Showing posts with label Neil Gaiman. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Neil Gaiman. Show all posts

Wednesday, May 13, 2020

My Top Fantasy Recommendations


Fantasy is one of the oldest, if not the oldest, genres in literature. While some credit George MacDonald (mentor of Lewis Carroll) as the first fantasy author (John Ruskin's The King of the Golden River published in 1841 not withstanding), others point to the Grimms' Fairy Tales published earlier in the century, while the puritans would, not without merit, trace the history of Fantasy all the way back to the Epic Mythologies (Beowulf anyone?). The earliest Fantasy book that still remains popular would perhaps be The Wizard of Oz, even though it would now qualify more as a Children's book with limited appeal to the adults.

As with the history of fantasy, the sub-genres of Fantasy remains an equally contentious discussion point and varies from a few to over 50, depending on whom you ask and how granular the sub-division. In this post, I would try to provide my reading recommendations under the main two sub-genres, High and Low Fantasies. The categories are fairly broad and I think I do more justice in keeping the categorisation limited than splitting them into a large number of unmanageable, and perhaps less useful, sub-genres for the casual fan of the genre. I have also tried to split my reading recommendations into casual and advanced categories, since some of the recommendations would be quite heavy for a casual reader of the genre.

1.    High / Epic Fantasy

This is probably one of the most famous sub-genre of Fantasy. The term High Fantasy itself was coined by Lloyd Alexander, an excellent fantasy author who wrote mostly YA literature, The Book of Three being his most famous work. This sub-genre includes complex world building, feature fantastical races and usually (but not always) features a Hero’s journey.

Reading recommendations for casual readers
1.    Chronicles of Narnia series by Lewis Carroll
2.    Mistborn series by Brandon Sanderson
3.    Lord of the Rings series by JRR Tolkien
4.  Farseer Trilogy by Robin Hobb
3.   Chalion Series by Lois McMaster Bujold 

Reading recommendations for advanced readers
1. A Song of Ice and Fire series by George RR Martin
2. The Wheel of Time series by Robert Jordan (concluded by Brandon Sanderson)
3. Malazan Book of the Fallen Series by Steven Erikson
4. A Wizard of Earthsea by Ursula Le Guin
5. The Bartimaeus Trilogy by Jonathan Stroud


2.    Low / Contemporary / Urban Fantasy

The key feature that differentiates low fantasy from high fantasy is that low fantasy doesn’t undertake massive world building, but builds on / tweaks the existing world. There is a lot of overlap between this sub-genre, Contemporary Fantasy, and Urban Fantasy, and it is largely a matter of personal preference on which book to be classified under which sub-genre. I have therefore decided to categorised these books under one common, all inclusive sub-genre.

Reading recommendations for casual readers
1. Harry Potter series by JK Rowling
2. Artemis Fowl series by Eoin Colfer
3. Percy Jackson and the Olympians by Rick Riordan
4. The Graveyard Book by Neil Gaiman (anything by Neil Gaiman really, but this is as good a place to start as any)


Reading recommendations for advanced readers
1. His Dark Materials series by Philip Pullman
2. Dresden Files by Jim Butcher
3. Watch Series by Sergei Lukyanenko
4. The Once and Future King by T. H. White



Disclaimer: I have included only one set of work from each author, some authors deserve multiple nominations on the list, but for the sake of variety, I have refrained from doing so.

Tuesday, November 12, 2013

58. The Graveyard Book by Neil Gaiman


Halloween 2013#3




So, I am lagging by a couple of weeks or so in my reviews, and I am only in my second month of starting this blog, troubling signs indeed.

Less troubling was The Graveyard Book, which read like a walk in a park, or rather, a graveyard. It was just the perfect combination of warm and weird, spooky and funny, a supernatural tale of vendetta like no other. Gaiman possesses the gift of taking out the sting off the grisliest of situations and putting you in that dreamlike haze where everything is possible and the horrible is as fascinating as the fantastic.

The book starts with a triple murder and revolves around the sole survivor in the family, a toddler, over the course of the book, turned young boy, named Nobody Owens (a little Dean Koontzie in the naming convention, aren't we?) who lives, you guessed it, in a Graveyard. With the ghostie people no less. And a lot many more interesting dead and undead species. And then, there is the tale of the revenge, as odd as it can get, against a whole tribe of people, all named Jack (now I am picking A Tale of Two Cities reference). I am quite sure there would be multiple such references which I have missed, and the whole book could have been a spoof, it it weren't so brilliant and coherent. There are plenty of cool characters, and to balance it out, the most cool headed actions in the book end up being despised.


To be honest, after reading two of his books, I am still undecided if Gaiman's works are a spoof or ordinary stories looked through a funny glass, whatever they maybe, they are so damn entertaining.



Tuesday, October 8, 2013

Stardust by Neil Gaiman

This marks my debut with Gaiman books, an author I have been meaning to read for a long time, but it took a RL Book Club for me to get around to him. Having said that, I am happy that get around to him I eventually did. I am not sure how representative Stardust is, of his general writing style, it just seemed so different a book, so I will restrict my thoughts to the book in question. How Gaiman transformed this story from a bunch of fairy tales woven together into a coherent and may I add, amazing story continued to amaze me throughout the novel.

The book has more than its fair share of bloodshed, and yet there is no slaying of the great evil by the hero and saving the world stuff - which makes it without doubt a most refreshing fantasy to read, after all the other stereotypical ones, no matter how well written. And the ending, well, it is like no other ending either, with its simplicity and realness, an irony in a fantasy if you ask me, and yet after the way the entire book read, it came as no great surprise.