What are some fantasy books with themes like humanity reaching the end of its evolutionary road and declining, or humanity collectively losing its will to live.
Andrew Morales
Oh aye, "I put on my robe and taker out my magic rod".
Some people like one, some people like the other, most people are capable of enjoying both without feeling the need to be a pretentious dick about it.
Lincoln Rogers
You sound like one of those sad fucks who is all like "X genre of music is objectively better than Y type of music and Z type of music is unrepentant trash".
Most people like that aren't worth the time of day, obnoxious twats.
Jacob Powell
(>>)13037077 Why are you tards getting baited?
Robert Robinson
Because they're WRONG. On the INTERNETS.
Hunter Thompson
>seek the flying sword is now done
What will life be like without new chapters to look forward to?
Cooper Nelson
What is some COMPLETED xianxia that is not ABSURDLY LENGTHY?
Leo Sanchez
Those are only interesting themes to materialistic atheists.
Triggered star trek fan defected.
Brandon Scott
Those are events, not themes >stop having opinions REEEE
Dominic Bennett
How are Elizabeth Moons works?
Robert Allen
“Iron or glass? they'd ask. She was neither. She was steel.”
The cover (lotr movie cover tier book) makes it look as if it has lotr vibes. Don't want to touch it.
Aaron Cook
When will you be doing 31th or 31rd again, reading user?
Tyler Roberts
Solid but unremarkable. I can't think of anything bad about her stuff except I'm not going to rush out and buy any new book.
Benjamin Reyes
But the length is the best part, so you get a full story with zero bloat
Nathaniel Richardson
Opinions are, by definition, subjective. When that user added the word ‘objectively’ to his post, he gave up his right to hide behind ‘opinion’ as a defence. >literally judging a book by its cover
Angel Bell
>>stop having opinions REEEE You can't say it's an opinion if you use the word "objectively". An objective statement would be, "if the animal known as human were to be deprived of imbibing oxygen for an extended period of time, they would cease to live".
Aiden Brooks
>literally judging a book by its cover Unlike back in the day, you can safely judge recent books by their covers. It usually tells of something that is occurring in the novel. Not in the mood for "the three adventures standing badass like holding weapons on the cover", thank you. Especially when one of them gives me lotr flashbacks.
Anthony Bailey
>literally judging a book by its cover Literally what they're for.
Justin Murphy
Stainless or mild they asked?
Asher Baker
It's nothing like Lord of the Rings. Apart from them both being epic fantasies.
Ethan Brown
Is this author the Yea Forums equivalent of Brie Larson (i.e. she triggers the incels nonstop)?
Grayson Collins
But it's also a horror novel, just in an epic fantasy setting.
Xavier Fisher
There's no triggering. Just one dedicated troll.
Angel Cooper
She’s just a plump housewife who writes ya shlock. Just one absurdly dedicated autist shilling her here.
Levi Taylor
Cringe
James Price
>absurdly lengthy = zero bloat In what fucking universe
Nathaniel Lopez
I have been meaning to ask: are you the same user?
Sex addict woman POV and cultists impaling sacrifices on a giant stone dick. All I remember before I dropped it. So it’s got some gay and rape in it.
Ian Ross
Why is it that pol and women like to use buzzwords so much? First it was a bean plant that has many industrial uses, now it's the rehashing and revamping of the "virgin" insult. They give themselves away so easily. It's like they can't control themselves and have to make an outburst.
Jordan Morales
Bloat = stupid writing or multiple points of view,
Tyler Flores
I bet you're the wandering inn user. What other lengthy bloated books you think is worth reading?
Mason Rodriguez
user I....
Liam Parker
>before I dropped it. Wtf. Why are you shilling a book you dropped? I was going to pick it up.
Jordan Stewart
They both have their merits and I like to alternate between the two depending on my mood
Jordan Roberts
Different user baka
Joseph Stewart
Anyone know any good /k/-tier sci-fi that doesn't revolve around the military? Police stuff or gang stuff, anything with good street level shootouts really, a few sprinkles of gun autism don't hurt either. Already read Neuromancer and Do Androids Dream Of Electric Sheep.
So is that retard claiming ASOIAF's worldbuilding is bad using capslock gone? Damn he had no fucking idea about why GRRM's characters are so good, and that's because of how they connect with the world.
Jacob King
Altered Carbon series has shootouts and every book some gun-buying scene. And it was interesting enough.
