the final book, which is the story of a group of heroes gathered to face a huge evil. He particularly liked the interplay between the heroes._ TOTAL NUMBER OF RECOMMENDATIONS PER AUTHOR The List contains every fantasy author recommended by two or more people. Some authors turned up on enough lists to gain special status as either "Highly Recommended" or "Recommended." Second on the list of Highly Recommended authors (appears on 20% or more of the recommendation lists) is: Raymond Feist Joining him are: Terry Brooks, Stephen Donaldson, Robert Jordan, Guy Gavriel Kay, Mercedes Lackey, Anne McCaffrey, Terry Pratchett, Melanie Rawn, J.R.R. Tolkien, the Margaret Weis/Tracy Hickman combo and Tad Williams. David Eddings is in the number one spot with 143 recommendations (hardly surprising, since the List originated in alt.fan.eddings). Recommended authors (10% - 19%) are: Lloyd Alexander, Piers Anthony, Robert Asprin, Marion Zimmer Bradley, Steven Brust, Susan Cooper, Dave Duncan, David Gemmell, Barbara Hambly, Katherine Kerr, Katherine Kurtz, Ursula Le Guin, C.S. Lewis, Julian May, Michael Moorcock, R.A. Salvatore, Janny Wurts and Roger Zelazny Following are the authors with recommendations from five or more of those sending in lists and their total number of recommendations (as of 2/28/97) Eddings, David. . . . 145 Feist, Raymond. . . . .70 Jordan, Robert. . . . .65 Tolkien, J.R.R. . . . .57 Donaldson, Stephen. . .50 Brooks, Terry . . . . .45 Pratchett, Terry. . . .41 McCaffrey, Anne . . . .39 Weis & Hickman. . . . .37 Williams, Tad . . . . .37 Kay, Guy Gavriel. . . .34 Lackey, Mercedes. . . .30 Kurtz, Katherine. . . .28 Kerr, Katharine . . . .27 Rawn, Melanie . . . . .27 Le Guin, Ursula . . . .21 Lewis, C.S. . . . . . .21 Zelazny, Roger. . . . .21 Brust, Steven . . . . .19 Duncan, Dave. . . . . .18 Anthony, Piers. . . . .17 Bradley, Marian Zimmer.17 Gemmell, David. . . . .17 May, Julian . . . . . .17 Moorcock, Michael . . .17 Hambly, Barbara . . . .16 Wurts, Janny. . . . . .16 Asprin, Robert. . . . .15 Salvatore, R.A. . . . .15 Alexander, Lloyd. . . .14 Cooper, Susan . . . . .14 de Lint, Charles. . . .14 Cherryh, C.J. . . . . .13 McKillip, Patricia. . .13 Goodkind, Terry . . . .12 McKinley, Robin . . . .12 Card, Orson Scott . . .11 Roberson, Jennifer. . .11 Beagle, Peter . . . . .10 Lawhead, Stephen. . . .10 Modesitt, L.E.. . . . .10 Wells, Angus. . . . . .10 Cook, Glen. . . . . . . 9 MacAvoy, R.A. . . . . . 9 Moon, Elizabeth . . . . 9 Tepper, Sheri . . . . . 9 Wrede, Patricia . . . . 9 de Camp, L. Sprague . . 8 Foster, Alan Dean . . . 8 Saberhagen, Fred. . . . 8 Vance, Jack . . . . . . 8 Cook, Hugh. . . . . . . 7 Eisenstein, Phyllis . . 7 Friedman, C.S.. . . . . 7 Green, Simon. . . . . . 7 Hobb, Robin . . . . . . 7 Hughart, Barry. . . . . 7 Jones, Diana Wynne. . . 7 King, Stephen . . . . . 7 Norton, Andre . . . . . 7 Reichart, Mickey Z. . . 7 Rice, Ann . . . . . . . 7 Rosenberg, Joel . . . . 7 Stasheff, Christopher . 7 Tarr, Judith. . . . . . 7 Taylor, Roger . . . . . 7 Watt-Evans, Lawrence. . 7 Cooper, Louise. . . . . 6 Edgerton, Teresa. . . . 6 Goldman, William. . . . 6 Jacques, Brian. . . . . 6 McKiernan, Dennis . . . 6 Rohan, Michael Scott. . 6 White, T.H. . . . . . . 6 Wolfe, Gene . . . . . . 6 Bradbury, Ray . . . . . 5 Carroll, Lewis. . . . . 5 Chalker, Jack . . . . . 5 Dean, Pamela. . . . . . 5 Duane, Diane. . . . . . 5 Leiber, Fritz . . . . . 5 Powers, Tim . . . . . . 5 Volsky, Paula . . . . . 5 All of the other authors currently on the list have 4 recommendations or less. NOW APPEARING AT A BOOKSTORE NEAR YOU The following books have a release date of April 1 in the U.S. (which means they've probably been out on the shelves since mid- March). "Paperback reprints" are, so far as I know, the first paperback reprints of books that are already out in hardcover, or reprints of notable books that have been out of print for several years. Last names of authors are in capitals, hopefully making them easier to spot. Hardcover originals: _Rage of a Demon King_ by Raymond FEIST; _Assassin's Quest_ by Robin HOBB; _Interesting Times_ by Terry PRATCHETT (1st U.S.) Paperback reprints: _Men at Arms_ by Terry PRATCHETT And here's what's coming out on May 1, 1997: Hardcover originals: _The