[Boards: 3 / a / aco / adv / an / asp / b / bant / biz / c / can / cgl / ck / cm / co / cock / d / diy / e / fa / fap / fit / fitlit / g / gd / gif / h / hc / his / hm / hr / i / ic / int / jp / k / lgbt / lit / m / mlp / mlpol / mo / mtv / mu / n / news / o / out / outsoc / p / po / pol / qa / qst / r / r9k / s / s4s / sci / soc / sp / spa / t / tg / toy / trash / trv / tv / u / v / vg / vint / vip / vp / vr / w / wg / wsg / wsr / x / y ] [Search | Free Show | Home]

/tg/ literature

This is a blue board which means that it's for everybody (Safe For Work content only). If you see any adult content, please report it.

Thread replies: 136
Thread images: 47

File: book of ages.jpg (316KB, 781x558px) Image search: [Google]
book of ages.jpg
316KB, 781x558px
What does /tg/ read?

I finished a fuckload of space science fiction lately and I've been looking for something with dragons and shit.
>>
>>53965651
Wheel of Time. It'll last you a while.
>>
>>53965651
Tolkien is always a good choice, as is anything by Zelazny. I'm a big fan of the Thomas Covenant books, but they're not to everyone's taste.
>>
>>53965651
I'm a fan of glen cook my dude
The black company is good but it's a low fantasy style book, if you like myth the fallen lords, this was the inspiration for it.
>>
File: gods demons book.gif (77KB, 329x500px) Image search: [Google]
gods demons book.gif
77KB, 329x500px
For anyone who's curious, the extremely rare genre Demon-Lit can easily point to this book as "literally the best possible example that this genre has to offer".
>>
File: thumbs up.jpg (31KB, 638x425px) Image search: [Google]
thumbs up.jpg
31KB, 638x425px
If you can do Weird Fiction, KJ Bishop's 'The Etched City' is great. For Magic Academy, try Red Sister by Mark Lawrence. Fair warning, it's a lot less gritty than the Jorg Ancrath stuff.

Failing that, Johnathan Strange and Mr Norrell by Suzanne Clark or the Prince of Nothing books.
>>
>>53965651
About /tg/ related stuff I read The Once and Future King last month, would recommend. The Sword in the Stone reads almost like a children's book (it's the source material for that Disney movie, although they cut a lot of the book's charm like its detailed depiction of medieval life and at least one scene that becomes a HUGE plot point in the rest of the series) but it steadily grows better with each book.
>>
"Night Watch" - Sergei Lukyanenko. It's about the most russian thing I can imagine, but a solid read.
>>
Gardens of The Moon. Still storming through the Malazan series but so far there's not been anything bad.
>>
>>53965651
The Worm Ouroboros by ER Eddison.
>>
File: ash.jpg (282KB, 308x475px) Image search: [Google]
ash.jpg
282KB, 308x475px
>>53965651
Read Mary Gentle's 'Ash' recently, that was very good.
>>
>>53966839
Good lord was that first book hard to get through with out googling everything.


I managed not looking anything up until the fifth book or so.
>>
>>53967519
Gardens of the Moon is a long running campaign where the players are all mates, there's a bit of liquor involved and the GM has been winging it on the rules from day 1 and operating on rule of cool. Nobody cares, everyone's having fun and the slow power creep kicks in so subtly that nobody notices. And about six months in, everyone, GM included, realises that nobody has any idea what's going on and is afraid to ask.

God I love it. I'm convinced that's what the game that inspired it actually looked like and the authors just ran with it.
>>
>>53967591
Er, the entire malazan series, not just Gardens.
>>
>>53965701
>Thomas Covenant
You and I are niggas now.
>>
I read choose your own adventure novels and fantasy as inspiration for my youtube project.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wMOPI-Cz4c0
>>
>all this manure

These are the same people that will claim Tolkien is a hack and that GRRM is a shit writer.
>>
Bartimaus. AU where magicians summon spirits to proform magic and the most sarcastic demon in existence is brought in to do shit
>>
File: TFS-Fugitive.jpg (563KB, 1951x1351px) Image search: [Google]
TFS-Fugitive.jpg
563KB, 1951x1351px
I read moderate quality self published science fiction.
>>
Discworld.