Wyatt Jenkins
/sffg/, im probably not going to work this into my story, but would it stretch suspension of disbelief if one of my characters used grenades rocket candy (an ameteur solid-state rocket fuel made of sugar and saltpeter). they would require an ignition source in real life, but I don't have a good idea that doesn't sound stupider than this already does
Benjamin Bell
>*grenades made of fugg
Grayson Thomas
I was about to say that that looks like a very /k/ gif. I'm J N Morgan, wrote a book dedicated to /k/, a little novelette called Firearm Valhalla set vaguely in the future and has a lot of firearms involves. I call it my 'gun porn' book, inspired a decent bit by STALKER: Call of Pripyat at least in terms of the firearm selection (primarily with the Misery and The Armed Zone mods), and there's also a character named Ivan.
There's also my 5-novel zombie survival series; Living Amongst the Dead. Not quite as many different firearms but lots of firearm terminology. The protagonist has a Lee Hand Press and dyes in his backpack so he can pull the bullets of ammo he might come across but don't have a firearm for, and then use the powder in his own ammunition. I did my best to maintain consistency in terms of how much powder he has and how many primers. Didn't want it to be just some untold amount that can basically give him infinite ammo provided he keeps finding more, and I was also very thorough from the beginning to track how much ammo he has from book to book. Primarily uses his bayonet to dispatch walkers that he can't avoid, which saves ammo.
There's other books I've self-published but they're mostly erotica, drama, and a couple non-fictions including my own take on the concept of 'arming teachers who are capable with firearms'. The title of that is kinda long, "For the Safety of our Students and the Security of our Future" or something like that. Anyhow, you can find my stuff on Amazon/Kindle if you're interested, in fact many of my books are available to read for free on Kindle Unlimited. Just search 'J N Morgan'.
Parker Lewis
Sci Fi boring as shit.
The only good thing close to that genre is Space Opera, because it's basically Fantasy in space.
Fred the Great? If he had one arm I'd have guessed Admiral Lord Horatio Nelson, what with the ship in the background. Oh, though it looks to have an American flag. Interesting.
Brandon Fisher
>Space Opera >Good W e w
Alexander Cook
I'm not dropping it. Going to read it to the end. Other user is a fag.
I can't remember the last time a read sci-fi novel so is there xianxia in space? I don't want some deep metaphorical meaning of life and downfall of mankind tryhard bullshit
Cooper Scott
How to make gun battles interesting? They finish so quickly compared to sword fights...
Adam Garcia
What's a good jumping off point for Dick's work (other than Electric Sheep of course)? Flow My Tears? A Scanner Darkly?
Sebastian Moore
It a completely different animal than a sword fight and you have to treat it as such. Gun fights have to feel deadly, very deadly, like any action a character takes could kill him in half a second no matter how skilled he is, the single most important aspect of a good gunfight is tension in my opinion; and while sword fights rely on face to face fights with the enemy a good gunfight should involve not actually knowing exactly where the enemy is at all times, the tension in your opponent being more of a looming presence just out of sight.
Finish quickly? Battles can go on for quite some time. Not only that but Beaumont Hamel comes to mind, well it probably goes with many WWI battles but some soldiers end up wounded or too pinned-down behind cover to do anything. If they survive until nightfall, they then have the terrifying process of trying to stealthily crawl back to their line under cover of darkness. Possibly while wounded. Then there's the 'Canadian Goodnight Kiss' that I heard of in College; Canadian soldiers crept into the German trenches at night and sliced some throats. If they're successful, they'll also sneak back to their own trench without others noticing. The next morning, Franz and Hanz would wake up to find some kamerads nearby, dead, likely with their eyes wide open in terror and utterly covered in blood if I had to guess.
There's a lot of different ways to go about an attack. There could also be a long-term and tense sniper battle, like those seen in the movie Enemy at the Gates (which inspired me to buy that M91/30 with the replica PU scope). I recall a scene in Sharpe's Trafalgar, in which redcoat infantryman Richard Sharpe finds himself on a ship during the Battle of Trafalgar in 1805. Lots of combat, ship-to-ship musketry shooting, boarding enemy vessels, at one point a loose orange rolls over to him and he realizes how thirsty he is and how his tongue is salty from gunpowder, having been biting paper cartridges to reload. He bashes the orange with the butt of his Baker Rifle and eats some of the slivers, I think also offering a piece to a fellow nearby.
Just use your imagination if you want long 'gun battles' as you put them. I recall one in Living Amongst the Dead: On the Road Again. There was some fairly close-range stuff, one character using a pistol due to having an injured right arm, a bit of house-to-house shooting I think, and one long-range situation that actually ends up including the element of bullet drop at a distance. That was a pretty fun scene to write, as I recall. Good ol' SKS.
