Silly Green Monkey
Cowardly Lurking in the Shadows of Greatness
Hammerfall and Forge of Heaven for a good look at regular humans in a fantastic world (want to go there!) and Dark Ship is one I've been pushing (and really should read again).
Just cannot make it through this one. I'm partway through Game of Thrones: A Song of Ice and Fire right now and I don't seem to be getting any closer to finishing it no matter how much I read. People have told me it gets better, but I can't see continuing with this series...
Tastes differ. I have friends who like the books for different reasons. One is bored by political intrigue and only cares about the magic zombies and dragons. Another managed to forget about all the magical elements because she's more interested in untangling the ridiculously complicated personal lives of the aristocracy. But if you don't like either of those things, it's probably not for you. I like both, and that most of the characters seem very multidimensional. One of the best things about the series is that the villain you hate in one book becomes totally understandable and sympathetic once you see the world from his point of view. I find that a welcome change from the Entirely Good vs Absolutely Evil endemic to most fantasy.
Oft said by people who saw the movie and never read the book.![]()
My daughter hasn't been able to shut up about the books, but I've avoided them because this is pretty much the least interesting thing to me ever. Reading some of the summaries felt like hearing a pitch for a reality show....untangling the ridiculously complicated personal lives of the aristocracy.
This I like, very much.One of the best things about the series is that the villain you hate in one book becomes totally understandable and sympathetic once you see the world from his point of view. I find that a welcome change from the Entirely Good vs Absolutely Evil endemic to most fantasy.
If you like dark fantasy stuff, I'd also suggest Glen Cook's Black Company series. Or "The Dragon Never Sleeps," which despite the title is SF rather than fantasy.
Niven's great for his settings, his characters and plots not so much. They tend to be a little Mary Sueish, but the love he puts into worldbuilding more than compensates.
The Laundry books by Charles Stross? Start with the Atrocity Archive.
Andy Offutt took a shot at this type of tripe-writing a goodly time back in which he used pretty much every synonym for black he coulld come up with: called "The Black Sorcerer of the Black Tower". Much funner that the type it satirized. http://www.fantasticfiction.co.uk/o/andrew-j-offutt/black-sorcerer-of-black-castle.htm for cover of the chapbook version.Throw in a ridiculous vocabulary (take a shot every time he uses "incarnadine" to mean "red" or throws out "condign", you'll die of alcohol poisoning pretty damn quick) and a ponderous insistence on being very, very significant and deep and you have a recipe for a "I can't believe they published this!" set of books right there.
Oh, for the heart of the SF/Fantasy meeting place it is close to impossible to beat Poul Anderson - my favorite being 3 Hearts and 3 Lions...The hero is an engineer and applies engineering/scientific ideas to the medieval legend peoblems he runs across in his adventure.
Have you read Orson Scott Card's books? Incredible stuff. Enders series is top notch, especially the first two books.