Check out the 21 Must Read Fantasy Books of All Time!
If you are like me, then you are a huge fantasy fan. It is easily my favorite genre and I have to force myself to read to read other books. But for this list, we will be staying with this genre as we share our list of the 21 must read fantasy books of all time!
A Song of Ice and Fire Series by George R.R Martin
American Gods by Neil Gaiman
His Dark Materials by Philip Pullman
Mistborn Series by Brandon Sanderson
The Wheel of Time series by Robert Jordan
Dune by Frank Herbert
The Night Angel by Brent Weeks
The Night Circus by Erin Morgenstern
The First Law series by Joe Abercrombie
The Dresden Files by Jim Butcher
A Wizard of Earthsea by Ursula K. Le Guin
The Graveyard Book by Neil Gaiman
Discworld by Terry Pratchett
The Fifth Season by N.K. Jemisin
The Way of Kings by Brandon Sanderson
Foundryside by Robert Jackson Bennett
The Hunger Games by Suzanne Collins
The Chronicles of Narnia by C.S. Lewis
The Kingkiller Chronicle, #1 by Patrick Rothfuss
Temeraire by Naomi Novik
For me a lot of these are solid, but some are pretty questionable. I regret the time I spent with Night Angel, for example, and found Hunger Games to be entertaining, but not substantial enough to get past the first book.
The fact that it's on the list and not something like Spellmonger tells me the person who made this article isn't really all that passionate about fantasy books and likely based their research off various google results for "popular fantasy series".
I would recommend not. The ending was extremely frustrating for me. Throughout the series all the characters grow and then in the last two pages they all revert back to who they were at the start and go back to doing exactly what they were doing before
Nah, Martin still has a place. He's written a ton beyond A Song of Ice and Fire. The Wildcards series has been going on for over 30 years.
Rothfuss wrote 2 books (I refuse to call whatever the hell is novellas were "books") and has spent the time since going to conventions, playing board games, and raising bees. Which isn't a problem, seems like a pretty chill lifestyle. What is a problem is his continued promises that he's working on the book, getting angry at fans when they ask him about it, and his insistence that he's a modern author despite not putting out a real book for over 15 years now.
Magician: Apprentice was my first foray into fantasy and the subsequent series made me a huge fan of the whole genre. It’s definitely on my list to reread.
I'm always sad to see Codex Alera not get the respect it deserves. Granted, considering its origin, it doesn't deserve much respect, but the end product is just so good imo.
Also never see Embers of Illeniel make the list either. Mageborn is an alright fantasy romp but the Embers prequel series really steps into interesting territory for me. It's that perfect level of fantasy setting meets Sci fi concepts. Like ye Olde battlefield earth.
That list reads more like a "21 books that I've read--with a few girl authors I heard were good or famous or black thrown in".
Brent Weeks is not a great author, and while Jim Butcher is consistent in his output (barring the few years where his RL went to shit on him) his Craft suffers in his non-urban fantasy series. (He coasts a LOT on Harry Dresden's voice and charm and culture references, and doesn't get that crutch in his other series and it shows.) I LIKE Jim Butcher, but there's tons of authors that can write circles around him. His career is based on completing books and getting them out the door, not creating masterworks.
Where's Robin McKinley? Robin Hobb? Kate Elliott, who was writing and COMPLETING her Crown of Stars epic fantasy series at the same time Martin and Jorden were writing (and never completed their series)? Lois McMaster Bujold, whose Challion series is just as good as her Vorkosigan series? Jacqueline Carey? And if we're including YA, which the Hunger Games suggests (although as one person pointed out, those are sci-fi), where's Tamora Pierce? Patricia C. Wrede?
The person who wrote that list reads a very specific part of the genre and leaves a LOT of the greats out.
Ugh, I disliked the Assassin's Apprentice series. It's written like his mentors have some sort of plan for dealing with Royal, when really the entirety of their plan is "let him do whatever he wants, up to and including getting everyone killed and selling out the entire country". That was the most disappointing, limp-dicked arc to a story I've read among books that are considered good by some people. I kind of enjoyed the first book or two while reading it, but I very much wished I had read something else by the time I was done.