Landon Foster
>I'm reading actual D&D novels, Daughter of the Drow is really comfy. The only Forgotten Realms books I've read are some of the Drizzt ones, are others as comfy as Driz?
I don't understand why colour of magic is under starter novel but the author apparently says you should skip ahead to sourcery?
Ryder Brown
It's the first novel, and in particular the first Rincewind novel. But it and Light Fantastic aren't particularly good or representative of the rest of the series.
Juan Stewart
What are some fun fantasy novels that utilize the traits of different fantasy races, especially in combination with each other? For example, I like what Vince's people do in Wild Wastes, i.e. putting dwarf-made heavy armor and giant tower shields on ogres and having them fight in a phalanx or function as a protective wall for frail elven mages while they prepare long cast time spells, or putting the ratfolks to their many uses.
Anthony Phillips
Lord of the rings
Gavin Collins
whats a good place to start then?
Mason Howard
I guess it qualifies, anything else?
Matthew Cruz
ignore the incels, her books are pure kino with cute fae waifus
Dylan Hill
What's so cute about them?
Xavier Long
Guards! Guards! is the usual response, but pick what strokes your fancy.
It's alright, nothing super groundbreaking, but it's a pretty solid look at a kind of post-Arthurian world Don't remind me. Miriamele doesn't deserve Simon.
Isaiah Smith
Loved That series when I was young.
Nathan Richardson
Have sex.
Tyler Hill
bros?
Julian Kelly
How do yall niggas personally account for the Fermi paradox?
I don't mean in your writing, I mean what's your real hunch about the "where is everybody" problem.
Dominic Nelson
Swing Shift is moving towards release. It's our Paranormal Urban novel.
Here's the blurb:
>Reports to write, forms to fill, coffee to drink, leads to run down.
>Gus’s life was a tedium and boredom he’d grown comfortable with. One that he sought out after he’d come back from his tour of duty.
>A Detective in the Paranormal Investigations Department.
>A job he could work day in and day out in relative peace.
>One cold and forgotten cup of coffee at a time.
>It was an environment that made some sense to him. At least in comparison to civilian life where almost nothing did
>On top of that, it gave him a chance to hide what he was from the rest of the world. >An apex predator that made the entirety of the Paranormal world fear him. His very species was often killed as soon as they were found out.
>By government and citizen alike
>He’s a Boogieman.
>A name that made humans laugh, and vampires curse. It was a strange life to be sure.
>Now though, Gus’s stable non-life is about to be kicked over. Whether he likes it or not, he’s about to be handed a case that’s going to mess up his already screwed up life.
Not feeling it senpai.
Camden Martin
Too far away.
Noah Nguyen
The New Achilles by Christian Cameron still isn't out on mobilism yet. I may end up buying it.
Jordan Diaz
something exists, no smoke without fire, all those UFO sightings aren't false now back to reading Rothfuss
Joshua Flores
dresden files by william. oh boy.
Chase Wilson
>Too far away. And to add to that wormholes, "warp" etc. are nonsensical fantasies.
Joshua Bell
I thought the first book in the Black company was a bit boring and slow going at the start, but it picked up at the end so I decided to try the next one. This one was really good, I really liked Shed and how your perception of him changes over the course of the book. Definitely going to finish the books of the north, probability will return to the others another time.
Thanks, hope you enjoy them! I'll give a link to a free ebook novella, though it's a drama and only has one or two scenes with firearms as I recall. Pretty emotional and intense stuff, kind of a tragedy.
Also, I've officially changed the title on Amazon/Kindle to simply 'Another One Please'. The former 'Another One Please, to Dull the Pain' title was quite melodramatic. I wrote this thing in like 5 days or something like that, just over 2 years ago. It was a very intense time in my life.
Gavin Anderson
I’ve liked every book he’s done, even if remnant moves way too fast for my liking. I’ll give him the benefit of the doubt.
Hunter Ortiz
I only know one person of the Stainless variety and he's a rat
Xavier Campbell
You're delusional, there's no women here.
Dominic Parker
>hype When and why exactly did people start using this without the d?
Kevin Bell
sounds and looks gay
Samuel Lewis
I'm looking for something a little more relaxed and worldbuilding/environment focused than most of the epic fantasy series - sort of like what the Ghibli movies are to most anime. Preferably something warm and sunny. I read the Inda series, and it fit the bill pretty well - lots of boats and seaside cities.
You are literally delusional mate. Women don't give incels like you a second of their day in real life, why would they give to you online? Arrogant and delusional.
