So I grew up very sheltered and isolated from society and as a result missed out on a lot of pop culture and other common things. I love to read, and I really enjoy fantasy and DnD and those types of things and I’m trying to find and catch up on the great fantasy books/series that every fantasy lover/nerd should know. I’m not as interested in sci-fi, but I’m willing to read the “great” ones too. What would you recommend?

Series I’ve read: The Lord of the Rings The Witcher The Dark Tower The Ultimate Hitchhikers Guide to the Galaxy Dungeon Crawler Karl

Update to add also read: Wheel of Time Most of the Stormlight Archive The Hobbit

I’m just starting my first Discworld book.

Edit: Thanks everyone! Keep them coming, I’m going to make a list with all the suggestions and start working through them.

    • showmeyourkizinti@startrek.website
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      4 days ago

      Very much Discworld. I shouldn’t have had to scroll this far down to find this shame on all y’all. The Night Watch series and The Witches series are my favourites and I do recommend reading series’s in order to but you can start practically anywhere if you want. Just remember the very first two books aren’t anyone’s favourites but are still good.

        • greenbit@lemmy.zip
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          3 days ago

          Wtff… I remember the colour of magic being fun and knew there was more but that’s wild

          • friendlymessage@feddit.org
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            The Colour of Magic was published in 1983, The Shepherd’s Crown was posthumously published in 2015 with up to three books published in some years. It’s an incredible life’s work.

            If you liked The Colour of Magic, I’d strongly recommend continuing reading, it’s usually considered one of the weakest novels in the discworld, being the first book he wrote while still having a day job.

            The good thing is, there are these sub series as you can see in the picture following specific characters with some cameos from the other series. Even within these series, every book is basically a standalone story with minimal spoilers if you read them out of order and zero confusion if you don’t remember what happened in the last book.

  • lb_o@lemmy.world
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    4 days ago

    Kurt Vonnegut - Slaughterhouse 5

    Firsthand account of one of the scariest events of the Second World War in the shape of highly entertaining sci-fi novel.

    Must read for everyone.

    • fishy@lemmy.today
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      Honestly, probably the most enjoyable series of novels ever. The jokes are so layered and absurd while being witty well setup. It’s been a few years since I’ve read them, may be time to start over…

    • dkppunk@piefed.social
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      Whenever I see someone asking for book recommendations, I always seek out comments like yours or make one if I don’t find it.

      His Dark Materials aka Northern Lights (Golden Compass in US) is a really good one. I was 12 when I read the first one. It’s such a good story and I remember anxiously waiting for the 2nd and 3rd books to be published. When my friends started reading HP #1, I was already 2 books deep into HDM and was fully engulfed in Lyra’s story. HDM is a superior series that I think all children should read.

      I read it again as an adult and realized how much those books really shaped my world view. Philip Pullman is an amazing storyteller.

      • ∟⊔⊤∦∣≶@lemmy.nz
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        4 days ago

        ‘I always seek out comments like yours or make one if I don’t find it.’

        Same here! They were so eye opening as a young kid

    • djdarren@piefed.social
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      Just a note to add that if OP does dig in to HDM, bear in mind that there are only three books. There are three more books masquerading as a continuation of Lyra’s story, but they can be safely disregarded as they are a nonsense.

  • spicystraw@lemmy.world
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    Here are some series I can’t recommend enough:

    Cradle by Will Wight — A young man born too weak to matter in a world where martial artists can shatter mountains and walk on air decides that’s not good enough. Starts small and intimate, then escalates into genuinely insane power fantasy. The progression system is crack cocaine. 12 books, all out, binge-worthy.

    The Black Magician Trilogy by Trudi Canavan — A slum girl accidentally discovers she has magic, which is very illegal if you’re not from the right family. Gets accepted into the Magicians’ Guild under suspicious circumstances and slowly uncovers something rotten at its core. Cozy, character-driven, and surprisingly political.

    The Lightbringer Series by Brent Weeks — Magic is literally made of light and color, and drafters slowly go mad from using it. Packed with political scheming, morally grey characters, and one of the best slow-burn mystery plots in fantasy. Weeks hid twists in plain sight for five books and sticks the landing.

    The Licanius Trilogy by James Islington — Time travel, prophecy, and a magic system where using power costs you years off your life. Dense and intricate in the best way, the kind of series where you flip back to chapter one after finishing it and realize how much you missed. Islington clearly planned every page from the start.

    All are fantastic series, happy reading! 📚

  • versionc@lemmy.world
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    3 days ago

    Worm by Wildbow, 10/10 all the way through, which is incredible given it’s 7000 pages and written by an indie author.

