Fantasy Book Club discussion
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Hack n Slash or High Fantasy?

I like "slumming" just as much as the next guy (or gal), though a little hack-&-slash can go a long way for me. I agree with you re Elaine Cunningham, she's usually able to churn out a decent novel. I wasn't blown away by it but her Counselers & Kings series (also Forgotten Realms) was OK.
Actually, I first encountered Jordan with his Conan pastiches from the '80s: Conan the Defender and Conan the Invincible. I remember thinking that he had really captured Howard's original barbarian. And, of course, there's always the original master himself, particularly Hour of the Dragon or "Red Nails" or "People of the Black Circle" and (probably the best of the lot) "Beyond the Black River."
Oh, yes, and Richard Baker's The Last Mythal series (Forgotten Realms) is good. Like Cunningham, he can rise above the material to write very readable, if guilty, pleasures.
Does Steven Brust's Taltos series count as hack-&-slash? Regardless, he's good too.


I love David Eddings, L.E. Modesitt Jr., Robert E. Howard & Karl Edward Wagner. Very readable & relaxing with interesting worlds & simple problems.

But I'm sure my perception is being clouded by my husband's book which is on the shorter side. I think the review at Cheryl's Book Nook said it well...
Don’t let the size of The Crown Conspiracy by Michael J. Sullivan fool you at only 296 pages. It may be shorter then some of the books I have read but it sure does pack quite the punch. I say “The smaller the package, the greater they are”.


We read & re-read the Belgariad enough times that I had to replace it. The paperbacks just fell apart. Part of the reason was we started reading the series shortly after it came out & had to wait a year for each new book. Of course, after a year or two, we'd have to skim the older books to make sure we were up to speed for the new one. Multiply that by 7 or 8 years... We read them a LOT!

anywhoo, i LOVED the belgariad, but all my friends make fun of me when they see me with the books, even my friends who also read fantasy novels from like, the 80's. so its nice to meet someone who likes the books too. @_@


You'll also see that there are 5 books in the Belgariad, 5 more in the Mallorean. Begarath, Polgara & the Mrin Codex are additional to those 10 books. There was a lot of repetition in them for the amount they added to the story, IMO. If you're really nuts about the series, you might enjoy them.
Does your school library allow you to borrow from the county library through them? I think one of my kids schools did that, but can't recall for sure. It's a great way to try books. I like to collect books, especially ones that the rest of the family likes. We have our own library & book club built-in!


Crown Conspiracy is on my must have list at the moment. I looked for it at the store and they had none :( I was not pleased. Hopefully I will get it soon!
I agree that shorter reads, that I lovingly call hack n slash, are great for a good time when you cant get too involved or in depth because of whatever is going on. I think I need a good 4 months worth for january thru april.

I got the books from BookMooch & PaperBackSwap & plan to read all 7 of them now. I hope they're as good as I recall, although I doubt they will be. Still, I have to figure out what happens to the hero! He's been stranded now since the 80's!!!

Could you please list all of the World of Tiers books here, in order, so I can finish the series. I think I lost track after book 4....
Thank you,
Jed

http://www.fantasticfiction.co.uk/f/p...
Fantastic Fiction allows you to look up a book or author name & find out all about them. At the bottom, there are generally links to fan sites or that of the author, if they have them. The link above will give you all the series & their order. It was while I was looking something else up that I found the other two books were even out.
I'm on the second book now & the first was as good as I recalled, which is amazing. There are some holes, but it was written in 1965 & has weathered the time pretty well.

Sorry you are having problems...Michael is published by a fairly small press - not one of the big guys like Tor or DAW or ACE etc. Any bookstore can get you a copy it just takes 2 - 3 days. We also sell signed copies from our website
Viktoria as the group is still only young (has only been going for about 2 months now) we havent got a lot of different threads started yet, so just start a thread on any series or novels you enjoy and see who else is interested.

Will do :) I already started one in the series section. I was just interested in people's views of high fantasy and short fun reads. I have met a lot of people that are terribly picky about one or the other.

Sorry you are having ..."
I have ordered it from the website. Thank you very much *big grin*


I just bought my first David Gemmell book, Legend. He definitely fits the hack and slash bill. :)



Comparing dungeon and dragon to Robert E Howard,Leiber,Moorcock,Gemmell and co are insulting IMO.
Just because its not High Fantasy doesnt mean its hack and slash only.

and there are some decent stories in the Forgotten Realms, Dragonlance, Ravenloft, etc worlds as well, I might add.....a good storyteller can tell a good story, regardless to a genre or class his/her work is placed in......

Not like S&S where there are alot of magic,other supernatural stuff.
Its simple Heroic fantasy is the modern name for S&S,other more adventure,fast paced fantasy.
I dont like the idea of High Fantasy being better just because its huge books about politics,many characters.

Feel free to ignore the conversation if it insults you and all you admire so horribly.

