Thanks for the suggestions guys. Reactions below...
mmu1 said:
R. Scott Baker's "Prince of Nothing" trilogy is fun and well written.
Steven Erikson's "Malazan Book of the Fallen" series is also pretty good. (though I've heard from a lot of people who it just didn't grab)
I haven't read either of these and Erikson is so prevelent that I should really read something of his sometime.
Tad Williams' "The War of the Flowers" is a nice modern fantasy.
To be honest most modern fantasy leaves me a bit cold...
Steven Brust has had several Draegera / Vlad Taltos books.
I read half of something of Brust's one time and it didn't grab me at all -
Jhereg I think. Should I try other stuff?
Lois McMaster Bujold's "The Curse of Challion" is excellent.
Read this and liked it a lot. Read
Paladin of Souls and wasn't quite so impressed.
Neil Gaiman's "American Gods" is another good modern fantasy.
Read it. It's 5 years old! I was really thinking more of the last few years, not this century!
"Jonathan Strange & Mr. Norell" by Susanna Clarke is great.
Yup - fantastic book. Anyone read the short stories one?
Gene Wolfe's "The Knight" isn't bad, and Wolfe is almost always worth checking out...
Like Erikson, I've never read any and always thought I should.
Tim Powers also had a couple of new books out in the last few years - "Declare" and "Three Days to Never", and while many of his books can be hard to pin down - is it fantasy, or supernatural thriller, etc. - I like to think of them as modern fantasy. (and he's worth recommending on general principle anyway - "Anubis Gates" and "Last Call" are great, great books)
Not huge on Powers. I've read Last Call and liked it but couldn't get into the rest of that series. Like I said above, not huge on modern fantasy.
HeavenShallBurn said:
I'm beginning to feel like a complete shill for her but Kate Elliot's newest series The Crossroads is just damned good. The first book is Spirit Gate and somehow it gives off the Exalted sort of vibe. Very unique mixture of tropes and has a more Asian-derived than European feel in many ways.
That sounds cool!
As always I recommend the Runelords if you haven't already read that series. The fifth book is out in hardcover but I'm waiting for softcover like the others.
Nope, never read that.
I read this and I was left fairly cold. Read to me like kidult fiction, a bit Harry Potter and the setting just didn't grab me.
PhoenixDarkDirk said:
I like Jim Butcher's The Dresden Files series.
Yeah, I'm hearing a lot about that. It's modern right? With a noir edge? Doesn't sound much like me but I might give it a go. The problem is I also heard you need to read the first two cos number one isn't all that. I'm unlikely to work my way through too books in a genre I'm not wild about.