    • NannerBanner@literature.cafe
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      Just give a little warning. It’s ‘superpowers’ written in a serial format that brings the brutality of a series like invincible, but while invincible sort of still plays it off in a comic appropriate way, it’s never ‘fixed’ or back to the status quo in worm. While a lot of the brutality is glossed over except when the author is hitting that anvil, and even then more is able to be overlooked because the action and character interactions are just written so alluringly and you’ll be speeding through it, taking a moment to step back and think about what just happened ‘in universe’ can be shocking.

    • faultyproboscus@sh.itjust.works
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      It’s good, but even Wildbow themselves says it could use a thorough edit - which will likely never happen. Not to say you shouldn’t read it. It’s fantastic.

      • Butterpaderp@lemmy.world
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        I dunno, I’m holding out that an animated adaptation will happen one day on the worm series. Maybe it’ll get the invicible treatment and get some edits then.

    • egregiousRac@piefed.social
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      4 days ago

      Earthsea is beautiful. There aren’t very many books, and they were written across 50ish years. They evolved with the genre, allowing readers a clear window into how we got to the modern works of Jordan, Sanderson, etc.

      • AlfalFaFail@lemmy.ml
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        There are six, which, by modern standards isn’t much. The first three came out in a four year time span and was an attempt to answer the question, “What was Gandalf’s youth like?” This was before Tolkien answered these questions publicly.

        Twenty some odd years later, she wrote Tehanu. It was, from what I remember, an attempt to answer her critiques who said she had written a series where magic was not accessible to women. Then ten years after that she finished with two more books. The first of the two was a bunch of short stories that fill in some corners of the stories prior.

  • ℕ𝕖𝕞𝕠@slrpnk.net
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    Series?

    • Le Guin’s Earthsea Trilogy

    • Lloyd Alexander’s Chronicles of Prydain

    • Discworld, especially the Night Watch books

    • Orson Scott Card’s Alvin Maker series

    Individual Books:

    • Robin McKinley, The Hero and the Crown, or anything else she wrote

    • Diana Wynne Jones, Fire and Hemlock and Howl’s Moving Castle, or anything else she wrote

    • Philip K. Dick, “Galactic Pot-Healer” (Dick straddles the line between science fiction and science fantasy, but this one’s firmly the latter)

    • Madeline L’Engle, Many Waters

    I’m sure I’ll think of more but my break is up.

    • proudblond@lemmy.world
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      Wait wait. You’re starting with Engel’s “Many Waters?” Isn’t it book 4 in a series where book 1 (“A Wrinkle in Time”) is considered a classic?

      It’s been a long time but I remember liking book 2 a whole lot. I never did get book 5, though I think there is one?

  • osanna@lemmy.vg
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    4 days ago

    The hobbit is great. I loved every page of it. Just don’t base your opinion of the movies if you’ve seen them, and not read the book. How the fuck did they shit out a 3.5 hour long turd from a 15 page chapter in the battle of the five armies. Holy shit.

    • GraniteM@lemmy.world
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      I still can’t get over how they stretched that short of a book over that long of a trilogy of movies and still managed to not show enough of Beorn. All of the party arriving at Beorn’s house is one of my favorite chapters and it’s just… not there. The. Fuck.

      • osanna@lemmy.vg
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        4 days ago

        Don’t even get me started on tauriel. I’m all for diversity, but she was entirely unneeded. A love triangle? Really?

    • lonefighter@sh.itjust.worksOP
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      I have read the Hobbit! I was so excited for the movies and when the first one came out I almost cried in the theater. I made myself watch the second one but never did watch the third one. The book is good enough.

      • MintyFresh@lemmy.world
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        3 days ago

        Some ofy best memories are of my grandfather reading me the hobbit at bedtime when I stayed with him for a summer.

    • Blackout@fedia.io
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      Yes. You may have seen the movies but the books are works of art. I still don’t think I’ve read a better written book in my life. The hobbit is especially fun to read.

      • osanna@lemmy.vg
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        Yup. The movies are an abomination. I saw them once and I’ll never watch them again. But I’ve read the book more than a few times

    • Omega_Jimes@lemmy.ca
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      There are several ‘edits’ you can put together online that are actually way better than the movies. They cut out a lot of the nonsense and trim around excess to provide a 2-ish hour movie that feels choppy but good.

  • Pholous@piefed.social
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    I really like Frank Herbert’s Dune. It is science fiction, but takes many aspects from history, like fiefdomship/politics and religion, especially from medieval times. Some argue the book is too much into details and thus can be dry (no pun intended) but I like it as the world seems more authentic, the characters more relatable.

    • ℕ𝕖𝕞𝕠@slrpnk.net
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      Just remember that Dune is only half (eh, two-thirds) of a book, and the story isn’t complete without Dune Messiah.

