this post was submitted on 22 Jul 2023
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Fantasy books, stories, &c
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These lists are subjective. I'm glad my favourite one is in there (see user name) but it's weird to me that Robin Hobb and Codex Alera aren't on there
Also, stop putting Patrick Rothfuss on these things. His series will never be finished and we should stop getting people stuck on book 2
That and G. R. R. Martin. ASOIAF is never going to be finished.
I mean he has other stuff, but him completely ignoring finishing his biggest series is frustrating.
It's really irresponsible to include Rothfuss and Martin.
Nah, Martin still has a place. He's written a ton beyond A Song of Ice and Fire. The Wildcards series has been going on for over 30 years.
Rothfuss wrote 2 books (I refuse to call whatever the hell is novellas were "books") and has spent the time since going to conventions, playing board games, and raising bees. Which isn't a problem, seems like a pretty chill lifestyle. What is a problem is his continued promises that he's working on the book, getting angry at fans when they ask him about it, and his insistence that he's a modern author despite not putting out a real book for over 15 years now.
And where's Raymond Feist?!
Magician: Apprentice was my first foray into fantasy and the subsequent series made me a huge fan of the whole genre. It’s definitely on my list to reread.
Raymond E. Feist is the only author that made me "understand" why dnd is popular. (I did not have a group growing up to play it with.)
His early works are great--although I am less impressed by his later ones which got very repetitive.
But the collabs with Janny Wurts were wonderful.
Yeah Rothfuss is what, 10 years late on the final book now? Has he addressed that at all recently?
It won't? I just got sucked into the first audio book by accident and enjoyed it quite a bit.
I'm always sad to see Codex Alera not get the respect it deserves. Granted, considering its origin, it doesn't deserve much respect, but the end product is just so good imo.
Also never see Embers of Illeniel make the list either. Mageborn is an alright fantasy romp but the Embers prequel series really steps into interesting territory for me. It's that perfect level of fantasy setting meets Sci fi concepts. Like ye Olde battlefield earth.
Can you elaborate on that?
Codex Alera started as a drunken bet between Jim and another party that he couldn't write a series on just two wildly disparate concepts. They were "pokemon" and "the lost Roman legion" lmao idk about your feelings but book series founded on foolish drunken bets probably don't deserve much respect. This is a wondrous exception to that rule.
Lmao, never knew that. Honestly, that makes it even more impressive to me