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Looking for a good series of books to read.
Quetzalcoatl.Mithlas
Server: Quetzalcoatl
Game: FFXI
Posts: 271
By Quetzalcoatl.Mithlas 2016-08-31 08:20:50
The Riftware Series by Raymond E. Feist.
http://www.crydee.com/raymond-feist/reading-order/written
It's quite a long series. However, that is due to some stories not being a direct continuation. It presents stories from other character's points of view or from events happening elsewhere in the world during a certain period of time.
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By Ramyrez 2016-08-31 08:25:03
some minor objectivist elements
In the Sword of Truth series?
Huh. Must be pretty minor or too subtle for my dumb ***...
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By Ramyrez 2016-08-31 08:32:28
Quetzalcoatl.Mithlas said: »The Riftware Series by Raymond E. Feist.
http://www.crydee.com/raymond-feist/reading-order/written
It's quite a long series. However, that is due to some stories not being a direct continuation. It presents stories from other character's points of view or from events happening elsewhere in the world during a certain period of time.
It's really not significantly different from LotR in that fashion. It switches point of view by chapter, so it may leave you in a bit of a mini-cliffhanger for a chapter or two, but it's really not bad at all. I always felt it worked for him. Helps keep you turning pages.
I love the Riftwar books. Almost beyond words. If I remember when I get home I'll post a pic of my Feist collection. I have an original printing of Magician in hardcover that I found at a YWCA book sale last falla few years ago (holy ***time flies). That is to say, the original version that was just "Magician," before it was two volumes "Magician: Apprentice and Magician: Master."
I also really love Prince of the Blood and King's Buccaneer as transition novels. The subsequent Serpentwar Saga is a bit greyer for me:
not because it's a bad story, but I don't like where he went with some characters. Author's prerogative, and it's not for me to tell him what to do in his fantasy world. But some if it didn't sit well with me. I never liked Miranda or her prominence, Pug's behavior after the death of his wife annoyed the ***out of me. The descent of the conDoin line over barely two generations into standard noble *** was pretty disgusting and depressing.
Cerberus.Keeo
Server: Cerberus
Game: FFXI
Posts: 118
By Cerberus.Keeo 2016-08-31 10:11:39
Three very good series for you!!!
The Painted Man (The Demon Cycle Series) by Peter V. Brett
The Name Of The Wind (The Kingkiller Chronicle Series)by Patrick Rothfuss
The Black Prism (The Lightbringer Series) by Brent Weeks
By Ramyrez 2016-08-31 10:41:46
If you are inside the US and/or Canada, then you will find it as The Golden Compass. If you are outside the US/Canada, then I believe you will find it as Northern Lights. I forget if it's a children's series or a teen series, but either way, it's excellent
That series got, I'm pretty sure, a bad rap in the States due to the high budget, fairly star-studded-cast of a movie that didn't do well. I haven't seen it myself so I'm not sure what did it in, but I've heard mixed reviews at best.
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Server: Sylph
Game: FFXI
Posts: 61
By Sylph.Padisharcreel 2016-08-31 11:17:19
All but 3 people have forgotten the faces of their fathers.
Read The Dark Tower series.
Bismarck.Vashkoda
Server: Bismarck
Game: FFXI
Posts: 62
By Bismarck.Vashkoda 2016-08-31 11:21:14
I thought about adding Anne McCaffrey and the Dragonriders of Pern series into the list, but despite there being firebreathing dragons who are telepathic and can move between time (which the author tries to scientifically explain), the series isn't really fantasy (if the OP actually cares to distinguish it from sci-fi). Rather it's about an pre-industrial society that slowly rediscovers its ancestors' technology and uses it to end the threat of flesh-eating rain from a neighboring planet. The series does mostly focus on the dragonriders (sort of the police/army/heroes of their world) and the harpers (a mix of bard/teacher/spy/reporter). Still a great series though.