My advice is to either start with Guards! Guards! or with Wyrd Sisters.
>>
>>53970526
GRRM is a shitty writer. He's also a fat, lazy, and a sell out.
>>
>>53970526
GRRM is a shit writer.
His plot was good until he got himself stuck, though.
>>
>>53970526
Tolkien is a rather bad writer (not an awful one though) but he's not a hack because people like him because of his worlbuilding and he was at least good at that.
>>
File: 1463454681165.png (36KB, 139x128px) Image search: [Google]
1463454681165.png
36KB, 139x128px
>>53965651
fan fiction
>>
>>53965651
-The Council Wars by John Ringo is pretty good, I especially like most of his posleen stuff.
-The Belgeriad by David and Leigh Eddings
-Anything by David Gemmell, with my favourite being Ravenheart.
-Darkness / Darlavai series by Harry Turtledove is also pretty interesting.
>>
>>53965651
Read the stormlight archive by Brandon Sanderson!
>>
>>53971505
When you really think about it, every story is really just fan fiction based on something else.
>>
I like to read epics mostly. I've just started to get into the King Arthur mythos from the Middle Ages. There's a gold mine of stuff in old literature for your /tg/ needs
>>
>>53965860
The only thing that's kept me from picking up World of Slavness was that it's apparently written in first person.
>>
File: DragonHunter.png (2MB, 1496x3802px) Image search: [Google]
DragonHunter.png
2MB, 1496x3802px
>>53965651
>looking for something with dragons and shit.
Why read published authors when you can just stay on /tg/?

You can find anything on /tg/. Anything.
>>
>>53971485
>Interlaces up to 5 separate plotlines, not actually keeping any of them chronologically sorted in the main narrative, but still manages to keep them all straight and even drop hints from one to the other as to what's going on, like how Denethor looks into the Palantir right after Frodo gets captured and that's what fuels his despair.
>Manages to create sub-poems within his own fictional universe which hold to alliteration and meter rules in the fictional languages he created for them.
>Creates an extremely dynamic theory of evil that is simultaneously and ambiguously both Boeotian and Manichean
>Creates instantly identifiable speaking patterns based on age by interweaving not only archaisms in word use, but actual archaisms in grammar, so that the older a speaker is, the more like to Anglo-Saxon English they speak.
>Bad writer.

I'm pretty sure you're just missing the actually clever points and figuring it as an adventure story and focused on how kewl it was that Legolas and Gimli killed lots of orcs at the Hornburg.
>>
File: DragonLifespan.png (2MB, 1474x2480px) Image search: [Google]
DragonLifespan.png
2MB, 1474x2480px
>>53972158
and also: https://1d4chan.org/images/f/f3/DragonLove.png
>>
File: Draconin.png (1MB, 1317x2160px) Image search: [Google]
Draconin.png
1MB, 1317x2160px
>>53972188
>>
>>53965651
I like the black company novels
>>
File: DragonChild.png (3MB, 1576x1671px) Image search: [Google]
DragonChild.png
3MB, 1576x1671px
>>53972209
>>
>>53972247
https://1d4chan.org/images/4/49/SheepDragon.png
>>
File: ShenronTheWishDragon.png (561KB, 950x1912px) Image search: [Google]
ShenronTheWishDragon.png
561KB, 950x1912px
>>53972277
>>
File: wild magic.jpg (121KB, 318x452px) Image search: [Google]
wild magic.jpg
121KB, 318x452px
This is probably a good thread to ask this in: what's /tg/'s thoughts on Tamora Pierce's fiction, and the setting her books take place in?
>>
File: Wizard'sQuest.png (3MB, 1679x1956px) Image search: [Google]
Wizard'sQuest.png
3MB, 1679x1956px
>>53972313
>>
>>53965651
I'm reading the latest Skullduggery Pleasant book at the moment, and going through the laborous process of making a full blown audiobook out of an old Shadowrun novel.
>>
>>53972362
A Skullduggery Pleasant RPG is one of my biggest desires in life.
>>
File: 0575077867.02.LZZZZZZZ.jpg (42KB, 299x500px) Image search: [Google]
0575077867.02.LZZZZZZZ.jpg
42KB, 299x500px
Started this recently. I'm still at the beginning, but it's been good so far.
>>
>>53972717
Honestly, use FATE. I tried using the Dresden system, but the styles of Magic are inherently different. FATE Core really captures the one-trick pony style of characters like Billy Ray, but it's flexible enough for Elementals and Adepts.

The setting and flavour doesn't lend itself to a lot of crunch.
>>
File: giant Tess with friend.png (292KB, 373x666px) Image search: [Google]
giant Tess with friend.png
292KB, 373x666px
>>53972158
>Anything

I want the adventures of some giantess and her human friend in a way that's organic and natural like what this picture shows- companionship and love.
>>
>>53965651
I'm currently in an exhaustive survey of the epic poems and mythological literature of human history. I also suffer from adhd AMA
>>
>>53976437
Or you could just recommend some books, you pompous twat.
>>
>>53973013
Nicomo Cosca is my spirit animal.