Bro Jim has chops I don't think a lot of people respect. I hated BG/PT more than most and am still pretty vocal about how blatant a cash grab it was, but that's just the latest Dresden drip. Go back and look at Codex Alera again. The complexity of plot, the subtle politics and character relationships, and the over the top large scale action. Imo it's pretty great all time fiction work, and it's genesis was a drunken bet about Pokémon and the lost Roman legion. I'm honestly hopeful for the Olympian Affair, as the Cinder Spires series had a very promising start.
These lists are so subjective. For example, The Dresden Files have been around for a while, but I wouldn't consider them to be the top of the fantasy genre. Also, no Robin Hobb?
I don't dislike Dresden Files but I'm liking it less as it veers further & further from its initial premise. Book 1 and book...er, 16? the latest one...are so tonally different. Power creep, yeah, is part of it, but also it went from "fun noir throwback starring Detective Hard-Boiled" solving things cleverly (and without spellslinging ALL the time) to "what if a Jedi with the power of God and pop culture references on his side fought Irish folklore kaijus while Bigfoot was watching".
Like... I'm strapped in for the ride and enjoying it besides but the series seems to have gotten a lot less intellectually stimulating and than before and is now "big powers do a fighting".
I didn't mind the first book, but I do see why people do. It was definitely rough. But it had that nior vibe you were talking about, so it works for me despite its edges.
The last two books, on the other hand, I absolutely hated. PT/BG is the biggest pile of crap I've read from Jim. I feel like his editor was replaced by a Disney exec for that publication. I understand he had a rough time during writing, but the quality is shockingly off from the rest of the series. You can see the elements of the usual Dresden Files entry in between the books, but it's so padded out with filler and gratuitous bombast that it's a slog to read.
Imo this is kind of a recurring theme for Jim when he gets to wrapping up a series. Codex Alera does this, though most of those books are still some of my favorite. Unfortunately, the only way Jim seems to be able to power up the witty, clever guy is to just make him the secret grandson of the last big badass strong guy in the series and suddenly the witty, clever guy is the new zomg over 9000 guy.
I agree on this. I'm enjoying it none the less and I like the direction its going in. To me, it's like going to see a movie like "Nobody"
You know what you're getting into. You know you'll be entertained. You know it won't be too long. And you know it'll never make a list as one of the greats or win any awards.
I don't get why American Gods is always recommended. Neil Gaiman takes the coolest ideas in principle and finds the most underwhelming ways imaginable to flesh them out. That and Neverwhere were really disappointing to me for those reasons.
I think that's why I can never get through his books, but seem to always like the movies and TV shows made of his work.
Perhaps it's some artifact of starting in news and comics? Starting out as a writer who collaborates with others? He's great at that. Just can't get through his books on their own.
Sounds more like you have a particular preference for big bold YA style narrative ENDINGS vs. real life endings where those that survived soldier on, what does "The End" even mean, and "what was the point of it all anyway?", style of existential and humanist literature. If you feel this way about Garman's endings, you should also avoid Kurt Vonnegut, Albert Camus, Milan Kundera, and Ursula K. Le Guin.
I get where you're coming from, but I don't think that's it. The entire book was kinda milquetoast, which wasn't a deal breaker. It was just underwhelming no matter was going on. I found myself interested in continuing the story, but I just didn't really care about any of the characters by the end.
Contrast that with something like East of Eden or Crime and Punishment, which are favorites of mine. I'm about a third of the way through blood meridian, which is fantastic so far. I'm actually a huge fan of Vonnegut fwiw.
Good analysis on your part, but Gaiman just falls flat for me.
If you liked that one I'd suggest checking out The Very Secret Society of Irregular Witches, which is a very similar vibe as a contemporary fantasy. I put off reading it for a bit because contemporary and witches aren't normally my thing but it's really, really great.
For sake of argument, maybe HP is seen as it's own thing now. It's become so ubiquitous it's sort of general fiction and not thought of as grouped with anything.
It's a bit tragic how she's fallen in with that crowd. I don't think she bears anyone any ill will herself, she's just stupidly sought refuge in the wrong place. She never should've bothered, not on twitter, the place is too polarised. She started off playing devil's advocate, but quickly learned there's no room for ifs and buts on socmed and - fuelled by the shock of being threatened with violence - flew to a bunch of accomodating cunts for reassurance.
