It was Valentines last week so I, as I often do, sent out a holiday themed tweet:

What I didn’t expect when I sent that Tweet out was such a huge variety of replies and such a wonderful array of reasoning for why each person had chosen the specific books they were throwing at me. Because I truly enjoyed the nostalgia-trip, I thought it would be fun to compile a list of books that the Fantasy-Faction community ‘truly love’.

My hope is that we can reconnect you with past loves or light a brand new flame for a book you may not have even laid eyes on until today. Do leave a comment with any we’ve missed or with reasons you agree with our choices:

We love our Grandpa (Tolkien, of course!)

As I’m sure you will appreciate and expect, a love of the work by Grandpa Tolkien was mentioned by a whole host of followers. Typically this was because The Hobbit or The Lord of The Rings were the first fantasy book that our readers came across and the one that sent them searching for more. For me though, the reason Tolkien’s work is so easy to fall in love with is because it is so, so immersive. As a result it’s very difficult not to truly care about the characters. They, their world and their story feels so vivid and so incredibly real to us.

That said, it wasn’t just The Lord of The Rings and The Hobbit that got the love and attention of our users… James Geoghegan, for example said his one true love is The Silmarillion because of the themes of the book: ‘perfection spoilt and the underlying sorrow from that loss is simply perfect’.

We have fond memories of SilverFoxes

Although not quite as old as Tolkien’s work, there were a number of fantasy works that I’d refer to as being of previous generations (note: this doesn’t mean the authors of which aren’t still writing today).

Similar to Tolkien who we just visited, Raymond E Feist’s Magician seems to be one of the first fantasy books that many of our readers stumbled upon. Indeed, it holds a special place in British readers hearts, it was one of the few fantasy books named on the ‘Nations Favourite Reads’ a few years back. Feist popped up many, many times with Magician, but Faerie Tale also got a few shoutouts.

Although readers seem to agree that The Dragon Bone Chair by Tad Williams was a slow burner, many say that the amount of time they got to spend in the company of the characters meant that, like Tolkien’s cast, they truly came to fall for them and their tale, and, as a result, the ending was so powerful that this is a novel they will never forget.

It was good to see that Dragonlance Chronicles by Margaret Weis and Tracy Hickman got so much love on Valentine’s day. Although the books do feel dated now, in 2015, readers maintain a fondness and appreciation for them. Many said that although it was the likes of Tolkien who drew them into Fantasy – it was the variety and huge output of Weis and Hickman that kept them here for the long-haul.

Although there is a feeling it is too bloated at points, The Wheel of Time series was mentioned a huge number of times. Most of the focus was on Robert Jordan’s first in the series, The Eye of The World. Like so many of the titles above, this was mentioned extensively as ‘the’ book that kindled a love of fantasy within the heart of our readers. Robert Jordan’s series is perhaps the most epic fantasy series that has ever been written and for those who trekked the entire journey it is one that had so many incredible sights and experiences along the way that they’ll never regret embarking upon it.

Two women writers who often get confused were mentioned time and time again on our lists – Ursula K. Le Guin and Anne McCaffrey. One user even wrote to us over Twitter: ‘I cried the day I was told Ursula K. Le Guin had passed away’ (we, of course, told them – quickly!!!). Anne McCaffrey’s most popular novel on our list was her first in the Pern series: Dragonflight. If you haven’t read it then you really should. It’s an easy book to fall in love with: epic, dragons, fantasy/sci-fi hybrid, dragons, emotional, strong women, dragons. DRAGONS! And as for Ursula, I mean can you really expect anyone to choose a single book? Pretty much everything she has ever written has been ‘special’, right? Well, actually, there was one standout: The Wizard of Earthsea and specifically, The Tombs of Atuan. I’d go as far to say that The Wizard of Earthsea is one of the most beloved fantasy series ever written – those who have taken the time to read it will ask themselves: ‘Harry Potter – who?’.

Roger Zelazny is often listed as the favourite and most influential author of George R.R. Martin and the Fantasy-Faction community all seemed to agree with George’s assessment that: ‘he was a storyteller without peer. He created worlds as colorful and exotic and memorable as any our genre has ever seen.’ Savvy readers will note that a number of George R.R. Martin’s characters are even named after Zelany’s book titles or characters too. In terms of Zelazny’s most popular work, we look towards Lord of Light (there’s one), which was an early example of a Fantasy / Sci-Fi hybrid. It’s a truly epic work that covers huge spans of time and you can see why Martin points towards it as an inspiration for him. Even more epic is the Chronicles of Amber series – the first book being Nine Princes in Amber. It spans 10 books, parallel worlds, altering realities and much more besides. Creatures of Light and Darkness and A Night in the Lonesome October were popular picks too.

Melanie Rawn was nominated for a Locus Award for her novel Dragon Prince when I was 2 years old. I am 28 this year and Melanie is still writing novels: her forth book in the ‘Glass Thorns’ series, Window Wall, is due out this April. It was the aforementioned Dragon Prince that most of our readers nominated and spoke about so fondly of though (written 26 years ago now). Similar in many ways to the work of Anne McCaffrey, this is epic fantasy enhanced with strong elements of romance. Melanie Rawn has an ability to carefully construct a story page by page until you feel as though you are living and breathing in her world. By the end of the novel you will be surprised at how the plot became so complex and the relationships so deep without you noticing.