Encyclopedia of Fantasy_ by John CLUTE and John Grant (1st U.S.); _The Demon Awakens_ by R.A. SALVATORE Paperback reprints: _The Warrior Returns_ by Allan COLE; _Ancient Echoes_ by Robert HOLDSTOCK; _Winter Rose_ by Patricia McKILLIP; _The Singing Sword_ by Jack WHYTE ADDITIONS AND MAJOR CHANGES SINCE THE LAST POSTING The list has changed versions from 2.5 to 2.6 with the dropping of the "Book News" section and a realignment of the list across the five sections. Also, there is now an Official WWW Homepage for the list at http://www.sff.net/people/Amy.Sheldon/listcont.htm James Blaylock (b. 1950) "Elfin series" - The Elfin Ship; The Disappearing Dwarf; The Stone Giant _John Clute says these books are 'remarkable for [their] geniality and quirkiness, and the general likeability of most o fthe characters, even the unreliable ones.'_ The Last Coin _A stand-alone involving the thirty pieces of silver given to Judas._ The Paper Grail _Blaylock is often mentioned in the same breath as Tim Powers, but his works are very definitely his own. They do share a certain skewed version of reality that can be very entertaining._ John Jakes (b. 1932) Mention My Name in Atlantis _Before John Jakes hit the big time with his 'Kent Family Chronicles', he turned out an incredible number of novels and stories in a variety of genres. Among them were the 'Brak the Barbarian' sword and sorcery series and this amusing parody. It is long out of print, but it turns up often at used bookstores._ FINDING THESE BOOKS Many of the books listed are currently in print, or were popular enough that you should be able to track them down in a used- bookstore or at the library. I have attempted to note those that will be particularly difficult to find. This is written from a United States viewpoint - those of you in Canada, Europe, Australia, and elsewhere may need to put forth quite a bit more effort. The easiest place to start looking if you can't tear yourself from your computer to go to your local bookstore is amazon.com. They have a huge selection of books (just about everything in print, so far as I can tell), are incredibly easy to use, offer discount prices, and reasonable shipping rates. And, yes, they do ship everywhere in the world. You can find them at http://www.amazon.com Other well-regarded on-line bookstores include Book Stacks (a personal favorite, since their physical location is my home town) at http://www.books.com and Future Fantasy at http://futfan.com Future Fantasy has the tremendous advantage of being a science fiction and fantasy specialty store, so if you have an obscure request they are a lot more likely to be able to help you. All three of the the above are U.S. based. If anyone is willing to recommend some European and/or Asian bookstores with a web presence, I'll be happy to list them. Finding books that are out of print will take a little more effort. For those of you in Britain, Dave recommends Fantastic Literature. They only deal in mail order, and have a large selection of out-of- print sf, fantasy and horror. Contact them at: Fantastic Literature, 33 The Ramparts, Rayleigh, Essex, SS6 8NJ DOWNLOADING THE LIST Yes! You too can have your very own copy of the Recommended Fantasy Author List on your very own personal computer! There are a couple of ways to go about it: 1) E-mail me at ais3@po.cwru.edu Be sure to let me know whether you want the list in one big lump as a MIME attached file, or broken up into five separate messages. 2) Via anonymous ftp to rtfm.mit.edu (and its mirror sites) from the directory /pub/usenet/alt.fan.eddings/ 3) If you don't have access to ftp, you can use the news.answers ftp-by-mail server. Send a message to mail-server@rtfm.mit.edu with the following six lines in the body (not the subject) of the message: send usenet/news.answers/fantasy/recommended-authors/part1 send usenet/news.answers/fantasy/recommended-authors/part2 send usenet/news.answers/fantasy/recommended-authors/part3 send usenet/news.answers/fantasy/recommended-authors/part4 send usenet/news.answers/fantasy/recommended-authors/part5 quit ABOUT THE LIST This listing was created in April 1994, following what seemed like the 900th posting of "what other authors should I read?" in the alt.fan.eddings