I would never suggest someone read all of ASOIAF. It just gets ridiculous in length and complexity for no valid reason, and he's likely to die before finishing the series. The first 2-3 books are alright though.
Also, no Hobbit? No Legend of Drizzt? Wtf. RA Salvatore is one of the best.
That's fair. It's not exactly adult level most of the time. If you want D&D stuff though, War of the Spider Queen might be more palatable. He chaired a round table of 6 authors, each of them writing one book in the series, so if you don't like one style it changes with the next. Post-Drizzt timeline and Drow being Drow. It's my personal favorite.
Patrick Rothfuss because he's never finishing it. Not that he doesn't deserve it based on merit, but it's irresponsible to recommend him. Authors take time and most will eventually finish one day but it's pretty clear he's not.
I don't understand the love that the Dresden Files gets. Great idea with terrible execution. Butcher's writing is just clumsy with bad dialogue and weak world building. The series was originally recommended to me because I was lamenting that Gibson had moved away from noir after Neuromancer and a friend thought Butcher would fit the bill.
Dresden Files is one of those series where I think if you encountered it when urban fantasy was just revving up as a genre (and you were the right age), it imprints on you. It was definitely its own cool thing when it first broke out.
But it's not aging well 20 years later, and if you come to it older I think you "imprint" on it less.
I genuinely despise the dialogue for at least the first six books in the Dresden files. If my friend didn't convince me to keep going, I would have given up. However, around book 10-12 is when I saw the magic.
That's a huge time investment for something you may not eventually like, but it paid off for me fwiw.
I genuinely despise the dialogue for at least the first six books in the Dresden files. If my friend didn't convince me to keep going, I would have given up. However, around book 10-12 is when I saw the magic.
That's a huge time investment for something you may not eventually like, but it paid off for me fwiw.
Read most of these and some I agree with, some I don't.
Weeks is okay, but I don't think Night Angel is a "must read".
I liked the Dresden Files well enough, but I don't think it is must-read either. They were fun reads, but he wouldn't be in the top authors even of urban fantasy specifically.
I don't read them really, but Harry Potter seems influential enough that it should probably be on the list.
I might make a case for some Scott Lynch and Robin Hobb to be there too. Sorta surprised neither Terry Brooks nor Terry Goodkind made the cut either, though I haven't personally read them since I was very young.
Terry Goodkind is prolific and his characters are extremely relatable. His omission from the list and lack of references in the comment section is disappointing
Having read, and enjoyed, everything up to and including Law of Nines he's repetitive and not terribly spectacular.
There's a lot of good stuff in his books, which I guess is good because by all accounts he was the black sheep of his family who I'm told are all lovely people.
Mistborn series by Brandon Sanderson should be expanded to the entire Cosmere, not just Mistborn. Several other book series in the same universe, and all are very good IMO, e.g. Stormlight Archive, Elantris, and my favorite, Warbreaker.
He has Way of Kings on there as a separate listing, so he's not ignoring the rest of the cosmere
Granted, it's generally a weak list. Night Angel was hot garbage, and eclipsed by Weeks own later series lightbringer even in spite of it's terrible last portion.
Night Angel is maybe the oddest choice on that list. I don't think it's hot garbage, but Lightbringer is much better, though probably also doesn't deserve to be on the list unless we're talking hard magic systems. If the author needs an assassin book.... well I think there's no shortage of those in the genre.
Pet peeve of mine but grouping an entire series together as an entry in a list of individual books is so stupid. So many lists do this all over the net.
At least pick a stand out book from the series or something. Sorry but don't promise me a list of 21 books then give me trilogies and series all getting their own single entry.
Lists of book series are way more useful. Book 14 of Wheel of Time is one of the greatest fantasy books of all time. Would I recommend anybody goes off and reads it, hell no.
But that's pretty much what the OP list is doing by having the whole Wheel of Time series on there. To me it's more useful and interesting to see your opinion of that one book than yet another generic list of popular series masquerading as a list of specific books.