Make sure you read all the other books and stories he set in that universe too.
>>
>>53976631
>'Question: what does tg read?'
>Answer? Answer
>'pompous twat'

K

Enuma Elish was a lot of fun, would highly recommend.
Asshole
>>
>>53972112
It is. It's also filled with a lot of cultural artefacts and turns of phrase that make no sense to me, but presumably do to a native russian speaker. As the books go on things start getting *weird*.
>>
>>53973013
That book is amazing. Never have I wanted to murder a character in a book in my life more than reading this book. You'll know who I mean at the end.
>>
Just started 1001 Nights. 30 pages down; 2500+ pages to go.
>>
File: 2012-NOV-Vathek-cover3-179x300.jpg (34KB, 179x300px) Image search: [Google]
2012-NOV-Vathek-cover3-179x300.jpg
34KB, 179x300px
>>53965651
Vathek was a wild ride, I think most people here would enjoy it if they don't mind older books.
>>
File: uk-orig-the-heroes.jpg (203KB, 426x650px) Image search: [Google]
uk-orig-the-heroes.jpg
203KB, 426x650px
>>53965651
>>
>>53972188
I'd have enjoyed an ending where it's made clear that the whole thing was just Cannaryth remembering this dialogue long after it happened.
Still a neat read, though.
>>
>>53965701
Thomas covenant was a weird read.

The only thing that kept me turning was a morbid curiosity of what was next. I didn't like Thomas, just because of all of the opportunities he fucks up or isn't able to take advantage of. Much like myself.

My name is even Thomas. Fuck.
>>
>>53970874
>>53971223
>>53971485

Your next line is going to be: "I really liked The Wheel of Time."
>>
>>53981633
Is it worth finishing? I saw the first part that Sanderson wrote and couldn't bring myself to read it. Lacks any of the subtlety that Jordan wrote with, which is saying something. And the prose is barely serviceable.
>>
>>53977447
If you mean Bayaz, I'd easily say one of the best villains of all time.
>>
>>53965791
Mark Lawrence's Red Queen series is also good
>>
>>53972342
Circle of Magic got me to create my own fantasy worlds and characters, so I have a soft spot for Pierce even though I doubt the quality of her books holds up at this point.
>>
>>53965651

Just finished The Witcher Saga, was pretty great.
>>
File: IMG_20170622_244952702.jpg (2MB, 1440x2560px) Image search: [Google]
IMG_20170622_244952702.jpg
2MB, 1440x2560px
>>
File: hammersslammers2.jpg (192KB, 710x1024px) Image search: [Google]
hammersslammers2.jpg
192KB, 710x1024px
>>53965651
Finished the Hammer's Slammers series recently.

Fun read if you're into Vietnam + hovertanks + energy weapons.

David Drake was a vet of the Vietnam war, so his expertise comes through pretty often in his writing (also some of his short stories are literally just recounted experiences of buddies that he repainted) and he does a good job of portraying his soldiers and just how shit a battlefield can really be.

He had a pretty believable idea of what future warfare might look like, though I don't think he sees the robotic revolution coming as hard as the futurists want it to. A.I. is incorporated into a bunch of stuff but doesn't override the human pilot, central command has access to and can remotely pilot armored vehicles if they need to do something important (like using a tank's main cannon to shoot down enemy satellites or aircraft). Does a decent job of justifying the Vietnam-like combat because anyone with a deep enough pocket can pluck satellites and aircraft out of the air like they're fucking tulips, limiting the guys on the ground to the sensor suites of their local armored company or command car.

Fair warning, the series was a bunch of short stories before they became proper books. Their serialized nature means Drake repeats himself on a lot of points in each story, like how the powerguns work, or certain details about the hovertanks. Pretty minor thing but I figured I'd mention it.
>>
Finished Promise of Blood. amazing book. very shit ending.
>>
>>53981650
Not him, but I finished out of loyalty. The second of the three Sanderson WoTs is readable, the other two were pretty weak.
>>
File: RosaAndTheGiant.png (2MB, 2108x1068px) Image search: [Google]
RosaAndTheGiant.png
2MB, 2108x1068px
>>53973912
sorry, I only have giant, not giantess
>>
>>53976437
what books would you recommend ?
>>
>>53965701
I've attempted to finish lord of the rings multiple times but never made it through the trilogy.

