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What is the single best fantasy novel of all time?
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<blockquote data-quote="Ruin Explorer" data-source="post: 9101461" data-attributes="member: 18"><p>It's unfortunate that [USER=11760]@Whizbang Dustyboots[/USER] perfectly reasonable request auto-excludes <em>The Book of the New Sun</em> by Gene Wolfe, because even though it's a single book/narrative, it's four volumes, otherwise that'd be a lock in. I don't think any single one of the volumes is quite strong enough by itself though, not even <em>The Shadow of the Torturer</em>.</p><p></p><p>On the basis of a single book, I'd have to agree with a lot of people here that it's <em>A Wizard of Earthsea</em> by LeGuin, if we're really talking pure quality.</p><p></p><p>However, if we're talking what speaks to us personally most, I'd go with <em>Imajica</em> by Clive Barker, which is a fantasy novel rather than his usual fantasy-horror, and is just an amazing journey and decades before its time, really.</p><p></p><p><em>Tigana</em> is extremely close though.</p><p></p><p>Also <em>Perdido Street Station</em> by China Mieville, is also a very strong contender for me because it single-handedly got me interested in fantasy again, and really, even in reading a lot again. I was flying to the US in, I think 2002, and as I was heading towards the gate I realized I hadn't brought anything to read for an 8+ hour flight (possibly even 11+, I can't remember if I was heading in to NYC or LA, I think we visited both that trip), so I stopped at an airport bookshop, and Perdido Street Station in softback was on a rotating book rack thing, and I thought "Hmmm, the blurb sounds okay, it has an airship on and it's real thick so no way I'll finish it, I guess I might as well", and I picked it, some other novel I forget, and a couple of magazines up. I started reading <em>Perdido</em> and didn't stop for the entire flight, and even after I'd landed and met up with people I just wanted to go to the hotel and keep reading it! Talk about unputdownable! (I also insisted on visiting a lot of bookshops that holiday and buying an awful lot of weird fantasy novels!) It's very hard to re-read knowing where it goes, though.</p><p></p><p>I've read almost all the books mentioned, I note, and it's a curious thing that I'd say 80%+ of those mentioned are absolutely top-tier stuff, and the rest contains very painfully mid or really clumsy books with nothing to say. But most of them are readable at least and I shall avoid any name-and-shame thread derail! Just assume whatever book you mentioned is in that 80%!</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Ruin Explorer, post: 9101461, member: 18"] It's unfortunate that [USER=11760]@Whizbang Dustyboots[/USER] perfectly reasonable request auto-excludes [I]The Book of the New Sun[/I] by Gene Wolfe, because even though it's a single book/narrative, it's four volumes, otherwise that'd be a lock in. I don't think any single one of the volumes is quite strong enough by itself though, not even [I]The Shadow of the Torturer[/I]. On the basis of a single book, I'd have to agree with a lot of people here that it's [I]A Wizard of Earthsea[/I] by LeGuin, if we're really talking pure quality. However, if we're talking what speaks to us personally most, I'd go with [I]Imajica[/I] by Clive Barker, which is a fantasy novel rather than his usual fantasy-horror, and is just an amazing journey and decades before its time, really. [I]Tigana[/I] is extremely close though. Also [I]Perdido Street Station[/I] by China Mieville, is also a very strong contender for me because it single-handedly got me interested in fantasy again, and really, even in reading a lot again. I was flying to the US in, I think 2002, and as I was heading towards the gate I realized I hadn't brought anything to read for an 8+ hour flight (possibly even 11+, I can't remember if I was heading in to NYC or LA, I think we visited both that trip), so I stopped at an airport bookshop, and Perdido Street Station in softback was on a rotating book rack thing, and I thought "Hmmm, the blurb sounds okay, it has an airship on and it's real thick so no way I'll finish it, I guess I might as well", and I picked it, some other novel I forget, and a couple of magazines up. I started reading [I]Perdido[/I] and didn't stop for the entire flight, and even after I'd landed and met up with people I just wanted to go to the hotel and keep reading it! Talk about unputdownable! (I also insisted on visiting a lot of bookshops that holiday and buying an awful lot of weird fantasy novels!) It's very hard to re-read knowing where it goes, though. I've read almost all the books mentioned, I note, and it's a curious thing that I'd say 80%+ of those mentioned are absolutely top-tier stuff, and the rest contains very painfully mid or really clumsy books with nothing to say. But most of them are readable at least and I shall avoid any name-and-shame thread derail! Just assume whatever book you mentioned is in that 80%! [/QUOTE]
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