It's a slog and it's shit. Random shit just keeps happening. He just keeps adding different stooges for the chained one. Each subsequent book starts to feel like a Saturday morning cartoon desu.
>give in and Start reading >halfway through the 1st book sounds like you already made your decision the first half of the first book is one of the weaker parts of the series, if you enjoyed it so far it only improves further on
Levi Price
I think you are confused.
Zachary Powell
Depends on what you didn't like about Wheel of Time, but there aren't too many similarities between the two. It's personally my favorite series of all time, but I understand why some people don't like it. There are some caveats. >first 2 books are pretty slow, and mostly just provide minor setup >the author is a anthropology professor, and there are a few historian characters that will give random lectures on the subject >similarly, the prologues are often in depth explorations of the culture and history of some of the races and can be skipped I never thought that stuff distracted too much from the story, though. If you're enjoying the first book, though, you will probably enjoy the rest of it. If you get bored, skip to the third book.
John Smith
>Depends on what you didn't like about Wheel of Time
What I mostly hated about the Wheel of Time was the feeling that absolutely nothing happened until the end of each book. I felt like I was reading the same book over and over again as I moved along each book. They were always on the road. It's hard to exactly put my finger on it, but it just felt like Lord of the Rings fan-fiction to me.
Ian Bailey
honestly, it would be completely in-character for dresden, but I don't think harry really is knocking off marvel characters. the closest thing he has to a marvel knockoff device is his shield bracelet, which is more like Black Panther's necklace than Cap's shield
Nicholas Rodriguez
no. his problem is that he just keeps expanding and expanding and expanding the world and its characters and isnt capable of tying it all together
Owen Howard
>Each subsequent books starts to feel like a Saturday morning cartoon I don't even know what this is supposed to mean. I can only assume you lost track of what was going on in the story if you assumed everything was random, it certainly doesn't hold your hand or repeat things like most series.
Well, my response to this guy should answer your question. I know exactly what you mean, though - half of every book in WoT is spent repeating and re-explaining things that happened in the last one, it's like reading each book twice. Malazan is definitely the opposite in that regard.
Justin Rivera
is there any science fiction in which religion plays a central role? especially christianity? i've already read the canticle for leibowitz,
everyone has their own opinion on the ranking of each book in the series, but generally GoTM is ranked lower than most of the other books I liked it better overall than the following book Deadhouse Gates but I know that's not an opinion the majority of readers would hold
James Brooks
/sffg/, would you immediately drop a book if it looked the monsters dropped mana orbs?
I'm not doing litrpg, but there's an element there that plays out sort of similarly
>Lasea groaned, and the mana orbs dropped from her like dung from an ox.
Ryan Robinson
user, please don't do that
I'm not up to the mana part yet
Evan Hughes
A+
Landon Howard
>Within the game, weapons take on human shape. >enter a world of guns, violence, profanity, fast cars, pretty girls, and a hot mess of sexual content. >Have we mentioned harems, yet? Every Meister gets one. This book was written by a /k/ommando, wasn't it?
You know that is fanart right? Dresden was out before the ironman movies. And a glowing pendant that reacts to demons can't be from the ironman comics. Read the fucking book because you shit out your ass. You're probably underage b& too.
Gabriel Reed
Preddy gud.
I read mana books (magic, litrpg, etc) so unless your writing is complete shit, I would probably read it. But some advice from a readfag. Don't have the orbs "drop" from monsters. Make your characters harvest the orbs after they kill the monster. Like a mana sack. Some organ that stores and compresses the mana the animal absorbs. Make it like hunting. Your kill the best, you harvest the usuable bits, meat, skin, fur, orbs.
Bentley Nelson
Can someone tell me what happened to the MEGA links?
Kevin Garcia
>Go to bookstores and look around for a good while to get ideas on what to read next >Leave without buying a single thing >Buy the books online for less than a third of the price Suckers
I thought so. You literally have to fuck your gun to make it happy. It's like those anime where, when you squeeze the gun trigger, the gun orgasms.
Jonathan Thompson
I only reconize arbies, McDonalds and Burger King, sticking knives at her.
Landon Evans
>look at books online >buy them online sucker
Matthew Carter
I actually had a specific reason why mana orbs drop. I have a whole detailed explanation for what mana is but the key thing is that mana is attracted to life, especially sentient life, like a magnet. Kill something with mana and the mana will fly to the nearest source of life. However, mana rapidly crystalizes the air around it into an insulating shell, so it usually won't travel more than a meter after the death of the host, meaning a bunch of crystals will suddenly scatter on the ground the minute you kill something magic unless you're close enough to absorb it
Jackson Gray
>I actually had a specific reason why mana orbs drop. I have a whole detailed explanation for what mana is but the key thing is that mana is attracted to life, especially sentient life, like a magnet. >Lasea groaned her last breath, and the mana orbs dropped from her like dung from an ox.