It's just so badly and aimlessly written with twenty page tangents on the shapes of rocks and streams. Reminds me of one of those that guy campaigns where he puts all this pointless detail in when you just want to kill goblins for loot.

Reminds me that lore creators have no place writing fiction
>>
File: ClWxkDQWMAAtJGZ.jpg (102KB, 1200x1200px) Image search: [Google]
ClWxkDQWMAAtJGZ.jpg
102KB, 1200x1200px
>>53985006
>this is what modern youths unironically believe
>>
File: pregaming prince.jpg (154KB, 500x397px) Image search: [Google]
pregaming prince.jpg
154KB, 500x397px
>>53985030
>What is bait
>>
>>53965651
Bernard Cornwell's Saxon Tales are the shit if you like historical fiction. Steer clear of the Last Kingdom series, though, it's ass.
>>
>>53970288

This is pretty cool. Thanks anon
>>
File: Ouroboros1.jpg (594KB, 1356x1722px) Image search: [Google]
Ouroboros1.jpg
594KB, 1356x1722px
>>53966876
Patrician.
>>
File: 1473612406534.png (358KB, 535x403px) Image search: [Google]
1473612406534.png
358KB, 535x403px
Some little more advanced, non-genre fiction I can recommend for getting inspiration.

The absolute apex of fantastic/magical writing of all time. Very advanced, not easy to read, but insanely clever and imaginative:
>Jorge Luis Borges: Ficciones/Labyrinths (two different translations of his collected works).
You can actually find them all on-line:
https://posthegemony.files.wordpress.com/2013/02/borges_collected-fictions.pdf
OR
https://wizchan.org/hob/src/1449201237263-0.pdf
You can check which translation you like the more! (I would recommend skipping the Universal History of Iniquity though.
Tlon, Uqbar, Orbis Tertius is probably the best story about world-building ever written (also a genius insight into philosophy of language, semiotics, and criticism of 20th century totalitarian regimes).
Stuff like Garden of Forking Paths, Library of Babylon, Circular Ruins, The Immortal, The Zahir, Funes The Memorious etc.. are just amazing exercises in imagination, and shit like The House of Asterion is an interesting take on traditional mythological tales.
Again, it's not an easy read though. If you find something particularly difficult to swallow, just skip to the next story, perhaps revisit later if you feel like it.

I can also strongly recommend:
>Mikhail Bulgakov's "Master and Margarita"
(for more contemporary "urban fantasy")
>Milorad Pavić "Chazarian Dictionary"
also for world-building and some serious mind-bending (its also the closest that non-genre fiction ever gotten to game-book concept)
>Italo Calvino's "Invisible Cities"
for some amazing, surreal and imaginative spaces, landscapes and general visions
>John Fowles's "Magus"
For some pretty interesting conspiration-style play (basically, it's a book about a guy finding himself being manipulated into a sort of psychotic larp - also it contains the best literally sex-scenes ever written)
>Franz Kafka in general
namely his shorter works, Contemplations and Country Doctor Collections are my favorite.
>>
File: Bondrewd, the good papa.jpg (48KB, 459x640px) Image search: [Google]
Bondrewd, the good papa.jpg
48KB, 459x640px
>>53981659
Bayaz isn't bad, but I seen way better.
>>
>>53965651
Read the Noble Dead Series, it was interesting. Not sure if I'd read it again, but it gave me some ideas for future campaign NPCs.
>>53972342
Great stories if you want to learn how to establish your own worlds. The World Building in that series was excellent.
>>
>>53986545
>literally sex-scenes
"And then she sucked his dick. Literally. It's not a metaphor or anything, she actually really did put his penis in her mouth, applied a gentle sucking pressure, rubbed the underside of the head back and forth with her tongue and bobbed her head up and down. She also stroked his shaft with her hand so you could say that it was as much a handjob as a blowjob (note: no actual literal "blowing" occurred at this point), but what she was doing with her mouth commanded more of his attention. When he was much younger he had preferred to receive oral 'no-hands', but later came to appreciate how much more intense the combined experience could be. He reflected on this only briefly, because he could feel his orgasm approaching, and he sincerely hoped that she did not stop or try to change her stroke at the wrong time."
>>
File: vasilisa.jpg (336KB, 1072x1354px) Image search: [Google]
vasilisa.jpg
336KB, 1072x1354px
>>53986737
OK, I got to say, I laughed, and you got me. Point for you.
That said, the reason why the sex scenes in Fowles are so damn great is precisely because they are quite literal, with very little metaphors or analogies. They are just extremely well written. In general the book is surprisingly good at exploiting male urges, even when it comes to romance.

