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May-June Nominations -- General Fantasy
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I think that Lions of Al-Rassan is a great example of how a duo of characters can make a novel great. The leads, Rodrigo Belmonte and Ammar ibn Khairan, are both compelling in their own right, but when they are on the scene together, there is just a magical spark. Its the literary equivalent of a good buddy movie on screen.
Steel Remains is one of my favorites of last year. Again, excellent characters who become even more compelling when they are finally brought together. Plus, a gritty and realistic view of what conflict can be like. Not to mention the best written unapologetically gay character I have ever read. Not a stereotype in sight, and the story is all the better for it.

GoodOmens is a hilarious book about the end of the world, the anti-christ is born but not placed with the correct family and a Devil and Angel work together to prevent Armageddon - this is one of the few books where I literally laughed out loud while reading...in public
The Amulet of Samarkand Bartimeus is a an Dijinni with attitude -- powerful, smart, witty. He finds himself doing the bidding of a young (teenage) upstart wizard. This is a YA book but highly enjoyable by adults. Well at least I'm an adult and enjoyed it.



I'm also nominating Thunderer by Felix Gilman. The unique storyline caught my attention. It's about a man who is a musician visiting this mystical city called Ararat, which is populated by gods. It fuses some elements of Poe, Verne and Dickens.





I have a copy of that too!

1. Lud-In-The-Mist by Hope Mirrlees
2. The Lions of al-Rassan by Guy Gavriel Kay
3. The Steel Remains by Richard K. Morgan
4. Good Omens: The Nice and Accurate Prophecies of Agnes Nutter, Witch by Terry Pratchett & Neil Gaiman
5. The Amulet of Samarkand by Jonathan Stroud
6. Legend by David Gemmell
7. Thunderer by Felix Gilman
8. Tigana by Guy Gavriel Kay
9. The Book of Joby by Mark J. Ferrari
10. Bridge of Birds: A Novel of an Ancient China That Never Was by Barry Hughart

Lamentation by Ken Scholes - This has just been released and is already getting good reviews. Ken won the Writers of the Future contest a few years ago and this is his first novel. Would be cool to get on the bandwagon early as a group...
Gardens of the Moon by Steven Erikson - in just a few years, this series has become one of the "standards" of fantasy. The plots and subplots run very deep. Though it is the start of a big series, it can be read on its own.

[Book: Dies the Fire] by S.M. Stirling - A really interesting post-apocalypse novel (with several twists) in my opinion, and I would love to hear others' takes on it.


Thanks!


The Naming The First Book of Pellinor by Alison Croggon
From reading the back cover and the GoodReads description, this is an epic fantasy about a young girl who discovers a powerful gift, her true heritage, and an extraordinary destiny. The GoodReads ratings for this book are good. I look forward to reading it and know I would get to it sooner if selected by the group.
Daughter of the Blood by Anne Bishop
This book has high GoodRead ratings, and I've seen the series recommended in discussions in the past. I've been trying to write a summary based on the book cover and the GR description but it's not working - you're better off reading the GR description!

-- Robin (24 days until Avempartha)

Assassin's Apprentice"
That's a great choice, seeing as it was just narrowly defeated in the tie-breaker with Neverwhere. Looks like we'll have a great voting round this month...





I created a tie-breaker poll, which will be open from today to the 28th, so please go vote! :)



Robin, Good Omens has already won... Nominating is over in for May-June, but if you'd like to nominate Lud in the Mist for June-July, please stop in and nominate in this thread. Thanks! :)
Books mentioned in this topic
Good Omens: The Nice and Accurate Prophecies of Agnes Nutter, Witch (other topics)Assassin's Apprentice (other topics)
Assassin's Apprentice (other topics)
Avempartha (other topics)
Daughter of the Blood (other topics)
More...
Authors mentioned in this topic
Steven Erikson (other topics)Ken Scholes (other topics)
Guy Gavriel Kay (other topics)
Hope Mirrlees (other topics)
Jonathan Stroud (other topics)
More...
Please keep in mind:
-- Nominations are limited to TWO per person.
-- Nominations must be submitted with an explanation as to why you're submitting it. (Not looking for Pulitzer award winning writing here, just a brief explanation of how it fits into the fantasy genre and why you're nominating it. IE: what you enjoyed -or hope to enjoy- about the book, etc.)
Submissions missing an explanation, or anything over 2 per person will not be accepted.
Please also provide the book and author (preferably using the "add book/author" link).
Thanks everyone!
P.S. If you have questions or comments about the nomination process, please use this thread . I'd like to keep the nomination thread as uncluttered as possible. :)