Colton Bailey
I didn't like those as much as I enjoyed Time Out of Joint and The Three Stigmata of Palmer Eldritch.
Owen Cox
I decide whether I'm going to read the book based off of the first sentence
Tyler Davis
Good, that means he writes a realistic story. I don't him to tie the story like Sanderson ties his shitty animes, with things happening just because.
Jeremiah Morales
>endings are bad
Joseph Powell
>it's okay just give me a shit ending
Luis Barnes
Well, I finally read Redshirts. I can never quite verbalize what redditcore means, but I know when I read it...
Juan Johnson
>Good, that means he writes a realistic story. You are very stupid.
Nathaniel Bennett
Scalzi is reddit incarnate. The three most shitty stories on Love, Death & Robots are his.
Jack Roberts
>Three Robots, When The Yogurt Took Over, and Alternate Histories Jesus, what a hack.
1 is guilt of failing to explain enough. the 2nd seems to be a fan favorite, especially the chain of dogs
Elijah Allen
The magical world tree
Matthew Martinez
its impossible to not like coltaine. The most critically underused character.
Brandon Edwards
The Eschaton Sequence. The number of things you can apparently convert to Catholicism is astounding.
Adrian Phillips
are there any scifi or fantasy books about a regular guy living a regular life, albeit in a harsh/strange world. maybe theres some big evil around, but the MC never really does anything against it and just provides social commentary on the actual heroes and shit that are fighting it
Joshua Myers
The Book Of Strange New Things by Michel Faber. A corporation colonises an exoplanet Avatar-style and makes contact with the natives, these weird nomadic desert aliens. The aliens learn about Jesus and become obsessed with him, especially with trying to work out why Jesus/God have visited humanity but left them behind. As part of the deal to get their sweet, sweet unobtanium the corporation brings a missionary to the world to teach them to be Christians, and the story is his account of mixing with and teaching the aliens while dealing with his separation from Earth.
You need to suspend your disbelief a little, because Faber isn't really a sci-fi writer and he skims over anything science-related that is too inconvenient to the story (like how all the aliens speak good English, or how the FTL system works.) Apart from that, it's a solid examination of faith and Christianity in a sci-fi setting.
Ryder Richardson
Endymion is awful
Isaiah Rogers
Some of the POVs in Wheel of Time are like this, but it's
Eli Young
Oof right in the childhood. I remember having some kind of picture book with illustrations and explanations of the various settings and monsters encountered in each book.
Robert Reed
Are there *any* good books with a dragon MC? And yes, I mean main character. Not sidekick, not mentor, not respectable villain, but actually the protagonist of the story whom plot events center around.
Brayden Campbell
I remember something on amazon with a dragon protag that had really good reviews. Probably some "YA" fantasy. If that doesn't bother you I could click around until it maybe pops up otherwise I won't waste my time
Alexander Cooper
I'd very much appreciate the effort, user. Just be sure it's not that series by E.E. Knight. That one was awful. Temeraire is pretty good but I wouldn't call the dragon in that one the "main" character.
I only remembered the cover art and I assume that the dragon humanoid thing is the MC. So I guess it's not really a dragon. oh well. Good luck finding a legit dragon MC. amazon.com/dp/B07MDHY6GC/ref=sspa_dk_detail_1?psc=1
Isaac Richardson
He’s a lizardman not a dragon but a decent enough series
Hudson Lewis
have you read it? is it good?
Luis Morris
>Christian Cameron >no mommy not the belt!
Hunter Mitchell
>Lasea groaned her last breath, and the mana orbs dropped from her like the shit from her arse Saved your career for you
Dominic Lopez
It’s decent. Lots of suffering fuel with a bit of cuckshit thrown in. It’s almost comedic how “and then the shitty humans try to betray the foreign lizard man” happens in almost every book. So Id say it’s predictable, but fun.
Adrian Allen
Haven't read Drizzt for comparison, only recently started reading some forgotten realms to take a break in between longer series. Seems like a bit of a crapshoot picking things out, I'm curious about what's good relative to each other among them too. Only read Daughter of the Drow and Elfshadow, and I like the drow one better out of those two, reading the 2nd one in that trilogy now.