I'll also mention Elizabeth Moon's Deed of Paksenarrion series. A farmgirl who runs away from home to join a mercenary company, and gets into all sorts of adventures (fighting evil priests, freeing her unit from a ruthless warlord, searching a haunted ruin for treasure with a pompous half-elf wizard) until she realizes that her good luck is a sign from the gods that she's to become a paladin. And then she gets into even more scraps trying to prove herself worthy (searching for a lost fortress and being cursed by dark elves, learning woodcraft from rangers and druids, uncovering plots by evil gods and saving her old mercenary captain). A really good mix of adventures and characters you can really feel for.
And back to what I was saying about those anthologies, since so many people keep bringing up the same authors, and since most have contributed to the Legends books, I thought I would include the tables of contents here, in case posters didn't realize there were extra stories out there for their favorite series (especially important now that many of those authors have passed away):
Legends I:
Stephen King: "The Little Sisters of Eluria" (The Dark Tower)
Terry Goodkind: "Debt of Bones" (The Sword of Truth)
Orson Scott Card: "Grinning Man" (The Tales of Alvin Maker)
Robert Silverberg: "The Seventh Shrine" (Majipoor)
Ursula K. Le Guin: "Dragonfly" (Earthsea)
Raymond E. Feist: "The Wood Boy" (The Riftwar Cycle)
Terry Pratchett: "The Sea and Little Fishes" (Discworld)
George R. R. Martin: The Hedge Knight (novella, A Song of Ice & Fire)
Tad Williams: "The Burning Man" (Memory, Sorrow and Thorn)
Anne McCaffrey: "Runner of Pern" (Dragonriders of Pern)
Robert Jordan: "New Spring" (The Wheel of Time)
Legends II:
Robin Hob: "Homecoming" (The Realm of the Elderlings)
George R. R. Martin: "The Sworn Sword" (A Song of Ice and Fire)
Orson Scott Card: "The Yazoo Queen" (The Tales of Alvin Maker)
Diana Gabaldon: "Lord John and the Succubus" (Outlander)
Robert Silverberg: "The Book of Changes" (Majipoor)
Tad Williams: "The Happiest Dead Boy in the World" (Otherland)
Anne McCaffrey: "Beyond Between" (Dragonriders of Pern)
Raymond E. Feist: "The Messenger" (The Riftwar Saga)
Elizabeth Haydon: "Threshold" (Symphony of Ages)
Neil Gaiman: "The Monarch of the Glen" (American Gods)
Terry Brooks: "Indomitable" (Shannara)
There's also a Legends IV apparently (III is just a remake of I) with an extra story by Anne McCaffrey, Raymond E. Feist, and George R. R. Martin
By Ramyrez 2016-08-31 12:37:16
I bought the first Legends book.
I actually didn't like it all that much, even from the authors I normally enjoy.
Phoenix.Psion
Server: Phoenix
Game: FFXI
Posts: 24
By Phoenix.Psion 2016-09-10 00:29:45
what is this? not a single mention of mercedes lackey and her heralds of valdamar books? there's quite a few of them, and they're all enjoyable. fantasy, lots of psychic powers, and also magic as well.
if you don't mind a main character and a few supporting ones who are gay (or if, like me, you actually find this a pleasant surprise), mark anthony and his Last Rune series, starting with the book Beyond the Pale, is uh...
fantasyscifihorrorcomedyromancewesterngodsknowswhatelse
yeah, its quite a mix. great story though!
incidently, mark anthony and mercedes lackey are the only two authors i can think of who ever had main characters who were gay. hell, i can't think of any others off the top of my head who had gay characters at all. in lackeys case, only a couple of the trilogies involved such, but vanyel and firesong both wound up being some of the most powerful characters in the whole storyline, haha.
regardless, both are great authors.
Books I've read since I quit FFXI/FFXIV include:
The Shannara series by Terry Brooks.
The Wheel of Time series by Robert Jordan.
The Harry Potter series bt J.K. Rowling.
In the past I have also read:
The Hobbit and the Lord of the Rings by J.R.R. Tolkien.
The Chronicles of Narnia series by C.S. Lewis.
Looking to get opinions from other fantasy nuts about what other good fantasy books are out there I can read through.
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