Approved Literature

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Revision as of 00:07, 6 May 2013 by 1d4chan>L41n (Fantasy)
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/tg/ Approved Literature

We're imaginative folks here on /tg/, and there's a lot of tuff which insites this.

Fantasy

  • J.R.R. Tolkien - The Hobbit, The Lord of the Rings, and anything else he wrote: The great grand-daddy of modern fantasy. at Not having even the slightest familiarity with his work is inexcusable
  • Michael Moorcock - the Elric Saga - The spiritual liege of Drizzt Do Urden, with all of the Mary Sue replaced with badassery. Elric, the High Lord of Chaos, travels reality with a shadow puma and a soul-eating demon sword learning the true nature of Chaos.
  • Robert E. Howard - Conan the Barbarian: Conan the Barbarian was born from his quill. Also a seminal classic
  • George R. R. Martin - A Song of Ice and Fire: Best character development in genre, with a bit of mystery, political chess and realistically high death rate.
  • Terry Pratchett - Discworld series: Starts from parodying Fantasy as genre, finishes far beyond AWESOME. Rare combination of good humor and wise messages.

Science Fiction

  • Edgar Rice Burroughs - A Princess of Mars: Iconic, manly, and fuckin' A!
  • Frank Herbert - Dune & its sequels: World-building, politic, super-humans - it's one helluva party. The spice must flow!
  • Robert A. Heinlein - Starship Troopers: Where Space Marines and Tyranids came from.
  • Harlan Ellison - I Have No Mouth, and I Must Scream: The most creepy in this book is that author thought it is optimistic. If he some day want to wrote something pessimistic, universe would implode from grimdark overdose.
  • George Orwell - 1984: WAR IS PEACE, FREEDOM IS SLAVERY, IGNORANCE IS STRENGTH!
  • A Canticle for Leibowitz In the grim darkness of the far future there is only Catholicism. Think Fallout meets Farenheit 451 and you wouldn't be too far off.

Horror

  • H.P. Lovecraft - The Call of Cthulu & Other Stories, Dreams in the Witch-House, At the Mountains of Madness, and anything else he wrote - Lovecraft is to modern horror what Tolkein was to fantasy.


Mystery

  • Raymond Chandler - The Big Sleep: The grandfather of Noir.