Jack Clark
No, that whole trilogy is derivative tedium. It's like he wrote by throwing darts at a wall plastered with fantasy cliches and stitched a story out of them. The Last King of Osten Ard was pretty good though.
Joseph Green
Thanks George!
Camden Robinson
Monthly Reading user here, I'll be afk for a while and will miss one or possibly two threads.
Eli Russell
If I think of it, I'll repost the reading in the new threads until you get back.
Jaxon Torres
thanks. God bless
Tyler Martinez
I'm not anyone that you linked, but God bless you as well.
Juan James
God bless you too
Nolan Perry
What MEGA links? I don't remember this general ever having having any mega links in the op.
Parker Robinson
a few threads ago or so some user posted a mega folder with pretty much everything relevant to this general. im pretty sure he was refering to this foder: mega.nz/#F!51Q0waSI!4Ut-eePQr9YSjHJJTQs7Ew
Austin Young
Almost as much of a retard as the brainlets that actually pay for books whose authors are dead.
Alexander Ross
>good female authors >good black authors >bot folders are empty my sides
oh yeah, it was the 20,000 books user that posted it.
Mason Powell
Blue mage raised by dragons. And if you feel he isn't a dragon, tell that to his mother's face.
Parker Evans
It was never in the OP.
Jace Cox
There's a handful of good female authors and they're all dead (and no; LeGuin is NOT on that list). As for black authors the only one I can think of is Charles Saunders who created a Black Conan and wrote decent enough Sword & Sorcery in an African fantasy setting.
Dominic Morgan
Monthly reading download link updated with the book for May.
Cooper Perez
There was a MEGA with basically every book written by every golden age scifi/ fantasy author of note, it was fantastic. If it wasn't on this thread then I can't think where it could be.
Eli Rogers
This is decent tho. Thanks, man.
Jaxon Foster
What are you waiting for then faggit? Whining about it isn't going to bring it back, it's gone forever. Time for you to remake a similar mega folder. Google a list of all notable golden age sff writers, input their names into mobilism, libgen and b-ok, download all their works and upload them to a mega folder.
Grayson King
Lois McMaster Bujold and CS Friedman are both alive though.
Yeah, the little dude on the cover bones the big one
I know there was. But. It. Was. Never. In. The. OP. Don't reply to the OP like it was posted there regularly.
Liam Cruz
Check /t/ faggot. Then kys for not storing shit.
Carter Lewis
David Farland is partly responsible for the degradation of fantasy. He mentored Sanderson back in the day.
Anthony Jenkins
Thanks user!
Brody Rodriguez
Sort of. It looks fantastic throughout and starts off really well but the writing really falters as the series progresses. If you're the type that hates inconsistencies, plot holes and idiot plots you're going to be irritated.
Ryan Ward
I liked this one, but I was already a big fan of the animated film. Gordon Dickson is a decent writer regardless, so you're probably safe.
>suck it up and grab a download of Desolate Era for funsies >only one easily available is a full, complete anthology which is fine >read a few pages and see how long the entire thing is >112 hours >ONE HUNDRED AND TWELVE GODDAMN HOURS are you niggers fucking serious >that faggot who said xianxia doesn't have bloat
Wow i never heard of those before,thanks user,very cool!
Bentley Anderson
Dread Empire by Glen Cook
Kayden Barnes
I recently finished The Wandering Inn, 110 hours, every one was worth it. I don't know about you, but I love when a series I like has tons of reading material because I like to read
Jackson Young
Rhialto the Marvelous
Jordan Butler
Pretty much.
Found some Xuanhuan stories and they have homoerotic love stories. But they kind of rely on the leads being bullied by some system to act in character.
So it feels meta in some spots, but it does feel a little weird. One line involves making fun of a female side character for being the type to always get kidnapped or in peril.
Aaron Lewis
Is amazon published stuff usually a hidden gem or so shit that's it's pretty obvious why no one would publish it?
the vast majority of authors are selfpublished nowadays. its not the minority. sffg tends to discuss lesser known stuff or obscure weebshit like litrpgs or wuxia. quality really has no relation to a book being self published or not. it mostly comes down to the book being edited or not.
Ryan Jackson
So how good are the Malazan books actually?
