RE: Your favourite books/author
April 26, 2021 at 7:56 am
(This post was last modified: April 26, 2021 at 8:11 am by zwanzig.)
Jack Faust by Michael Swanwick - modernization of the Faust story that I always enjoyed.
Written In Red by Anne Bishop - urban fantasy about a world where humans are second class citizens to the shifters, elementals, and vampires who were here first.
The Chronicles of Amber by Roger Zelazny - epic fantasy the only way Zelazny can do. Gets kinda convoluted in some parts but I've always loved the ideas presented.
Land of the Beautiful Dead by R. Lee Smith - an undead tyrant kills 90% of the planet and turns them into his undead army to control the rest. He is hideous, cruel, and unlovable. One woman tries.
King Rat by China Miéville - modernization of the Pied Piper of Hammelin story. Great urban fantasy.
Infinite Jest by David Foster Wallace - supposedly an "unreadable" book. I find Wallace's observations, tangents, and quirky ideas charming and interesting.
Bloody Rose by Nicholas Eames - one of the best "quest fantasies" I've read in a long time. In a world with a surplus of bands of monster killers, this book was full of humor and heart. And fantasy without feeling like the cookie cutter crap the genre usually churns out.
The Circus of the Earth and the Air by Brooke Stephens - a book that will always stick with me frever. A husband and wife go to a circus show. Wife volunteers for a disappearing act on stage. She doesn't reappear. Nobody knows where she went and when questioned, the circus people don't even know the act he's talking about that she volunteered for. Thus starts his journey delving into the underground to find his wife, discovering a circus cult that worships the stage and a hidden army on a secluded island.
Written In Red by Anne Bishop - urban fantasy about a world where humans are second class citizens to the shifters, elementals, and vampires who were here first.
The Chronicles of Amber by Roger Zelazny - epic fantasy the only way Zelazny can do. Gets kinda convoluted in some parts but I've always loved the ideas presented.
Land of the Beautiful Dead by R. Lee Smith - an undead tyrant kills 90% of the planet and turns them into his undead army to control the rest. He is hideous, cruel, and unlovable. One woman tries.
King Rat by China Miéville - modernization of the Pied Piper of Hammelin story. Great urban fantasy.
Infinite Jest by David Foster Wallace - supposedly an "unreadable" book. I find Wallace's observations, tangents, and quirky ideas charming and interesting.
Bloody Rose by Nicholas Eames - one of the best "quest fantasies" I've read in a long time. In a world with a surplus of bands of monster killers, this book was full of humor and heart. And fantasy without feeling like the cookie cutter crap the genre usually churns out.
The Circus of the Earth and the Air by Brooke Stephens - a book that will always stick with me frever. A husband and wife go to a circus show. Wife volunteers for a disappearing act on stage. She doesn't reappear. Nobody knows where she went and when questioned, the circus people don't even know the act he's talking about that she volunteered for. Thus starts his journey delving into the underground to find his wife, discovering a circus cult that worships the stage and a hidden army on a secluded island.