Olgar Shiverstone said:
Or if you're a LotR Fan, I'd recommend David Eddings or Terry Brooks (yeah, sure, there are some who claim Brooks is a hack who ripped off Tolkein, and it's true ... but I'd still say his writing is generally better than anything you'll pick up that was published by TSR or WotC).
I'd like to add here that Terry Brooks's first book,
The Sword of Shannara, was published simply because it was so similar to LotR. His publisher, Lester Delrey, was trying to open up a new market: don't forget that in the late 1970s, early 1980s (in fact, before
Dragonlance Chronicles started to make fantasy hugely popular) there was very little available in the way of fantasy. Delrey published
Sword to prove that there was a huge market out there, consisting of readers who loved LotR and were waiting for more of the same.
Brooks's later novels, particularly those after
Wishsong, are much further removed from the original formula, which, to be quite honest, is much older than Tolkien anyway.
Back on topic: I devoured the initial Dragonlance novels when they first appeared. Like I said, there wasn't much fantasy out there, and I'd already read most of it. Looking back, I still like the books, although I prefer the second trilogy, but the market has matured, and there's stuff out there that's a lot better (or at least, more suited to my taste). Actually, I don't see how people can complain that Shannara is a Tolkien rip-off but not say the same about the original Dragonlance trilogy.
If you're looking for suggestions about other fantasy novels, I'd like to suggest
Memory, Sorrow and Thorn by Tad Williams, as being very close in style to Tolkien, but very different in substance.