|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Category: Fantasy
A true epic in scope and story telling and possibly the greatest epic ever told. Simply devastated the conventions of what we imagine comics could be. The heights that it climbs to are stunning. In many ways the pinnacle. Must be read to be believed. Pick a cover any cover |
Never heard of it, not surprised. So utterly amazing that you need to do whatever it takes to get a copy. Go Now! If you send Vandermeer an e-mail you can probably still get a copy. |
Great story by a great writer. The change of narrative perspective could have been a gimmick but was handled flawlessly. In fact it could be a text book on perspective. Most readers choose City of Saints & Madmen as their favorite but Veniss is the one for me. |
Punches Tolkien & his ilk right in the eye, kicks him when he’s down, pees on him, & sets the corpse on fire. There have been other anti-Tolkien & anti-fantasies but this was the first and remains the best. Particularly astute of Harrison to recognize the pitfalls of the genre considering when the first Viriconium book was published. |
Don’t read comics, read this and have your opinion of them changed. A brilliant deconstruction of the super hero mythos. A perfect marriage of words and pictures. |
|
One of my absolute favorites. Profound treaties on big issues draped in the tropes of the fantasy genre. Carroll is the master. The scene at the zoo is one of the most haunting and tragic pieces ever written and is worth the price of admission alone. First book of a planned trilogy, 2nd book is Glass Soup. |
My personal Moorcock favorite. Elric may be the popular one but I like the Von Bek’s. Grab any of the Eternal Champion books if you see them. They all deserve to be read. A giant in the field of SF&F. The meeting with the sympathetic Miltonian Satan, the commonality of the grail, all brilliant stuff. |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
A great, if sometimes forgotten SF novel. Zelazny’s strongest novel. Also contains what might just be the single worst pun in the history of the novel. |
One of my favorite novels. Ever. Period. Tim Powers at his strongest. So complex, so masterfully executed that everything else just pales in comparison. Plus you’ve got Bugsy Seagal as The Fisher King. Followed by Expiration Date & Earthquake Weather |
An unclassifiable book. The ending is so delightfully weird that it just takes the story right over the edge and into perfection. I like Catheryne Valiente’s assertion that it is the first slipstream novel. |
The greatest “quest” novel. Don’t let the fact that it is a children’s book fool you, more happens here then in most books. The most allegorical book since Moby Dick. |
Possibly the greatest fantasy novel of the 20th century. Brilliant. The story of how it came to see publication is interesting in its own right. |
|
The classic movie is just the tip of the iceberg of the actual story. A grand epic and as Paul Harvey says “…and now you know the rest of the story.” |
My favorite Gaiman novel. An exiting and well told adventure. |
|
No other book does more to totally immerse the reader in a created world. The death of our language and the subsequent creation of a new language from its ashes is amazing. The power of language to direct how we view the world. Tolkien created a new world using language, Hoban does the same thing but vastly different. One of the most challenging books that I have ever read and also one of the most rewarding. Also the greatest post-apocalyptic tale ever written. John Leonard of the New York Times said ”… designed to prevent the modern reader from becoming stupid |
Parts of this book haunt me to this day. Joyce deserves a bigger audience. I don’t know if he has a best but this is my favorite. |
The single greatest SFF group of books period. This is the high water mark for the genre. Infinitely re-readable with more and more being revealed with subsequent readings. |
Greyweather’s List
Bujold A wonderful story of political intrigue and subtle magics in a world modeled after pre-unified Spain. |
Carroll A man goes searching for the story behind his favorite children’s author, and finds a legacy he never expected. |
A hilarious, exciting, and flawless co-production where an angel and a demon both decide Armageddon is not a very good idea and join together to try and prevent it.. |
Guin Le Guin crafted a unique novel exploring the sociological ramifications of divergent evolution in humanity. In particular, a world where every person shares the same, neutral gender. |
A collection of weird and imaginative short stories that will redefine the word "fantasy" for you. |
|
An extraordinary re-imagining of a folk-tale mythos into an urban fantasy. |
Miller Jr. The post-nuclear holocaust science-fiction novel. |
|
What would costumed crime-fighters be like if they were real people, and how would they have changed the world? |
One brave little girl and her familiar and the adventure that finds them caught up in a conspiracy that could rock the foundations of their world. |
|
