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Poll - I'm over 25 and I've read....

I've read books from the following authors:

  • Dan Abnett

    Votes: 53 12.5%
  • Lloyd Alexander

    Votes: 138 32.5%
  • Poul Anderson

    Votes: 190 44.8%
  • Terry Brooks

    Votes: 281 66.3%
  • Jim Butcher

    Votes: 110 25.9%
  • R. Scott Bakker

    Votes: 41 9.7%
  • Glen Cook

    Votes: 169 39.9%
  • Susan Cooper

    Votes: 76 17.9%
  • Lord Dunsany

    Votes: 108 25.5%
  • Charles De Lint

    Votes: 102 24.1%
  • David Eddings

    Votes: 248 58.5%
  • Steven Erikson

    Votes: 90 21.2%
  • David Farland

    Votes: 40 9.4%
  • Neil Gaiman

    Votes: 285 67.2%
  • Alan Garner

    Votes: 22 5.2%
  • Gary Gygax

    Votes: 246 58.0%
  • Hickman & Weis

    Votes: 325 76.7%
  • Robert Howard

    Votes: 279 65.8%
  • Frank Herbert

    Votes: 305 71.9%
  • Robin Hobb

    Votes: 115 27.1%
  • Robert Jordan

    Votes: 278 65.6%
  • Brian Jacques

    Votes: 90 21.2%
  • Diana Wynne Jones

    Votes: 56 13.2%
  • Katherine Kurtz

    Votes: 131 30.9%
  • William King

    Votes: 34 8.0%
  • Mercedes Lackey

    Votes: 154 36.3%
  • Fritz Leiber

    Votes: 266 62.7%
  • H.P. Lovecraft

    Votes: 316 74.5%
  • Stephen Lawhead

    Votes: 92 21.7%
  • George r.r. Martin

    Votes: 258 60.8%
  • Michael Moorcock

    Votes: 273 64.4%
  • William Morris

    Votes: 26 6.1%
  • China Mieville

    Votes: 115 27.1%
  • Andre Norton

    Votes: 155 36.6%
  • Terry Pratchett

    Votes: 264 62.3%
  • J. K. Rowlings

    Votes: 278 65.6%
  • Sean Russell

    Votes: 19 4.5%
  • Mickey Zucker Reichert

    Votes: 29 6.8%
  • R.A. Salvatore

    Votes: 296 69.8%
  • J. R. R. Tolkien

    Votes: 406 95.8%
  • Jack Vance

    Votes: 191 45.0%
  • Paul Edwin Zimmer

    Votes: 26 6.1%
  • I'm 25 or younger

    Votes: 17 4.0%

  • Poll closed .

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Among obvious mainstream fantasy authors, you missed Marion Zimmer Bradley (Mists of Avalon, Darkover series)
 

I'm more well=read than I thought; I've read at least one book from everyone on that list.

(And I think you overlooked Tad Williams and Janny Wurts, two of my favorite authors.)
 

OK, now I'm curious. What possibly could motivate such an extreme reaction?
I just don't buy into characters who embark on dangerous adventures just because they "fall in love" with some bloke or chick they've never met before. I just can't relate. I've fallen in love, but it was over the course of weeks/months. Maybe people really do fall instantly and madly in love and then decide to risk their lives fighting some soul-sucking overlord with their true love but I've never seen it in real life.

I wasted a month of reading time getting through a two book series in which the protagonists and plot was driven entirely by their absurd love and trust in each other, in the face of every reason to distrust each other. I kept thinking "there's gotta be an explanation for their seeming retardedness," but I was wrong. There was no explanation, and the last chapter was just as bad as the first chapter. And that's why I don't read books that start with absurd love scenes. [Okay, I don't really burn them.]
 


I'm exactly 25 and I feel left out.

Terry Brooks
Jim Butcher
R. Scott Bakker
Glen Cook
Susan Cooper
Lord Dunsany
Charles De Lint
David Eddings
Steven Erikson
Neil Gaiman
Gary Gygax
Hickman & Weis
Robert Howard
Frank Herbert
Robin Hobb
Robert Jordan
Brian Jacques
Mercedes Lackey
Fritz Leiber
H.P. Lovecraft
George r.r. Martin
Michael Moorcock
China Mieville
Terry Pratchett
J. K. Rowlings
R.A. Salvatore
J. R. R. Tolkien
Jack Vance
 

Can I vote twice for George R. R. Martin? He's that good (I just wish he'd hurry up and write the rest of his doorstopper saga)

And also, my missing author is Louise McMaster-Bujold, she's better known for her Sci-Fi Vorkosigan saga, but her fantasy books are also very good
 

I haven't read all of the list. Some I haven't even heard of. I've also read Zelazny, Kay, Wolfe, Burroughs, McCaffrey, McKillip, Moon, Bradley, Bradbury, King, White, Goodkind, Williams, Cherryh, Hambley, Crowley, Rohan, Wells, Feist, LeGuin, Lawhead, Godwin, Keyes, C.L. Moore, Warner, and Holdstock.

nice additions here too. I would have voted twice for Zelazny. :)
 

What, no Roger Zelazny? No Heinlein? Clark? Bradbury? Brackett? (Notices Nellisir's list) And those?

Ah, well- no poll is perfect!

I voted for at least half the list presented though.
 

Wow... so about the same percentage of people have read Moorcock as have read Salvatore or Jordan? That's pretty darn awesome.

R. Scott Bakker is amazing, and anyone who's a big fan of Martin might want to consider checking him out. As well as anyone with a big history and/or philosophy background.

I'd like to raise a hand for one that didn't make the list - Scott Lynch. He only has two books under his belt - The Lies of Locke Lamora and Red Sails under Red Skies, but damn did I have fun reading them.

Agreed about the criticism of Gene Wolfe. He's a postmodernist, and while he's a good writer, he employs deliberate obtuseness masquerading as literary depth. It's hard to separate such viewpoints from the author, but I think if he hadn't gotten so mired in that viewpoint he would have been much better.

Oh, and thank you for not including Terry Goodkind. Otherwise I'd have to wonder whether having read the authors on the list is considered a good thing or not.

Oh, and beware: I'm pretty sure if you put Kevin J. Anderson on the list that Frank Herbert's shade will come after you seeking vengeance.
 

Into the Woods

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