this post was submitted on 15 Sep 2025
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Sanderson's big fantasy series right now, the stormlight archive. Oh my god, each book is just made to make you get drawn deeper, and deeper until you hit the end. The gap between the first and second book was so freaking long to wait. I think we're up to book five now, so you don't have to have that feeling for a while.
Alternatively, if you like blue fantasy (talking animals and wise spirit guides that help sometimes hapless humans), mercedes lackey did great things with her heralds of valdemar series. I'd actually recommend jumping into it at a later point because her writing greatly improved from the first trilogy. You could start with magic's pawn/promise/price, which has one of the earliest depictions of lgbt protagonists I ever read.
If you like more 'earthy' fantasy, the wit'chfire series (actual series name, banned and the banished) by james clemens (who I just found out is a pseudonym for a sci-fi author who didn't want to be 'smeared' as a fantasy author and has some other good books when i googled for the name) is really good. Don't start his other series, because even though it was fantastic, it's never going to be finished. I think we're at like 30 years now and never gotten the third book.
And then there's the big one, the bold one, the 'start you off so small and build you into a great, grand sweeping epic' jim butcher series: the codex alera. The first book was riveting from start to finish. I actually think it was the best one, because the worldbuilding was just so sublime. I loved the characters more and more with each added book, but the magic of the beginning was just amazing.
Oooh, I love talking animal series, a guilty pleasure of mine. I read and loved A Fire Upon the Deep and was devastated to learn the author passed away before finishing the series.
That series is genuinely through provoking sci-fi, though some elements do require a bit of suspension of disbelief. Honestly though, some characters are so interesting, it's worth a read.
Just a note of caution: the series ends unexpectedly and was never finished, though some points can be inferred at the end.
Oathbringer did this to me the first time, but since then have not been able to enjoy Sanderson’s work unfortunately. Was super hyped for mistborn era 2’s last book but after multiple attempts, was unable to get through.