      The next two books are more self-contained.

  • SpruceBringsteen@lemmy.world
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    Malazan, Malazan, Malazan. Literally the result of two bored archaeologists and their DnD campaign while they were out on a dig.

    It hangs with the best in terms of humor, tragedy, epic scope, and heroism. It does not hold your hand, in fact it will delight in letting your hand go while leading you through a dark room. Deeply philosophical, challenges and embraces tropes in equal part, absolutely interesting magic system(s). It is hardcore hopecore, it champions the little guy, empathy, and the bright mind over the slow. Main series is finished, 10 giant books. Also a bunch of others outside that series by both creators.

    Be patient with it, some payoffs take a while. Read Gardens of the Moon and then Deadhouse Gates to see if it’s clicking. It isn’t for all.

    • statler_waldorf@sopuli.xyz
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      I feel like this might be a terrible suggestion to start with. It has ruined fantasy for me. Nothing else I’ve found has come close, the worlds feel half baked, the stories mediocre, the characters forgettable, the scale a fraction of Malazan’s.

      Erickson can get me more attached to a throwaway character that is introduced and killed off in a handful of pages than some authors can to their main character.

        • statler_waldorf@sopuli.xyz
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          More bleak than the Chain of Dogs, the Children of the Dead Seed, Beak’s candles, The Snake?!

          I have had Bakker on my radar but I have to be in the right mood for fantasy.

          • SpruceBringsteen@lemmy.world
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            Much more bleak. Erikson has more in the way of heroics in the face of the bleak. Bakker you get more of human flaws ushering in doom. It has a similar sense of scale, the world building is top notch. But the passage of time and intelligence are much less forgiving in Bakker’s world.

            I’ve done numerous rereads of Malazan, none for Bakker. Though it’s just as deserving, if not more so. It’s just… a lot less uplifting.

  • Mothra@mander.xyz
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    Ah, I love recommendation posts.

    It depends on what you actually enjoyed reading and why. I see you already have a lot of great suggestions. The only author I haven’t yet seen mentioned is perhaps Asimov, although you said you prefer fantasy to sci fi. That’s also my preference, however I find his short stories are worth reading and also low commitment for this reason.

    One thing I find useful in recommendations is to know what else people have read and what they think about that. It helps me get an idea of which books I’m more likely to enjoy best or not, especially if I can compare their thoughts to mine about the same books. With that in mind, my thoughts:

    Discworld is amazing. Pratchett is a great author. I like that he can write a story that on the surface is just a simple comedy/adventure, but if you are the type that also analyzes what they read you will soon see his stories go much deeper than what they appear to be. He will keep things entertaining and witty but also throw at you a piece of his mind for you to mull over and reflect on various aspects of life. Small Gods is one of my favorites.

    I also really enjoyed Dungeon Crawler Karl, and I mean really really really. Hilarious. But it doesn’t have the depth Pratchett has.

    On a similar vein, The Witcher- loved the characters and the story is very entertaining, but t can’t say I was blown away as with Pratchett.

    I absolutely loved Abercrombie’s First Law trilogy. Now that’s some solid writing. The characters are so well fleshed out, unique, original. Somehow the world and the plot feel realistic, crazy as it sounds for a fantasy book. It may feel a bit slower in pacing than any of the three I previously mentioned, but not slower than LOTR which you have already read.

    • robador51@lemmy.ml
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      I can also recommend the first law trilogy, just finished it. There’s actually some standalone books and a second trilogy in that world, i’m reading ‘best served cold’ now which is also excellent and features some characters from the trilogy. Can’t wait to read the rest and dread the day i read them all.

  • theskyisfalling@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    4 days ago

    Brandon Sanderson books, specifically the cosmere stuff are all pretty fucking good.

    My favourite is probably Mistborn but I know a lot of people prefer The Stormlight Archives. All worth reading!

    • egregiousRac@piefed.social
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      Both Mistborn ages are really tight, making them easy reads. Intriguing magic, moving story, great characters.

      Stormlight has all the same elements, but it lets every character have their own storyline. It’s sprawling. It lets you see more sides of it.

    • Serinus@lemmy.world
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      Sanderson is a great airport read.

      I wouldn’t recommend it outside of that context. It’s nothing special.

          • AlfalFaFail@lemmy.ml
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            I just finished Gardens of the Moon. In order to keep track of everyone, I made my own wiki. It felt like watching Eriksson play a war game.

            I’m taking a break as the style isn’t interesting to me. I hear his writing becomes more intimate and visceral in the rest of the series. Looking forward to this in book 2. Sort of wish I started with book 2 since none or few of the characters carry over.