Other authors I've also thought of that might be worth checking in for /tg/ folk if they are not like >>53985006 and can handle actual literature:

>Bruno Schulz: Senatorium Under the Sign of Hourglass and Crocodile Street
These are kinda Kafka-esque but a lot more surreal and magical, and again have an amazing ability to instill a sense of wonder and uneasiness into mundane scenarios.
>Michal Ajvaz (recently translated into English), Golden Age and The Other City
Also from the family of Magical Realism. Golden City takes ages to get going, but once you reach the second half, it actually has some AMAZING fantastic ideas of crazy, strange and improvized stories that I think anyone who ever mastered a game session will find extremely amusing and inspirative. Seriously: it's worth perserving, even if the book starts slow and explicitly declares to the reader that "this book is going to be boring and nothing is going to happen in it". It lies, just wait till the second half.
>Ray Bradbury (particularly his stories between 1955-1970's)
Ray Bradbury is seriously underrated as an author. In his better stories, he goes way out of the realm of genre fiction.

Also, just a quick list of other, more notorious authors worth checking out:
>Nathaniel Hawthorne
>Edgar Alan Poe
>Sinclair Lewis
>C.K. Chesteron
>Karel Čapek (his "War with the Newts" and "Krakatit" are particularly interesting)
>Emanuel Swedenborg


Finally, I always found classic collections of mythology and folkore great. Thousand and One Nights (unabridged and uncensored) is an amazing work. I also liked Afanasyev's Russian Fairytales.
>>
File: DC3nK34UwAUah3r.jpg (59KB, 331x500px) Image search: [Google]
DC3nK34UwAUah3r.jpg
59KB, 331x500px
>Set out to write a cliche fantasy adventure because it's easy
>No deep love for the genre, no preconceived notions. Advice for fantasy writers is to completely avoid fantasy
>Write one of the best fantasy coming of age stories of all time

Why aren't you as good as David Eddings /tg/?
>>
>>53982111
>Just finished The Witcher Saga, was pretty great.
You liked it?
I mean: I grew up with the books and have a ton of good memories with them, but looking back at them... they aren't all that damn great. I'd even go as far as to claim that the games are actually better: as stories and writing goes. Which is pretty harsh.

They are... harmless and entertaining at times, especially if you get to read them in original or one of the good translations, but they can also be incredibly tedious and the characters (especially the female ones, and the saga's Geralt - in short stories he is quite fun, but in the saga is he just dreadfully boring from the second book on) made me want to punch someone, namely the author.

Towards the end it also veers off into the insane territory quite hard.
>>
>>53987118
>No deep love for the genre, no preconceived notions. Advice for fantasy writers is to completely avoid fantasy
Honestly, I think that is really the ONLY way to write good literature that is also fantasy. God knows I think the genre has an incredible potential, but it's incredibly bogged down by shit.
>>
File: CormacMcCarthy_BloodMeridian.jpg (30KB, 229x350px) Image search: [Google]
CormacMcCarthy_BloodMeridian.jpg
30KB, 229x350px
>>
>>53987161

I think you can write good genre fiction while still reading it, but you have to be VERY aware that any idea you have, you may have stolen
>>
>>53987118
After nearly 15 years after having read the book, I still remember half the cast, they were that good.
Polgara, Belgarath, garion, Seda (Silk or velvet in english perhaps?), Durnik, the knight, berserk , the lord of horses... Ce'Nedra can die tough.
Polgara must be the closest think to a waifu than I had.
>>
>>53987286
Silk in English, But in the Malloreon there's a woman called Velvet.

Sir Mandorallan, Barak, Hektor. Fucking love them all

Ce'Nedra is best girl, she basically got me to like tsunderes before I knew what tsunderes were. Velvet and Taiba are also pretty great
>>
File: yokohama-kaidashi-kikou-ykk-20.jpg (399KB, 767x1100px) Image search: [Google]
yokohama-kaidashi-kikou-ykk-20.jpg
399KB, 767x1100px
>>53987225
>, but you have to be VERY aware that any idea you have, you may have stolen
Honestly, it's not the theft of ideas itself that bothers me. At all. I'm a subscriber to the Borgesian school of thought that basically suggests that there is no such thing as originality, and that is fine.

