I like Raymond Feist’s stuff since it’s not very long. I just can’t get into these 900 page books. (I wonder how long they were before they were edited) I like GOT on TV but never read the novels because of their length.
Steven Brust’s Vlad Taltos books are pretty good - they take a dip around the time he was getting divorced. Read them in published order, starting with Jhereg. They’ve been running a couple of hundred pages.
Ursula K. LeGuin’s “Earthsea” trilogy (now expanded to six books) is brilliant, and very easy to read. I don’t know if it formally qualifies as YA, but it’s close kin to YA, anyway. These are my favorite-most of all the books I’ve ever read. They deal with themes of universal morality…in a very gentle way.
Lord almighty, 400-500 pages is what you’re looking for? I was coming in prepared to recommend novels less than 200 pages. Less than 500 pages is easy as hell. I’m gonna limit myself to novels of the last couple years, just to make it interesting :).
Check the World Fantasy Awards for a great list. Here are some of my favorites:
China Mieville’s latest novel, This Census Taker, is short and wonderfully disconcerting. Dude specializes in disconcerting.
Uprooted, by Naomi Novik, is a lovely fairy tale of a novel, at 448 pages.
The Library at Mount Char is a gory little gem, at 400 pages. If your sense of humor isn’t pitch black, skip it.
The Traitor Baru Cormorant is my favorite fantasy novel of the past several years. It’ll kick you in the guts. It’s fucking brilliant and is not getting the recognition it deserves.
The Violent Century is very cool. If John Le Carre decided to write superheroes, it’d be this.
These are all stand-alone novels, although Baru Cormorant and possibly Mount Char will have sequels. I recommend them all very highly–with the proviso that not all tastes are the same :).
And John Betancourt wrote a three-volume prequel series, about the background of Oberon, before he became king. Actually fairly good, although book two of the three dragged terribly. Books one and three were hot stuff. (The “book two of a trilogy” curse.)
My favorite book of this century is The Curse of Chalion, by multi-Hugo winner Bujold. It’s about average novel length, and pretty light on the fantasy, but it’s a beautifully written book. Her earlier novel The Spirit Ring is also pretty good.
Hey, some of us might be interested in the list of sub 200 page fantasy novels. Also if you can do some high quality shorter novellas and short story collections I would be interested in those too. (I don’t have much time for reading these days. So I gotta stick to quick reads or I lose the thread.)
GRR Martin wrote three short stories set in the GOT universe, but a century or so before the action in the main books. They’ve been collected as A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms.
They’re on a different axis from most fantasy, but Lawrence Watt-Evans’ Ethshar series is written in short chunks, nearly all of them quite entertaining. One or two of the late, subscription-published ones are weak, but you can’t go too wrong with the first half-dozen. Start with The Misenchanted Sword.
Here are some fantasy novels that I like that aren’t very long:
Lewis Carroll Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland
Lewis Carroll Through the Looking Glass
Peter Beagle The Last Unicorn
G. K. Chesterton The Man Who Was Thursday
Madeleine L’Engle A Wrinkle in Time
Ray Bradbury Dandelion Wine
Terry Pratchett and Neil Gaiman Good Omens
Daniel Pinkwater Borgel
L. M. Boston The Children of Green Knowe
The L’Engle and the Boston books are the first in series. I could add several more books that aren’t short but aren’t long either. What’s the maximum word length?
Doesn’t anyone here read older books? Most of those mentioned are fairly recent books. There is a lot of good older fantasy.
The Finney and Arlen novels I suggested are from the '30s, and the two good Gormenghast novels are from 1946 and 1950. I read older books almost exclusively when I read fiction.
I’ve read nearly all the books on your list. Loved them all and some of them are life-changers (when read young enough).
I’d recommend a good Kuttner collection as a substitute for a novel, here. There are a couple of good ones, and yes, most of the stories are co-authored by CL Moore even if not so credited.
Piers Anthony’s *Xanth *series are all pretty short, as I recall. Jack Vance has a collection of short novels and interrelated short stories that can be read together or stand-alone, collectively called The Dying Earth stories.