Advanced technology with the appearance of magic, set in a world ruled by the Hindu pantheon. |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Fablehaven by Brandon Mull |
Faerie Wars by Herbie Brennan |
Five Children and It by E. Nesbit |
Good Omens by Neil Gaiman and Terry Pratchett |
Half Magic by Edward Eager |
His Dark Materials Trilogy, The Golden Compass by Philip Pullman |
Howl’s Moving Castle by Diana Wynne Jones |
Inkheart by Cornelia Funke |
Sabriel by Garth Nix |
The Indian in the Cupboard by Lynne Reid Banks |
Magyk by Angie Sage |
Redwall by Brian Jacques |
Robert Asprin’s Myth Adventures by Robert Asprin |
Stardust by Neil Gaiman |
Out of the Silent Planet by C.S. Lewis |
The Amulet of Samarkand by Jonathan Stroud |
The Annotated Alice by Lewis Carroll |
The Chronicles of Narnia by C. S. Lewis |
The City of Ember by Jeanne DuPrau |
Silver on the Tree by Susan Cooper |
The Fall by Garth Nix |
The House of the Scorpion by Nancy Farmer |
The Invention of Hugo Cabret by Brian Selznick |
Mister Monday by Garth Nix |
The King of Elfland’s Daughter by Lord Dunsany |
The Neverending Story by Michael Ende |
The Princess and the Goblin by George Macdonald |
The Princess Bride by William Goldman |
The Book of Three by Lloyd Alexander |
The Sea of Trolls by Nancy Farmer |
The Spiderwick Chronicles, The Field Guide by Holly Black |
The Thief Lord by Cornelia Funke |
A Series of Unfortunate Events by Lemony Snicket |
The Weirdstone of Brisingamen by Alan Garner |
The Wonderful Wizard of Oz by L. Frank Baum |
Wizard’s Hall by Jane Yolen |
The Last Unicorn by Peter S. Beagle |
The Color of Magic by Terry Pratchett |
Greatest time-travel tale. Powers may have written a couple of journeyman books but never a weak one. If you have never read him then you should start now. Also read On Stranger Tides & The Stress of Her Regard. This is the book that most fans of Tim Powers read first. |
An examination of the mythical Christ vs. the historical Christ using the Science Fiction tropes of time travel and the time machine. |
A quest novel unlike any others. A woman led through the fantastic landscape of her dream world by her aborted son and how it all crosses over into the “real” world. An influence on Gaiman’s Sandman |
A truly original SF novel by an underrated writer. If only his day job didn’t take so much of his time maybe he would produce more mind-bending fiction. |
Leiber was truly one of the century’s great writers and he deserves more recognition. Fafhred & The Grey Mouser are his most recognized characters and tales but these quietly powerful tales still resonate with me, a clear influence on Tim Powers. |
|
Akira is the more widely known work and it is deserving of its praise but I always thought it played things a little fast and loose at times. This however is tight storytelling from start to finish. A psychic battle of good and evil as represented by a girl and an old man that all takes place in an apartment complex. |
I’m familiar with and see the argument of calling Tolkien the greatest fantasist of the 20th century but I just don’t buy it. Now admittedly I’ve never toed the company line when it comes to fantasy (as I said once before I once watched my best friends head literally explode when I proclaimed that Jim Henson’s body of work was more important then Tolkien’s, but I digress) but I think that Jack Vance certainly could hold that top spot. His output and the quality that it maintained is just astonishing. I actually own the V.I.E. |
|
Great story that begs and deserves to be discovered ( a “re-“ doesn’t even apply here). Haunting and will stick with you. |
One of the great SF epics. Contains the 1st 2 novels. Also read Endymion & Rise of Endymion. For me its consistency places it in higher regard then Dune which is all over the map quality wise after the admittedly great first book. |
Book 2 of the Jerusalem Quartet. The strongest of the group. All 5 of Whittemores books deserve to be read. They may be fantastic but I don’t think that they are fantasy, but what the hell it is my list right. |
A great, if sometimes forgotten SF novel. Zelazny’s strongest novel. Also contains what might just be the single worst pun in the history of the novel. |
One of my favorite novels. Ever. Period. Tim Powers at his strongest. So complex, so masterfully executed that everything else just pales in comparison. Plus you’ve got Bugsy Seagal as The Fisher King. Followed by Expiration Date & Earthquake Weather |
An unclassifiable book. The ending is so delightfully weird that it just takes the story right over the edge and into perfection. I like Catheryne Valiente’s assertion that it is the first slipstream novel. |
The greatest “quest” novel. Don’t let the fact that it is a children’s book fool you, more happens here then in most books. The most allegorical book since Moby Dick. |
Possibly the greatest fantasy novel of the 20th century. Brilliant. The story of how it came to see publication is interesting in its own right. |
|
The classic movie is just the tip of the iceberg of the actual story. A grand epic and as Paul Harvey says “…and now you know the rest of the story.” |