My problem is not the lack of originality, but the lack of meanings. Hell, fantasy is rooted in mytholog/folklore, and those are rooted in archetypes. And the continuity of archetypes is in fact one of the things I believe can fantasy make so damn strong.
The problem is that most fantasy authors copy these archetypes without any thought of their purpose of function: they do it because they are genre staple, not because they actually want to use them to communicate an archetypal concept.

And ironically it gets even worse when they try to liven them up by altering it, because all they do is just render the original archetype even more meaning less.

So stealing: that is fine with me. I don't demand originality (though I would like to see a broader set of inspirations, medieval Europe and Scandinavian mythology ARE getting a little worn out in particular).
It's just that most fantasy writers rely extremely heavily on what were originally archetypal, symbolic concepts (monsters and dragons, elves and fays, spells and curses, gods and hero's) without ever bothering to think what these bloody fucking things are supposed to represent. Like what the fuck did make the dragons and elves in Tolkien so great? Because it was not their ability to spew fire or those fucking pointy ears.

Most fantasy authors don't seem to understand this and that is what is bothering me.
>>
>>53987353
Those books were such a delight. The world couldn't be more of a cliche, full of badly tought points like how massive the tiemline is and how few things happen. The plot without that many twists and mostly predictable. But the characters man. It flowed. The way they interacted with each other was nearly magic, you got caught and entranced. And at first they were mostly caricatures or paragons about they countries (not-northman the berserk, not-cossack the horse rider, the not-france knight), but how they growed in you. Garion best boy too.
>>
y'all niggers need to get yourselves some Robert E. Howard
>>
>>53987486
>Howard.
>Not Clarck Ashton Smith.
Howard had Conan, Lovy his mythos.
But Clark is best boy.
>>
>>53987513
shit taste detected

CAS is ok, has some good stuff, but Literature begins and ends with Howard: Howard Philips Lovecraft and Robert Ervin Howard.
>>
Where are my vernor vinge boys at. If you don't think a fire upon the deep is one of the the best "an ancient evil awakens" story's out there, you can get the fuck outa my face
>>
I have 170 or so books and less than two dozen are non-fiction. Some of my favorite authors.
High fantasy
>Wheel of Time
>Brandon Sanderson
>Discworld
>Tolkien
>Song of Fire & Ice
>Narnia and other old series (not my favorite but they fill a bit of space)
> Jim Butcher - Dresden Files/Codex Alera/ his new series
Future fantasy
>Dune
>Asimov
>40k stuff
>various other things like Ender's Game
>>
bump?
>>
Has anyone combined robots and high fantasy stuff?
I don't mean steam robots I mean like circuits and shit.
>>
>>53966876
You sir are my nigga
>>
>>53987354
Oh man, this is a huge issue for me in so much modern fiction.
>>
I want something comfy with romance set in a fantasy world. My edgelord days are long behind me, now I just want "I'm a single dwarven dad doing my best to raise my adopted half elf daughter while hopelessly flirting with the widowed baker down the way"

There is a fair bit of that in manga, but I don't know of any books.
>>
File: OrconomicsCover-lg.jpg (237KB, 1385x2078px) Image search: [Google]
OrconomicsCover-lg.jpg
237KB, 1385x2078px
>>53965651
Orconomics: A Satire (The Dark Profit Saga Book 1) is my recommendation.

It is a comedic high-fantasy novel (with more than a few touching moments including what an elven lifespan has done to some of their psyche) that sees a disgraced dwarven berserker trying to repair his tarnished reputation alongside a few other washed-up/flawed heroes including a thief-turned-bard, a pair of philosophically (and elementally) opposed mages, and a has-been ranger.

Overall the book provides not only a fairly well fleshed-out world but also an interesting look at how an adventure based economy would work.
>>
File: hmm coffee.jpg (47KB, 662x635px) Image search: [Google]
hmm coffee.jpg
47KB, 662x635px
>>53973912
So in the writing of "giantess slowly falls for an adventurer in the same manner presented as in this picture" what exactly does /tg/ look for? Like, how does this work. (All the precedents on 4chan just have vore and foot shit and nothing else and that's just fucking the worst thing ever.)

How do they...DO.
>>
>>53993463
Magically induced synchronized dream states. They meet in the dream land and get all the naughty stuff taken care of while they can be the same size.
>>
>>53993521
Isn't that just defeating the purpose though?

If we're doing dream states I could just literally set it up so it's a "fill in the blank" deal and at that point you could switch out "giant" with literally anything. A dragon, a table, March 5th of 2019, and so on.
>>
I read old Battletech epubs.

I don't read often. Maybe when I'm on the train or have some time to kill, but there's tons of Battletech novels and MWDA novels I've yet to read.

