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riskllama wrote:Koolbak wins this thread.
Wheel of Time I have read twice, all 14 of the 700+ page books. And they pick up after a few books in the middle.KoolBak wrote:Agreed.....they went straight to hell....lol.
The Wheel of Time is another epic fantasy.....by the late Robert Jordan....but, like the covenant books, they go downhill rapidly after the first handful (think there were like 12 or 14 total). Dune was like that too....
riskllama wrote:Koolbak wins this thread.
+1 for Joe Abercrombie, who I've just discovered.Lord Arioch wrote:Well if u want a GOOD fanatsy serie:
Joe Abercrombie, all his books are wicked good!
Urban Fantasy
Jim Butcher, dresden files, really good!
SF
Cs friedman, this alien shore one of the best!
Otherwise
Iain M banks, culture novells
Lynn Fllewlling, nightrunner series
David Weber, honor harrington series LONG serie very space opera:)
Cs friedman has also written fantasy coldfire triology
just from top of my head that:)
riskllama wrote:Koolbak wins this thread.
DoomYoshi wrote:http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MythAdventures
Absolutely hilarious... it includes regions where the men are all Trolls and the women are all Trollops... probably harder to find these days; some used bookstores will carry the whole series though.

Robert Aspirin? Been reading his "Griffen McCandles" series. Will have to check that out.DoomYoshi wrote:http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MythAdventures
Absolutely hilarious... it includes regions where the men are all Trolls and the women are all Trollops... probably harder to find these days; some used bookstores will carry the whole series though.
Actually read some of the Dragonlance series. Not my cup of tea, as I just could not get invested into it.http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dragonlance
As much as LotR set the tone for DnD, so too did this Dragonlance series... Raistlin, Tasslehoff etc. have all become their own archetypes distinct from the strictly Tolkien archetypes.
I have a few of hi in the "waiting to be read" pile.notyou2 wrote:I love Jack Whyte's books.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jack_Whyte
The Dragonlance series! This whole thread I have been trying to remember what the ones with Raistlin were so thanks for that DY. A great series overall with some very memorable moments. Also I will say I enjoyed the death gate series and the iron druid chronicles although those may be the rune related ones mentioned in the OP. And on an unrelated note check into Clive Cussler if you have any interest in adventure novels(usually nautically themed)DoomYoshi wrote:http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MythAdventures
Absolutely hilarious... it includes regions where the men are all Trolls and the women are all Trollops... probably harder to find these days; some used bookstores will carry the whole series though.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dragonlance
As much as LotR set the tone for DnD, so too did this Dragonlance series... Raistlin, Tasslehoff etc. have all become their own archetypes distinct from the strictly Tolkien archetypes.
jonesthecurl wrote:I have a few of hi in the "waiting to be read" pile.notyou2 wrote:I love Jack Whyte's books.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jack_Whyte




These books should be read in this order, but the Icewind Dale Trilogy came out before the Dark Elf Trilogy, but Salvatore had such success and feedback over his Dark Elf character (Drizzt) that he began writing with him as the main character. So, you can do like the rest of us old farts did...read Icewind Dale Trilogy first and then back track...or, read them in order. Either way, you should enjoy the whole series.Army of GOD wrote:This thread is now about my large penis
