Katherine Kurtz - Deryni and Adept Series a d if you can find Lamas Night
you won't be disappointed.
The Chronicles of Thomas Covenant - Stephen Donaldson - another of my
favorites, the hero frustrates & angers hugeyl, may be difficult to begin
but
'endure' & keep a packet of tissues with you at end.
The Uplift series - David Brin also author of The Postman - Sci Fi but
something for everyone in Startide Rising & The Uplift War
Nine Princes in Amber Series- Roger Zelazny
Songs of Earth & Power, (The Infinity Concerto & The Serpent Mage) - Greg
Bear
Ringworld - Larry Niven
Lillith - 19th century author George McDonald a Scottish clergyman. You
maybe surprised, I lent this copy to someone was very difficult to get hold
of, but I see Amazon is stocking .

I am am not home by my library, but do have many more suggestions.
Barbara

  *From:* Dave Killingsworth <[email protected]>
*To:* feistfans-l <[email protected]>
*Sent:* Tuesday, 14 May 2013 10:12 PM
*Subject:* Re: In need of something new

 Jordan is a great suggestion and the series is complete - it bogs a little
in the middle and I have to say the kid that wrapped it up based on his
notes had a great pacing and style that actually really lifts it up at the
end


On Tue, May 14, 2013 at 9:11 AM, <[email protected]> wrote:

Robert Jordan
large books...great read

also

Dragonlance
so many to chose from

-----Original Message-----
From: Dave Killingsworth <[email protected]>
To: feistfans-l <[email protected]>
Sent: Tue, May 14, 2013 10:09 am
Subject: Re: In need of something new

Yes  Anthony Xanth is fun popcorn candy reads
Adept series is good

Incarnations series is awesome.
Also suggest  Eddings  (Belgariad (5), Mallorean (5), Ellenium (3) and
Tamuli (3)



On Tue, May 14, 2013 at 9:02 AM, Michael Hawksworth
&mailto:lt%[email protected] <lt%[email protected]>&gt; wrote:
Peirs Anthony, although they do have blended in SciFi at times (besides
his SciFi works).



On Tue, May 14, 2013 at 2:57 PM, L B
&mailto:lt%[email protected]<lt%[email protected]>&gt;
wrote:
How about L.E. Modesitt's Recluce series?

Sent from my iPhone

On May 14, 2013, at 7:04 AM, Michael Hawksworth
&mailto:lt%[email protected] <lt%[email protected]>&gt; wrote:



Most of the Drenia books are geared to that in one way or another but I
don't think it is the core plot for the waylander/Sipstrassi(J.Shannow)
books.  That said epic end battles in individual books are a norm of
the genre and David didn't do the now standard trilogy format giving
him chance for hanging book endings etc so if you have to end an epic
quest a major valiant fight is better than most.


I would also say that the battle in Legend takes about 200+ pages on
and off &lt;G&gt; and that it is the characters getting there that is
the story not the end battle, and at least he is willing to kill off
people.


The Troy and greek series are bound by their outlines so are always
going to be based on war which is probs why he picked them.


I was never a great fan of Druss and prefer characters like Decado and
Pagan who are more interesting and the thirty are fun but by default
have to fit into epic battle format.


I would say that there are over thirty books so most people will find
something they like.









On Tue, May 14, 2013 at 11:40 AM, Brian Jones (Trancendance)
&mailto:lt%[email protected] <lt%[email protected]>&gt;
wrote:
I'm quite willing to be shown one of his books that doesn't have that
basic plot, but i have a significant proportion of them already :0p

Sent from my Windows Phone

From:Marsh, Paul (CA-CIB)
Sent:14/05/2013 11:13
To:feistfans-l
Subject:RE: In need of something new




Sacrilege, get back under your bridge troll and never show your face
again…………lol  tbh as much as I love his work  I have always seen his
books as 300 pages of build-up to massive battle of 4 million people
etc.  that is somehow concluded in 12 pages. From:
[email protected]
[mailto:[email protected]]On Behalf Of Brian
Jones (Trancendance)
Sent: 14 May 2013 10:55
To: feistfans-l
Subject: RE: In need of something new


I loved Gemmells stuff although it generally tended to go old guy, does
heroic stuff, meets nubile young lady, gets some, dies.
 