So I'm booked up for a long while. There's always something else I should be doing, or something else I want to be doing. Reading happens, just not frequently.
>>
>>53965651
The Laundry Files.
>>
The Earthsea books by Le Guin are slower and more thoughtful in nature, but they're fantastic books.

Been making my way through the Abhorsen books by Garth Nix, and they're pretty fun as well.

And you can't go wrong with the early Conan stuff by Howard. Dude had a wonderful way with words, and they're not the dumb brute stories one might expect.
>>
>>53982629
>David Drake
Also Northworld by him is great.
Some of his non Hammers Slamers short fiction is way out there. He wrote a story where a soldier's buddy turns into a werewolf and starts slaughtering people on both sides untill he's cut in half by a NVA DShK machine gun. Soldier the goes home and kills his buddies entire werewolf family by knocking on their front door and tossing in a white phosphorus grenade when they answer.
>>
Anyone have the new Perturabo ebook they can share?
>>
>>53965651
Name of the wind by Patrick Rothfuss.
>>
>read

Bitch I write

Dungeon Meshi and Vinland Saga
>>
>>53994227
The point is a heartwarming tale of a strange pair making their way in the world, not your macro/micro fetish.
>>
File: warbreaker.jpg (244KB, 938x1412px) Image search: [Google]
warbreaker.jpg
244KB, 938x1412px
Just finished the first 2 books of the Stormlight Archive series, gonna be reading Warbreaker next and them Mistborn Era 2 aka Alloy of Law.
>>
>>53996738
Anon this is /tg/. Come on now.
We want stories with BOTH.
>>
>>53965651
You want dragons and you like sci-fi? Anne McCaffrey's Pern is a good read. I mean, sure, there's some uncomfortable implications here and there, but it's a product of its time to an extent.

I've also been reading Peter F. Hamilton. Pandora's Star/Judas Unchained is a solid space opera story, though they are doorstoppers.
>>
>>53994366
> kills his buddies entire werewolf family by knocking on their front door and tossing in a white phosphorus grenade when they answer.

Yeah, that sounds about right for Drake. I wasn't aware he did much outside of the Slammers, I'll have to check out his other stuff.
>>
File: BF.jpg (25KB, 321x499px) Image search: [Google]
BF.jpg
25KB, 321x499px
>>53965651
/thread
>>
File: grunts.gif (22KB, 173x290px) Image search: [Google]
grunts.gif
22KB, 173x290px
It's been a while since i read this, but i remember enjoying it
>>
>>53996857
Warbreaker is great. It has a very cool and unique system of magic. As far as the ones I've read, Sanderson always devises fun and unique magic.
>>
>>53965651
Ursula K LeGuin is my favorite author. both Earthsea and Hainish are great
>>
Fafhrd and the Grey Mouser books. I believe Sword against Deviltry is the first book. Also Conan of course.
>>
File: 688300._UY500_SS500_.jpg (41KB, 500x500px) Image search: [Google]
688300._UY500_SS500_.jpg
41KB, 500x500px
Huge cooks chronicle of an age of darkness is still my favourite read, still finding it impossible to hunt down book 9 and 10, honestly I'm surprised I hardly ever see any one talking about it
>>
File: 1738.jpg (109KB, 1738x1738px) Image search: [Google]
1738.jpg
109KB, 1738x1738px
>>53973013
5 star post
>>
>>53998932
Anything out there about "Henchmen", I love the casual "super villain workplace" genre.
For example I present "Villains Rule" by MK Gibson.
>>
>>53999549
This dude is one letter off from having a disaster of a name.
>>
I love me some Dianna Wynne Jones. But she probably isn't dark and mature enough for /tg/.
>>
>>53972158
Don't get tempted by Eragon. You'll regret it.
>>
>>53986545
>>53987074

I would add Antoine Volodine's Minor Angels to this list. From the amazon page:

"In Minor Angels Volodine depicts a postcataclysmic world in which the forces of capitalism have begun to reestablish themselves. Sharply opposed to such a trend, a group of crones confined to a nursing home―all of them apparently immortal―resolves to create an avenging grandson fashioned of lint and rags. Though conjured to crush the rebirth of capitalism, the grandson is instead seduced by its charms―only to fall back into the hands of his creators, where he manages to forestall his punishment by reciting one “narract” a day. It is these narracts, or prose poems, that compose the text of Minor Angels."