Viktoria, in another topic, a writer asked for definitions of a robot, which I thought was fairly obvious & straightforward. I was VERY wrong. I would think fantasy terms would be even less definable.

Viktoria :
Hack and Slash have never been the name for Heroic Fantasy. Check out the history of the terms in wiki. No one in fantasy has ever called Heroic fantasy Hack and slash other than something to offend.
Its like calling Urban fantasy chick lit or romance novels just because there are Twillight and their type.
If it was tonge in cheek i wouldnt care. But it seemed like it was used as a serious.
Great S&S/Heroic fantasy writers made me enjoy fantasy and a fan. Im not a fan of High/epic usually but i would never call any type of fantasy a bad name.
It just remind me off people who look down fantasy,SF as something bad to read. I didnt expect to see it a fantasy group.

It's just an opinion by a stranger, so no big deal.
Robert E. Howard's Conan books with Frank Frazetta cover art is what got me interested in reading. Is there anything that makes a young boy want to read more than seeing a chained barbarian straddling a huge snake with half seen monsters lurking in the background? (The cover to Conan Conan the Usurper). if so, it was the same barbarian standing at the top of a mountain of dead enemies with a scantily clad, curvy girl clinging to his leg (The cover of Conan Conan the Warrior.)
Perhaps it's not GREAT writing, but I can't think of any higher praise for any book than to make a kid want to read. It's why J.K. Rowling will always have a place near & dear to my heart. Her books took a dyslexic little girl from hating to read to loving it - my daughter.
So I don't really care what any one else calls it or thinks about it. If they want to call it names, it only lowers my opinion of them. Personally, I didn't read anything horrible, though.

Viktoria :
Hack and Slash have never been the name for Heroic Fantasy. Check out the history of the terms in wiki. No one in fantasy ..."
When your horse lets you down, feel free to contact me privately. I don't feel this is the place to have a personal disagreement over something that is clearly a matter of misunderstanding. If you believe that I look down upon fantasy, clearly you have not read a single bit of anything I have posted, looked at my profile, or glanced at my bookshelves. I'm sorry your sense of humour doesn't mesh well with mine. Lastly, technicalities of the exact origins of words have little to do with how I people in my immediate vicinity tend to use them. That would be called laymen's terms. If you wish for a technical discussion on exact definitions or specific subtopics in the genre, I'm not sure you will find that topic here. Perhaps you should start one. My apologies if I have ruined the entire group experience for you with a single term. Have a good day.

Viktoria :
Hack and Slash have never been the name for Heroic Fantasy. Check out the history of the terms in wiki. N..."
You havent ruined anything.
I just wanted to point the term sounded like an insult. I even thought you meant something different from Heroic fantasy.
I didnt see the name as a joke hence the misunderstanding.
No need to apologize.
I've always found Robert Jordan to be enormously heavy writing and I've only made it through the first two books with a long break in between. (And with his unfortunate and too soon death, I'm unlikely to ever finish the series) I liked the story as it unfolded, but after 800 pages I just needed a break.
As for GRRM, I never even made it through the first book. Gave up when I realised that I disliked every single character in it.
On the other hand I really enjoy David Eddings (unlike most others, it seems, I prefer Elenium & Tamuli), and the Narnia Chronicles by CS Lewis, or the Septimus Heap series by Angie Sage. Why yes, I do actually have a childish soul. :)
Currently I'm very much enjoying the Runelords series by David Farland, which is a lot darker than Eddings, so I'm not sure where they fit in on the scale.
As for GRRM, I never even made it through the first book. Gave up when I realised that I disliked every single character in it.
On the other hand I really enjoy David Eddings (unlike most others, it seems, I prefer Elenium & Tamuli), and the Narnia Chronicles by CS Lewis, or the Septimus Heap series by Angie Sage. Why yes, I do actually have a childish soul. :)
Currently I'm very much enjoying the Runelords series by David Farland, which is a lot darker than Eddings, so I'm not sure where they fit in on the scale.

http://www.dragonmount.com/Books/Memo...
Basically, Brandon Sanderson is supposed to be writing it based on Jordan's notes.
I like Eddings Belgariad & Elenium the best. I found the Mallorean & Tamuli a bit much. Still enjoyable, though. We read the Belgariad so many times in my family that I had to replace the books. My wife & I started reading it right after the 2d book, Queen of Sorcery came out. It was a year's wait for each new book & we'd often re-read the previous books before reading the new one. Then the kids each read them a time or two, so our copies were a bit too well read!
Jim, I might get around to reading the rest then, it would be nice to finish the story at least. Although I doubt it'll go any faster than before. I still don't really feel ready to give the third book a poke. It the same experience I had with Tolkien. Good story, just really difficult to read.
I found the Mallorean kind of boring compared to the others. All they do is travel around a lot. The Elenium is definitely my favourite of them all though. I have read it more times in both danish and english than I can count. The first time when I was fifteen, and I absolutely swallowed them. I was disappointed by his latest series though, The Dreamers. Seemed to me like all the books had the exact same plot.
I found the Mallorean kind of boring compared to the others. All they do is travel around a lot. The Elenium is definitely my favourite of them all though. I have read it more times in both danish and english than I can count. The first time when I was fifteen, and I absolutely swallowed them. I was disappointed by his latest series though, The Dreamers. Seemed to me like all the books had the exact same plot.