mailto:from%[email protected]<from%[email protected]>
[[email protected]] on behalf of Marsh, Paul
(CA-CIB) [[email protected]]
Sent: 14 May 2013 10:26
To: feistfans-l
Subject: RE: In need of something new
Wow fantastic response a few there that I have never heard of and some
that are a staples to the fantasy reader  Gemmell = Legend/Waylander
nuff said Steven Ericson:  I tried Gardens of the Moon but found it
really hard going so I put it down.  but I do hear good things about it
all the time and thatIan Cameron Esslemont’s Malazan stuff is
better 40k Horus Heresy books are great Dan Abnett is especially good.
I’m on book 14 Dragon Lance: dragons of autumn twilight was the first
fantasy book I ever read love them all. Thought they are Standard D&D
fair along with forgotten realms. not read the Death gate cycle but I
do have them on my shelf Fred Saberhagen book of swords, I have read a
few and liked them but they are hard to get hold of Patrick Rothfuss
never heard of so will give them a try Anne McCaffery never read any
will give them a try Tom Lloyd:  loved the stormcaller but found
twilight herald a hard slog need to re-read that as I have the other
sitting on my shelf.   Has anybody ever thought about starting book
clubs? We have all read the same stuff more or less and some of us must
live in the same geographical areas.  I live in UK Greenwich and work
in Central London, anyone nearby fancy meeting for a beer and
discussing the finer points of fantasy
novels????
mailto:from%[email protected]<from%[email protected]>
[mailto:[email protected]]On Behalf Of Ryan
Hosiassohn
Sent: 14 May 2013 09:56
To: feistfans-l
Subject: Re: In need of something new Robert Jordan but he passed away
unfortunately and haven't read his set since the new person took over
the wheel of time series.On Tue, May 14, 2013 at 10:53 AM, Ryan
Hosiassohn 
&mailto:lt%[email protected]<lt%[email protected]>&gt;
wrote:Kevin J Anderson is
also good but hes more Sci-Fi On Tue, May 14, 2013 at 10:52 AM, Ryan
Hosiassohn 
&mailto:lt%[email protected]<lt%[email protected]>&gt;
wrote:Yeah I would say
Steven Erikson or Terry Brooks On Tue, May 14, 2013 at 10:34 AM, Harv
Barker &mailto:lt%[email protected] <lt%[email protected]>&gt;
wrote:Can definitely recommend the
Patrick Rothfuss books, Name of the Wind and Wise Mans Fear, but only
two in the series out so far. Loved them though.

H
 On 14 May 2013 09:24, Marsh, Paul (CA-CIB)
&mailto:lt%[email protected] <lt%[email protected]>&gt;
wrote:After the excitement of the book
signings,  Meeting Ray and other fans and Reading Magicians End, I find
myself feeling a little down.  I’m in need of something new. Can anyone
suggest other Authors / Sets of books that have a really fresh twist to
the fantasy genre. Two such authors I have read recently that fit the
bill are: David Farland:  Rune LordsAdrian Tchaikovsky: Shadow of the
Apt But I have exhausted their  books in print so need something
else Please help Cheers Paul


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extent of our regulation by the Financial Services Authority are
available from us on request. Crédit Agricole Corporate & Investment
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This email does not create a legal relationship between any member of
the Crédit Agricole group and the recipient or constitute investment
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The content of this email should not be copied or disclosed (in whole
or part) to any other person. It may contain information which is
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are not the intended recipient, you should notify us and delete it from
your system. Emails may be monitored, are not secure and may be
amended, destroyed or contain viruses and in communicating with us such
conditions are accepted. Any content which does not relate to business
matters is not endorsed by us.
Crédit Agricole Corporate & Investment Bank is authorised by the
Autorité de Contrôle Prudentiel (ACP) and supervised by the ACP and the
Autorité des Marchés Financiers (AMF) in France and subject to limited
regulation by the Financial Services Authority. Details about the
extent of our regulation by the Financial Services Authority are
available from us on request. Crédit Agricole Corporate & Investment
Bank is incorporated in France with limited liability and registered in
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Broadwalk House, 5 Appold Street, London, EC2A 2DA.

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