I'm not sure if I want to get in bed with it's bajillion books if it's not worth it
Felicien Champsaur's Nora, The Ape-Woman (1929) is a sequel to both Homo-Deus and Ouha, King of the Apes. Nora is the story of two hybrids: a beautiful dancer sired by an orangutan and a human scientist, further humanized by surgery, and the son of a native woman and the part-human orangutan Ouha, King of the Apes. It is concerned with evolutionary history and the true nature of the simian and human species; it deals with the scientific modification of such species by means of surgery, thus enhancing the human condition, ultimately leading to the creation of supermen and the conquest of death. Despite various critical claims, Nora refuses to be racist and proudly claims that supposedly civilized white men are not superior to other races, or even species. It is a story of the triumph of animality, and argues that such triumph is not something of which we should be ashamed.
Xavier Robinson
They are better than WoT,but that's not saying much.
Jordan Powell
Daniel Black for Magical Engineering.
Austin Clark
Damn,Elric of Melnibone looks like THAT?!
Robert Walker
Elric is a skinny fucboi all hopped up on magic and drugs.
I think you are supposed to get caught up with the patterns on the floor and not respond.
Jason Diaz
I honesty want to know the answer to this? Do other people not notice the tile? I definitely do not have autism and my eye went straight to the belligerent tile. Are normal people so retarded as not to notice? I honestly do not know the answer to this.
Joseph Russell
Any good space opera that isn't trying to copy Star Wars plot?
Liam Collins
depends on the page size, typeface size, type color, and the type of content and how much i care about it
Angel Jenkins
We are being raided right now. Is it rebbit?
Daniel Jenkins
Probably some tranny. They are all over the site.
Christian Collins
great filter being ahead of us.
Leo Myers
literally nobody on reddit raids. It's exclusively a chan thing, like false-flagging and brap posting
Andrew Murphy
a fire upon the deep fits this bill.
Evan Bailey
The great filter has been occurring all along and is happening before our very eyes, mongrelization, dysgenic, high fertility amongst the lowest races with low fertility among the best
Landon Brown
the kindle calculates it and shows it at the bottom of the page.
Leo Williams
[Citation needed]
Alexander James
I don't really read books, I want something like Dark Souls, any recommendations? Thanks.
Angel Lewis
...
Justin Gonzalez
Ok retard
Jace Fisher
>this board >links to a different board
Nolan Cox
Bakker
Nathaniel Rivera
Vorkosigan Saga
Dylan Perry
It seems interesting. Where do I start?
Dominic Moore
Don't respond to /pol/tards
Lincoln Davis
Prince of Nothing
Christian Ramirez
Thanks!
Nolan Fisher
Favourite Sword and Sorcery novels? Are Conan stories the best of this subgenre?
The Cassandra Kresnov series by Joel Shepherd is about this android/replicant soldier who runs away to be a civilian, but eventually she ends up joining a police SWAT unit on the planet she flees to.
His other series, Spiral Wars, is more military focused but rather than straight milSF it's more of a adventure series about the crew of a space battleship mutinying and going on A Quest.
Read some of David Drake's stuff.
Colton Torres
Niggers
Angel Torres
Spiral Wars is so good holy shit When the fuck are we getting the next one
Owen Flores
The chain of events that lead to sapient intelligence are so rare that we're literally a freak occurrence. In the universe it probably happens a lot, but it's so rare that we'll never find another species like ourselves. We'll probably end up making them our of a sense of cosmic loneliness.
Gavin Thomas
>when you get conned by a coworker who recommends you a book Should've known not to listen to a woman recommending me anything about vampires.
Make sure to read the Silver Spike. It's not part of the original North trilogy, but it finishes it off.
Jeremiah Stewart
No. But I imagine his assistants will put one out real soon after he croaks.
Ian Barnes
It happened here, therefore it can happen elsewhere Dark forest problem, perhaps a superpredator civilization Maybe we're being intentionally shielded from transmissions or evidence as a science experiment Maybe we're a simulation
Jeremiah Powell
It plays big role in the Contact by Carl Sagan. Not central role, but in Rendezvous with Rama there is a character who is religious and his theories regarding Rama's purpose and existence are treated with same respect as scientific theories, I found that refreshing.
Brandon Wright
The beginning was decent at least. Either way that's what you get when you don't check if it's YA or not.
Matthew Powell
>It happened here, therefore it can happen elsewhere That's some decent folk-spun wisdom, but is it meaningful in relation to the topic at hand? It can happen elsewhere, but does it require such a random confluence of events to all occur in just the right sequence and at just the right moments that it won't happen again for a billion years, or it won't happen again in this galaxy? Maybe. Probably. It's certainly more likely than that tired old cliche of the Earth-exclusion zone.
Juan Moore
How come France was literally 90 years ahead of the USA when it comes to social justice?
Mason Hall
Would it be inadvisable to read this at the same time as BOTNS?
