Recommend me some fantasy novels

They might be characterized as science fiction, but Edgar Rice Burroughs’ Barsoom books are pure fantasy.

Well, they were published by Playboy. I’m sure lots of sex was a pre-requisite. But you still get disembodied spirits, demons, magic, battle scenes, and a queen trying to get her throne back from her evil twin sister.

Quoth Malthus:

They’re also very difficult to find. All I’ve read is “Ill Met in Lankhmar”, which would have been enough to get me hooked on the series, if I could just get my hands on them.

Quoth rjk:

Oh, yeah, I should have mentioned this one, too. The writing isn’t the greatest, but he makes up for it with his magic system(s). And physicists will enjoy a lot of inside jokes in the series (Hardy is a physics professor by day). Like, for instance, at one point the protagonist literally summons a demon tasked with separating out fast-moving water molecules from slow-moving ones.

Quoth Epimetheus:

Rather an odd distinction, there… Any other kind of magic makes something fantasy, but if the magic is psionic, it’s science fiction? Fans of speculative fiction need to just admit that psionics is a kind of magic. And it can fit quite well into fantasy: Off the top of my head, both the Jhereg books and the Bahzell Banakson books contain psionics, and are both unambiguously fantasy.

I didn’t make the distinction up. Psionics come from the brain, not from some mystical force outside. Sure, it doesn’t conform to our understanding of Physics, but neither does some of the other “science” in Science fiction, such as faster than light space ships or copying your brain into a computer. You would have to classify those as magic too. And then, what wouldn’t be magic and considered fantasy except some book that conforms exactly to our level of understanding of physics. Like a John Grisham Novel.

I have three volumes of these stories – Swords’ Masters, The Knight and Knave of Swords, and The Three of Swords. Apparently they comprise the six volumes of the Fafhrd stories. I thought maybe they were treasures, but Amazon sellers are offering them starting at a penny.

Seconding The Young Wizards series, also don’t miss The Book of Night With Moon, and To Visit the Queen, books set in the same universe, sort of an offshoot of her Young Wizards series. Also seconding The Dragon and the George, Earthsea, Conan, Darksword Trilogy, Darkover, both Robert Asprin’s MYTH series, (There is MYTH Adventures and M.Y.T.H. Inc.) as well as his Phule’s Company books, and the Sword of Truth series.

What about Madeleine L’Engle’s Time Quartet, if you are willing to look at Young Adult fantasy?

Also try Mercedes Lackey’s The Halfblood Chronicles and each of these:

Knight of Ghosts and Shadows (1990) with Ellen Guon
Summoned to Tourney (1992) with Ellen Guon
Bedlam Boyz (1993) with Ellen Guon (prequel)
Beyond World’s End (2001) with Rosemary Edghill
Spirits White as Lightning (2001) with Rosemary Edghill
Mad Maudlin (2003) with Rosemary Edghill
Bedlam’s Edge (2005) with Rosemary Edghill
Music to My Sorrow (2005) with Rosemary Edghill

What about the Gryphon trilogy from Andre Norton’s Witch World? I bet you can still find secondhand copies of those books.

The Crystal Gryphon (1972)
Gryphon in Glory (1981)
Gryphon’s Eyrie (1984) with A. C. Crispin

The Thieve’s World books aren’t bad, collections of short stories. I recommend Lythande and The Gratitude of Kings by Marion Zimmer Bradley.

If you can find any of the Magic in Ithkar series, BUY THEM! I bought Magic in Ithkar 4, and have been searching for the rest ever since.

Also, you might try Peter Moorword’s The Demon Lord, The Horse Lord, and the Dragon Lord books, from his Book of Years series.

Another good series is set inForgotten Realms, The Empires Trilogy: Horselords, by David Cook, Dragonwall, by Troy Denning, Crusade, by James Lowder. I don’t know if you’d like any of the Drizzt books, or the Legacy of the Drow series or not.

Ack! Also look into the Forgotten Realms Songs and Swords books by Elaine Cunningham:

Elfshadow
Elfsong
Silver Shadows
Thornhold
The Dream Spheres

Oddly, both Bridge of Birds and Eight Skilled Gentlemen are both available at Amazon.ca, but not Story of the Stone. I’m almost through Bridge of Birds right now. What a hoot! I’m loving it - funny, moving, atmospheric and inventive. And very different from most fantasy.

Somewhat reminiscent of the Kai Lung stories: Amazon.ca