I agree with you about the Mallorean. Like I said, it was a bit too much. I read the other books; Belgarath, etc... once & found them just a rip off. Very few new facts to add to the story or unreadable, for the last book, the Codex one.
I felt pretty much the same about the Tamuli. I don't like it when something is 'gone forever' & then not, either.
The good thing about the Dreamers was that they were quickly read. I've got the Mrin Codex, but I've never managed to actually get through it. It's too dry and reads like an encyclopedia.
I liked the Redemption of Althalus, though. I liked that it was a stand-alone rather than a series so he had less space to get the plot underway. It's still the same plot of super-powerful things though.
I did wonder at the end of the Elenium too, when they supposedly got rid of Bhelliom. Throwing something in the sea, no matter which sea, is not and has never been a guarantee that it won't resurface. I thought Aphrael should know that. Obviously she did, but then they might as well just have kept it.
I liked the Redemption of Althalus, though. I liked that it was a stand-alone rather than a series so he had less space to get the plot underway. It's still the same plot of super-powerful things though.
I did wonder at the end of the Elenium too, when they supposedly got rid of Bhelliom. Throwing something in the sea, no matter which sea, is not and has never been a guarantee that it won't resurface. I thought Aphrael should know that. Obviously she did, but then they might as well just have kept it.

An ex of mine was into the Dragonlance Chronicles, and we listened to it on audiobook - but I had a hard time following it. (Not a fan of audiobooks, really, in general.) Anyway, I've been thinking about reading the Chronicles at some point - but I had a question as to which version.
Of course there's the original trilogy, but I recently saw that they've made a young adult version, edited for younger readers. I'm not looking for a committment concerning Dragonlance, just something quick and fun - so I was wondering if anyone's read the YA versions and if they know the differences between it and the adult versions, and, more importantly, whether it's written for a "young" young adult target (9-14) or an "older" young adult target (14-20s).
Also, just today while I was browsing Amazon (to try and get this very question answered), I discovered that they also have a graphic novel version. I'm a big fan of graphic novels, and so was also wondering if anyone's read this version of the novels. The general vibe I got from amazon is that they don't have quite the same depth and breadth as the originals, but that they get the spirit of the story and are generally well done. I'm thinking this might be the version I end up going for - but was hoping maybe someone had experience with the different versions and could put in their recommendations.
Thanks :)

I liked their Dark Sword trilogy, although it was kind of depressing.

But who is into the hack n slash fa..."
You know what I like in the way of 'hack & slash'? I really like The War God's Own! It's light reading and funny as all get out.

I'm putting a plug in for Avempartha and The Crown Conspiracy as not necessarily "hack n slash" but definitely easier reads with plenty of wry humor. They are great summer reading.


But who is into th..."
I will need to pick that up. I have not read it yet.



But I can see if the wit or the humor didn't pan for some, the story wouldn't work.

I also remember reading a novella in the same setting (Baz is a minor character), but have read so many lately I can't remember (or find it). Could be the above one, though. Anyway, I'm with you. Been a while, but they are fun.
In order:
Oath of Swords
The War God's Own
Wind Rider's Oath

By the way Oath of Swords and War God's Own are available at the Baen Free Library.
Masters of Fantasy
Oath of Swords: http://www.baen.com/library/067187642...
War God's Own: http://www.baen.com/library/067187873...

By the way Oath of Swords and War God's Own are available..."
ahhh Thank you! I have downloaded a ton or free books from various sites. I often forget about Baen though. Thanks!
Books mentioned in this topic
Sentinelspire (other topics)Swordmage (other topics)
Unbinding the Stone (other topics)
A Warrior Made (other topics)
Masters of Fantasy (other topics)
More...
Authors mentioned in this topic
R.A. Salvatore (other topics)Brandon Sanderson (other topics)
Robert E. Howard (other topics)
J.K. Rowling (other topics)
Frank Frazetta (other topics)
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But who is into the hack n slash fantasy? Like the reams of pages written for the Forgotten Realms or the fantasy worlds created for very short novels with one major conflict like Elaine Cunningham?
I love Jordan and Martin and all the rest... but I also love some Elaine Cunningham and Ed Greenwood. The Shadows and Starlight Trilogy (Forgotten Realms Starlight & Shadows: Gift Set) by Cunningham is one of my favourite series ever. Greenwood's Shadow of the Avatar trilogy was also really good.
These are lighter novels. There's less character development and less relationship development, and more focus on incredible conflicts and really intricate plot twists.
Does anyone else like these or am I a pariah of the fantasy genre? If you do like them.. suggestions??