Henry Kelly
Advanced civilizations transcend the material dimension.
John Wilson
France has always been well ahead of everyone else when it comes to social justice. That's why they're such a dominant world power...
Oliver Scott
Book of the new sun, about the church in a far future
Ryder King
Lol retards with kindles
Ryder Jones
The universe is a big place. Earth is smaller than a pinhead when you take the entire universe into context. There are other intelligent species out there. Remember not too long ago it was believed that the earth is flat, and that the sun orbit the earth.
Take earth as an example. We as humans didn't know natives existed, and natives didn't know the white devil existed either. They didn't know each other existed, they were separated by a few leagues of oceans and isolated from each other. This was on earth, what happens when you take this to a planetary / galaxy scale?
The only people I see argue that there is no other life, and human are alone, are ignorant bible thumpers who want to feel special.
Impressive. I've honestly never seen a more disgusting collection of books. Could have saved yourself a lot of money if you instead just shat in your hand and started eating said shit though, you didn't have to go and waste all that money on paperbacks to achieve the same goal.
Connor Brooks
>read masters of Rome >its actually good Based shill I'll try Maas' stuff next.
Camden Clark
Haven't seen the Maas fag in a while, hopefully he got banned again and it was a perma this time.
Alexander Morales
To be fair these days anything labelled fantasy has a 50/50 chance of basically being YA-tier
Tyler Jackson
I’m trying to come up with an idea for an invading force as a big antagonist Something like the Orcs from WoW, or the Kaiju from Pacific Rim.
My initial thoughts were large beasts that start showing up out of nowhere, and seem to be highly intelligent/coordinated. Then later they’re revealed to be just the scouts for someone.
However it’s hard for me to justify how legions of soldiers (mid fantasy) would have trouble taking down a bunch of animals, and then guys controlling animals.
Anyone have thoughts? I’m open to all suggestions on types of invaders
Jonathan Taylor
Don't see what's hard to justify, a bunch of animals are much stronger than humans, being coordinated eliminates their biggest weakness. Something like an army of tigers with scaly hides would be terrifying, have you seen the muscles on those things? Look at zerg or tyranids or something, and the humans have high tech weaponry in those, if anything you'd need to justify how humans armed with scrap don't get slaughtered by many times stronger beasts.
Easton Kelly
lol you know both of the posts you quoted mention the possibility of other life but just presume we won’t come into contact with it, right? lot of words just to agree with each other.
Thoughts on this? Looking for a new fantasy trilogy to read and i'm trying to decide between, pic related, Bakkers Prince of Nothing, Elizabeth Moons Deeds of Park, and Anne Bishops Black Jewels.
>Thomas Covenant Hard pass, I say either Bakker or Deeds of Park
Black Jewels is kind of a meme, but I’d save it for after those two.
Jose Powell
I'll probably drop Rage of Dragons. I also need to throw Coiling Dragon in there somewhere. Battle Mage is slow but alright enough so far. Shit is happening but not happening enough in Darkest Revenge. Help.
Battle Mage picks up around halfway through, if you want to stick around for it.
Dylan Phillips
Thomas Covenant is pretty based
Luke Cook
>Afro fantasy what
I'm ~20% through, they've left the town, Falco is healing from the forced fuming from Malaki, and those other soldiers found the message tube from the dead messenger.
Joshua Brown
What did you like about it?
What did you dislike about it?
Benjamin Russell
Covenant is a depressed piece of shit and the trilogy is how he becomes a real human bean again. Omg He's literally me!
Adrian Butler
You forgot the rape.
Jayden Gutierrez
GRI APPROVED
Brayden Mitchell
How often do fantasy novels have a bad ending for the main charater(s?) Any way to find obscure novels that end bitter or bittersweet?
Julian Taylor
Guess i'll pass for now, i'll probably get Bakkers.
What's meme about Black Jewels?
Carter Powell
New Thread
Eli Thompson
In Elric of Melnibone everyone fucking dies
Benjamin King
The second Thomas Covenant series doesn't exactly end on a good note for the MC. That one hurt.
Lincoln Anderson
Get Black Jewels Trilogy.
Blake Turner
Lots of little loli rape
Carter Turner
>Rwandan Genocide >Still colonizing in 1950 yeah lol sure man
Luis Jackson
look into the dredge from banners saga. the first game is almost as well written as a novel, and as a preliminary antagonist they are GREAT
Elijah Flores
the power metal of fantasy subgenres
Hunter Butler
Which of Heinlein's books are most similar to starship troopers **aside from starship troopers**?