+ The Hypnerotomachia Poliphili if you want to be really wanky.
>>
File: lesabendio4.jpg (51KB, 290x434px) Image search: [Google]
lesabendio4.jpg
51KB, 290x434px
>>54002381
"Lesabéndio: An Asteroid Novel
By Paul Scheerbart

First published in German in 1913 and widely considered to be Paul Scheerbart's masterpiece, Lesabéndio is an intergalactic utopian novel that describes life on the planetoid Pallas, where rubbery suction-footed life forms with telescopic eyes smoke bubble-weed in mushroom meadows under violet skies and green stars. Amid the conveyor-belt highways and lighthouses weaving together the mountains and valleys, a visionary named Lesabéndio hatches a plan to build a 44-mile-high tower and employ architecture to connect the two halves of their double star""
>>
File: lesabndioeinas00sche_0037.jpg (382KB, 600x764px) Image search: [Google]
lesabndioeinas00sche_0037.jpg
382KB, 600x764px
>>54002662
>>
File: lesabndioeinas00sche_0145.jpg (395KB, 600x760px) Image search: [Google]
lesabndioeinas00sche_0145.jpg
395KB, 600x760px
>>54002711
>>
File: lesabndioeinas00sche_0091.jpg (348KB, 600x771px) Image search: [Google]
lesabndioeinas00sche_0091.jpg
348KB, 600x771px
>>54002734
>>
File: lesabndioeinas00sche_0163.jpg (334KB, 600x750px) Image search: [Google]
lesabndioeinas00sche_0163.jpg
334KB, 600x750px
>>54002777
>>
>>53965651
Foundation, Dune, Chronicles of Thomas Covenant

Favourite series would be Foundation.
>>
File: lesabndioeinas00sche_0271.jpg (384KB, 600x749px) Image search: [Google]
lesabndioeinas00sche_0271.jpg
384KB, 600x749px
>>54002830
>>
The Vorrh

In B. Catling's twisting, poetic narrative, Bakelite robots lie broken - their hard shells cracked by human desire - and an inquisitive Cyclops waits for his keeper and guardian, growing in all directions. Beyond the colonial city of Essenwald lies the Vorrh, the forest which sucks souls and wipes minds. There, a writer heads out on a giddy mission to experience otherness, fallen angels observe humanity from afar, and two hunters - one carrying a bow carved from his lover, the other a charmed Lee-Enfield rifle - fight to the end.
>>
File: 9781101972724.jpg (32KB, 300x450px) Image search: [Google]
9781101972724.jpg
32KB, 300x450px
>>54002889
The Erstwhile

"In London and Germany, strange beings are reanimating themselves. They are the Erstwhile, the angels that failed to protect the Tree of Knowledge, and their reawakening will have major consequences. In Africa, the colonial town of Essenwald has fallen into disarray because the timber workforce has disappeared into the Vorrh. Now a team of specialists are dispatched to find them. Led by Ishmael, the former cyclops, they enter the forest, but the Vorrh will not give them back so easily."
>>
Gonna read through Rifters trilogy once my tablet is fixed.
>>
>>53994363
Hour of the Dragon and Tower of the Elephant in particular are top class Conan.
They showcase all his varying features, and how they evolved over the years
Thread posts: 136
Thread images: 47


[Boards: 3 / a / aco / adv / an / asp / b / bant / biz / c / can / cgl / ck / cm / co / cock / d / diy / e / fa / fap / fit / fitlit / g / gd / gif / h / hc / his / hm / hr / i / ic / int / jp / k / lgbt / lit / m / mlp / mlpol / mo / mtv / mu / n / news / o / out / outsoc / p / po / pol / qa / qst / r / r9k / s / s4s / sci / soc / sp / spa / t / tg / toy / trash / trv / tv / u / v / vg / vint / vip / vp / vr / w / wg / wsg / wsr / x / y] [Search | Top | Home]

I'm aware that Imgur.com will stop allowing adult images since 15th of May. I'm taking actions to backup as much data as possible.
Read more on this topic here - https://archived.moe/talk/thread/1694/


If you need a post removed click on it's [Report] button and follow the instruction.
DMCA Content Takedown via dmca.com
All images are hosted on imgur.com.
If you like this website please support us by donating with Bitcoins at 16mKtbZiwW52BLkibtCr8jUg2KVUMTxVQ5
All trademarks and copyrights on this page are owned by their respective parties.
Images uploaded are the responsibility of the Poster. Comments are owned by the Poster.
This is a 4chan archive - all of the content originated from that site.
This means that RandomArchive shows their content, archived.
If you need information for a Poster - contact them.