newsgroup. Originally, the tone of the editorial comments was intended to be neutral, since this is a compilation of the recommendations of many people and not a list of my personal favorites. This policy has gradually eroded, and the perceptive reader can probably make some pretty good guesses as to which books are particularly favored by the FAQMaster. Do note, however, that there are quite a few books on this list that I either haven't read, tried and didn't like, or wouldn't recommend to an enemy, let alone a friend, so don't blame ME if you spot an author that you absolutely loathe. Newly recommended authors spend at least six months on the List. If they don't pick up another recommendation in that period of time, they are cast into outer darkness. Recommenders are encouraged to keep their lists updated - in fact, I try to write occasionally to confirm that the choices I have on record are what was actually sent. This list doesn't contain shared world novels and short story collections, except in those cases where I feel like including them (hey, it's called Editorial Privilege.) I also avoid listing books with multiple authors, mainly because I'm never quite sure where to put them. The dividing line between fantasy, science fiction, and horror is indistinct and highly subjective. Inclusion on this list for those books that straddle the border depends on three factors: How many people push for inclusion of the author, how the publisher markets the book, and, most importantly, whether it matches *my* definition of fantasy (remember that editorial privilege I mentioned?) I would like to note that most the long-running, open-ended series contained herein do tend to have one major problem: They get weaker as they progress (Piers Anthony is the prime example of this tendency.) Try to start with the earlier books in the series, so you can get thoroughly hooked and are compelled to keep reading even after the author just starts hacking them out. CREDITS Many people made suggestions and offered aid and comfort in the creation of this list. Many thanks to everyone who sent me lists of their favorite Recommended Authors, and if any of you read any *new* authors you want to recommend, let me know. Three cheers for: Jonathan Yen - who has almost as many books on his recommendation list as I do Donal Fellows - ruler of the Eddings home page (as well as all that he surveys). View it (and this list too!) at: http://r8h.cs.man.ac.uk:8000/eddings/ Special thanks to all of the following, who helped to fill in the blanks, suggested new authors to add to the list, and/or sent me Real Nice Mail: Tim Abicht (Eriond), Henry Andrews, Corinne Aragaki, Denis Aumueller, Krista Babstock, Zachary Mitch Binder, Elizabeth Blatt, Fredrik Blom, Doug Bowles, Jan Erik Breimo, Daphne Brinkerhoff, Edward Buckley, Andy Carlson, Simon Challands, Steve Christensen, Stephen Clark, Stevie Clifford (a.k.a. Gaspode Wannabe), Cyradis, Amy Darke, Nathan Daniel, Jessika Diamond, Asher Dunn, Matthew Dworkin, Richard Faircloth, Paul Farris, Donal Fellows, Michael Crist Ferguson, Maria Fox, David Geelan, Kevin Green, Jo Harrold, Clint Hauser, Simon Hogley, Jani Joki, Glynne Jones, Mark Allen Jones, Scott Kessler, Derrek Kirk, Michael X. Koon, Jim Lahue, Glynis Long, Mike Loux, Dwayne MacKinnon, Beth Martin, Craig Meyer, Naomi, Barry Nelson, Ray Pugh, Tarja Rainio, Leigh Rooney, Kevin Roose, Steve Sams, Heather Sexauer, Joe "Uno" Shaw, Eric Siebert, Martin Slade, Dean Smith, Lars H. Tombre, Garry Turkington, Luke Vaughn, Michael van Acken, B.J. van Look, Elaine Walker, Wardley the Wizzy, Brett Whinnen, Adam Wick, Pamela Wolff, Theresa Yoder The listing was created and is maintained by Amy Sheldon. Permission to reproduce this material for non-profit purposes is freely granted, however it would be really nice if you asked first. Not only can I then make sure that you have the latest version, I'll also have the chance to be tremendously flattered that someone actually wants this list. Any corrections, comments or questions should be sent to: Amy.Sheldon@sff.net ---------------------------------------------------------------- Amy Sheldon ais3@po.cwru.edu Benefits Specialist (216) 368-6693 Case Western Reserve University