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  1. #1
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    I read the first three of Martin's books when I was down with my back six years ago. Not uplifting material to someone when they cannot walk! Every time I thought something was going right, that one character had a chance at a better life, it was crushed in the most horrible manner imaginable. As a result, I found the books depressing, even if interesting and well wrtten.

    I like Robert Jordan's Wheel of Time series. He died before he could finish it but found Brian Sanderson to finish the books, spent his last days going over plots with his wife so fans would have closure. His books have powerful men and women in them, strong women with normal character flaws, same with men. I honestly think Jordan had a gift with developing characters - believable characters, and all memorable.

    Happy to check out some of the other books mentioned in this thread. I love fantasy, am happy to escape life for a few chapters! My 15 year old niece is the same, we trade books back and forth (I warned her away from George Martin for now). Anybody have more suggestions?
    Last edited by grey; 09-28-2011 at 03:05 AM. Reason: Typing posts on an iPod again.
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  2. #2
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    I love fantasy, science fiction is good but I prefer a well written fantasy series. Pratchett is wonderful, CJ Cherryh rocks. I used to like Robert Jordan's Wheel of Time series until it just went on too long...I will likely try it again at some point and perhaps start at the beginning. Mercedes Lackey is indeed a very guilty pleasure, and indeed I am reading some of her works from the 80s that I hadn't read before.

    I've read most of Game of Thrones and have enjoyed it, but yeah, I wouldn't give his books to a 15 year old. I really don't understand why they call him the "American Tolkien" while I have enjoyed what I've read so far I disagree.

    I like "speculative fiction", whatever they are calling that genre these days. It is still fantasy (what if WW2 had been won by the other side sort of thing). I especially like Judith Tarr and Harry Turtledove, though I haven't read either of them for some time. Stephen Hunt has also done some good writing, his books are a mixture of alternative history, steampunk and sorcery.

  3. #3
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    Catrin you ought to check out the Leviathian series by Scott Westerfield then. It's aimed at young adults and a few of my students have read it. I've really enjoyed it and actually pre ordered the last book, something I never do.

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  4. #4
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    I really don't understand why they call him the "American Tolkien" while I have enjoyed what I've read so far I disagree.
    I had this discussion with a friend of mine, who is a huge proponent of respecting women as partners and teaches such with his personal work. CB said, "It's like Tolkien without the magic" and my response was, " At least the few women in LOTR didn't get smacked around all the time". Funny, he hadn't considered it in that light before.
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  5. #5
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    I'm curious if there's anyone else here who doesn't care much for Tolkien. I mean - he was a visionary, he created a wonderful, incredibly detailed world and history and people and language and all, but the writing to me is boring, flat and very dated. (Besides there being almost no women in it at all.) When people rave about LOTR I tend to say I'd love it if only he'd found a better writer I wonder if it's because I read a lot of other fantasy before reading Tolkine, so by the time I got to reading "the original", as it were, it sounded like a cliche.

    My earliest and strongest fantasy reading experience was the Narnia books. I still love them

    Dan Simmons' Hyperion books are also very good. But very different, a bit unsettling in their horror approach.

    Pardon me for semi-hijacking the thread away from women in fantasy. I just don't get to talk about my favourite genre very much!
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  6. #6
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    Quote Originally Posted by lph View Post
    I'm curious if there's anyone else here who doesn't care much for Tolkien. I mean - he was a visionary, he created a wonderful, incredibly detailed world and history and people and language and all, but the writing to me is boring, flat and very dated. (Besides there being almost no women in it at all.) When people rave about LOTR I tend to say I'd love it if only he'd found a better writer I wonder if it's because I read a lot of other fantasy before reading Tolkine, so by the time I got to reading "the original", as it were, it sounded like a cliche.

    My earliest and strongest fantasy reading experience was the Narnia books. I still love them

    Dan Simmons' Hyperion books are also very good. But very different, a bit unsettling in their horror approach.

    Pardon me for semi-hijacking the thread away from women in fantasy. I just don't get to talk about my favourite genre very much!

    I agree with you about Tolkien being dated, but as a great intro to Fantasy for young adults, it's awesome. And as the originator of this thread, author suggestions and comments are welcome. Anyone else on Goodreads, btw?
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  7. #7
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    Quote Originally Posted by Irulan View Post
    I agree with you about Tolkien being dated, but as a great intro to Fantasy for young adults, it's awesome. And as the originator of this thread, author suggestions and comments are welcome. Anyone else on Goodreads, btw?
    I guess it is just personal regarding Tolkien, he is my favorite in the entire genre, bar none. Recently found a collection of his unfinished short stories and found them delightful

    It is great to read about other suggested authors and series, there is a lot out there. I will carefully avoid mentioning my love of mysteries outside of just mentioning it

  8. #8
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    Quote Originally Posted by lph View Post
    I'm curious if there's anyone else here who doesn't care much for Tolkien. I mean - he was a visionary, he created a wonderful, incredibly detailed world and history and people and language and all, but the writing to me is boring, flat and very dated. (Besides there being almost no women in it at all.) When people rave about LOTR I tend to say I'd love it if only he'd found a better writer I wonder if it's because I read a lot of other fantasy before reading Tolkine, so by the time I got to reading "the original", as it were, it sounded like a cliche.

    My earliest and strongest fantasy reading experience was the Narnia books. I still love them

    Dan Simmons' Hyperion books are also very good. But very different, a bit unsettling in their horror approach.

    Pardon me for semi-hijacking the thread away from women in fantasy. I just don't get to talk about my favourite genre very much!
    I loved the Chronicles of Narnia. I really liked the Hobbit... Lord of the Rings, I liked... but I admit to finding some of the battle scenes tedious.

  9. #9
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    Quote Originally Posted by grey View Post
    I read the first three of Martin's books when I was down with my back six years ago. Not uplifting material to someone when they cannot walk! Every time I thought something was going right, that one character had a chance at a better life, it was crushed in the most horrible manner imaginable. As a result, I found the books depressing, even if interesting and well wrtten.
    i haven't read more than a few chapters of the first book yet, but from your description it sounds a lot like Stephen R. Donaldson's Chronicles of Thomas Covenant, the unbeliever... Also a rape in one of those books, but the main character, who was so filled with self loathing to begin with, continued to loath himself even more. There were other strong female characters in the books from what I remember.

    And from the first few chapters of Martin's book - I'm not sure I see a resemblence to Tolkein.

    For old sci-fi, I somewhat expect odd treatment of women - a lot of the older sci fi authors sexed up their stories so that they could sell them to playboy, because well... it paid. The Catteni or Freedom series by Anne McCaffrey grew out of a short story (The Thorns of Barevi) that she wrote as an attempt for the erotica market. It does have a "forced rape" that ends up being enjoyed in the original short story, I can't remember if she kept that in the book series that she eventually wrote.

    Anyone read any James H. Schmitz books? He was a writer in the 40s/50's that tended to have strong female heroines in the era of space operas. For the time period & compared to most others they were well done.

 

 

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