My favorite Gaiman novel. An exiting and well told adventure. |
|
No other book does more to totally immerse the reader in a created world. The death of our language and the subsequent creation of a new language from its ashes is amazing. The power of language to direct how we view the world. Tolkien created a new world using language, Hoban does the same thing but vastly different. One of the most challenging books that I have ever read and also one of the most rewarding. Also the greatest post-apocalyptic tale ever written. John Leonard of the New York Times said ”… designed to prevent the modern reader from becoming stupid |
Parts of this book haunt me to this day. Joyce deserves a bigger audience. I don’t know if he has a best but this is my favorite. |
The single greatest SFF group of books period. This is the high water mark for the genre. Infinitely re-readable with more and more being revealed with subsequent readings. |
A true epic in scope and story telling and possibly the greatest epic ever told. Simply devastated the conventions of what we imagine comics could be. The heights that it climbs to are stunning. In many ways the pinnacle. Must be read to be believed. Pick a cover any cover |
Never heard of it, not surprised. So utterly amazing that you need to do whatever it takes to get a copy. Go Now! If you send Vandermeer an e-mail you can probably still get a copy. |
Great story by a great writer. The change of narrative perspective could have been a gimmick but was handled flawlessly. In fact it could be a text book on perspective. Most readers choose City of Saints & Madmen as their favorite but Veniss is the one for me. |
Punches Tolkien & his ilk right in the eye, kicks him when he’s down, pees on him, & sets the corpse on fire. There have been other anti-Tolkien & anti-fantasies but this was the first and remains the best. Particularly astute of Harrison to recognize the pitfalls of the genre considering when the first Viriconium book was published. |
Don’t read comics, read this and have your opinion of them changed. A brilliant deconstruction of the super hero mythos. A perfect marriage of words and pictures. |
|
One of my absolute favorites. Profound treaties on big issues draped in the tropes of the fantasy genre. Carroll is the master. The scene at the zoo is one of the most haunting and tragic pieces ever written and is worth the price of admission alone. First book of a planned trilogy, 2nd book is Glass Soup. |
My personal Moorcock favorite. Elric may be the popular one but I like the Von Bek’s. Grab any of the Eternal Champion books if you see them. They all deserve to be read. A giant in the field of SF&F. The meeting with the sympathetic Miltonian Satan, the commonality of the grail, all brilliant stuff. |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
While I did not continue with the rest of the series, The Eye of the World still remains one of my favorite books. I remember reading this book in a single day, I just consumed it. It is damn good epic fantasy with a lot going on. The killer is in the later books there is just too much description and not enough really going on. That does not make this book any less brilliant though. |
This is epic fantasy. Martin’s books continue to impress. The only problem I have is sometimes I forget what is going on. Can I get a Cliff Notes for this series and I would be set. |
This book is probably my favorite book of all time. The whole series is probably my favorite series of all time. Fitz and Nighhteyes…ah I do not think fantasy gets any better then this. At least for me. |
People that tell you, that you do not have to read this series to enjoy The Tawny Man trilogy are just wrong. This is another great series and should be read before The Tawny Man trilogy. |
This book is a classic in my opinion. One of the first fantasy books that I really enjoyed. I think I enjoyed to like book 12 then it got a little repetative. This book though could be the best one in the series. |
|
Mixes Fantasy and Sci Fi worlds, where character cross over. I do not enjoy strict science fiction so this worked out great for me. More serious then the Xanth series still has the easy style that Piers Anthony writes in. |
Weis and Tracy Hickman The first book that made me a little teary eyed when a character died. Yes it has nostalgia factor and no I do not care I still think it is a classic. A world with a lot of magic and dragons. It is a shared world winner. Some of the later books in this world not written by Weis and Hickman do not hold up. |
|
Drizzt. Could he be the most recognized fantasy character these days? Could be. I liked the first Trilogy a lot. Salvatore can really write sword fights. |
Another magic and technology world exist together. A little better done then Split Infinity, but not much. I really enjoyed Coe’s work. |
|
A graphic novel on the list? Are you crazy? Yup I enjoyed this so much I read it multiple times. I can not wait till the next book. Eldred told a story sort of like Battle Star Galactica and it worked. |