I must admit that I couldn’t get into The Sword of Shannara… I actually really didn’t like it. To me it seemed as if Brooks had attempted to re-write The Lord of the Rings as a writing exercise and upon finishing it sent it out to a publisher who saw the $/£ signs and decided to put it out into the wild. However, last year I was sent Brooks’s latest novel, The High Druid’s Blade, and I REALLY enjoyed it. The prose was light, the plot was a lot of fun and the characters were fairly complex for a novel that was semi-marketed for a young adult audience. Forget my opinions though, you guys are the ones who made this list possible and you tell me that the second of Brooks’s books (that I am yet to read), The Elfstones of Shannara, is one of your favorite books of all time and, indeed, it is the book the upcoming MTV series has chosen to focus on. So, I should probably pick it up shouldn’t I?

Mists of Avalon by Marion Zimmer Bradley is similar to A Game of Thrones in the sense that it is as popular now with non-fantasy fans as it is with us genre fans. The novels focus in on the popular Arthurian Legend, but instead of following the masculine King Arthur or Lancelot, it follows the women characters and their shaping of Britain; Morgaine (half-sister to King Arthur and priestess of Avalon), Ingraine (Arthur’s mother), Viviane (the High Priestess of Avalon) and Gwenhwyfar (Arthur’s queen). Marion Zimmer Bradley wrote many other novels and many of them in various SFF sub-genres, Darkover got a number of shouts for example, but Avalon remains the most read and recommended – and rightly so.

One series that has never gotten enough attention is The Riddlemaster Trilogy by Patricia Mckillip. Like Tolkien’s work this is epic fantasy at its best – the world is a truly immersive one and the prose are as magical as the plot. Perhaps where the novel differs to Tolkien’s is that everything is more complex: you will find it hard to decide whether you love or hate the characters at times, whether you agree or disagree with their choices and the story will keep you guessing until the very end – it is a novel that takes you on a rich and unforgettable journey that is more grey than black and white.

Then there was the bad-boy, the ‘anti-Tolkien’, Michael Moorcock. Moorcock was a hippy, an anarchist, who made his name writing against the grain. The result was something very, very special that sent fantasy reeling in a completely new direction. Although the fact majority of our users directed their love towards fantasy’s most renowned albino, Elric of Melniboné, other titles such as the Warlord of the Air, Queen of Swords, Hawkmoon, Dancers at the End of Time and The Golden Barge got multiple mentions.

The Power of Emotion

No author was mentioned as much as Guy Gavriel Kay. Multiple readers commented that they cried whilst reading a number of his books. The most popular and the most heart-breaking seems to be Tigana, but The Fionavar Tapestry, The Lions of Al-Rassan, A Song for Arbonne, The Summer Tree and Under Heaven were all up there. For books to truly touch and affect you in a way that hits your emotions hard – the author has to have a very, very special talent for immersing you incredibly deeply into their world and connecting you with their characters. There is no doubt that Kay is one of the best at this. Because of the emotions Kay has forced upon individual readers it is little surprise so many mentioned his work as unforgettable and a true love of theirs.

Most readers have enjoyed viewing the world from behind the eyes of Robin Hobb’s Fitz. Sometimes, I find myself unsure what it is about Hobb’s work that keeps me coming back to it – the stories within are so, so heartbreaking, right? – but perhaps it is the fact we, as readers, need to know that life gets better for her remarkable characters. In Assassin’s Apprentice Fitz is the very best kind of person in a dark world where horrors and pain seem to find him easily. No one seems capable of forming the kind of bonds and harnessing the kind of hope that he does. As much as we love Fitz and want everything to work out for him though, I feel Hobb’s writing is something very, very special too. It is just too remarkable and too brilliant not to read and admire. Perhaps it is the contrast of the two – similar to Mark Lawrence’s destruction told with beauty sttle – that enriches the book so much. Whether or not that’s it, how many times do we sit down to read ‘a couple pages’ of a Robin Hobb book and look up to find hours have passed and we’ve torn through 300 pages? Yep. Lots!

Ellen Kushner started her career out writing those ‘Choose Your Own Adventure’ gamebooks. Remember those? Her novel, Swordspoint, though remains her most popular written work. For those yet to discover it, it’s considered ‘manner punk’, which is a fantasy genre that draws more upon the influences of Jane Austin or Dumas’s The Three Musketeers more than it does Tolkien. Gormenghast would probably be one of the earliest examples of this genre, so if you’ve read that you will have an idea (although this title certainly less ‘weird’ than Peake’s). One reader told us: ‘I loved this book so much I wish I could marry it and have its babies.’ That’s commitment right there. The emotion and tension are very, very high throughout Ellen’s work – the events of the books stay with readers after forcing their pulses to race so often through both danger and romance. The Fall of the Kings, the sequel where ‘sharp swords and even sharper wits rule’, is said to be very, very good too.

We love a sense of humour, us!

Who doesn’t look for a good sense of humour in the one they love, right? Well, knowing this it shouldn’t surprise you that Terry Pratchett was named extensively. Our good friend and one of our favourite authors Jen Williams named Lords & Ladies as her favourite, but none of our community seemed to be able to decide. So, ‘all’ and ‘any’ were popular words, but we were able to tease out Night Watch, Going Postal, Soul Music, Carpe Jugulum, The Amazing Maurice and his Educated Rodents and Mort as specific titles. One user gave Pratchett what has to be the ultimate compliment: ‘if i am sad I open it at almost any page & it makes me laugh’ 🙂 Oh, and there were a good few mentions for a collaboration with another author who, as you might expect, will be appearing on this list later – Neil Gaiman – with Good Omens.

The Lies of Locke Lamora by Scott Lynch is one of the books we – and likely you guys too – suggest to friends who we are trying to convince that fantasy isn’t just about knights, orcs and elves. Scott Lynch offers readers a laugh a page and also a plot with as many twists and turns, ups and downs as a great thriller. Although the Gentleman Bastard series is taking its time getting released (currently on book 3 of 7), each book so far has been episodic in nature so, unlike A Song Of Ice & Fire, for example, they are not hard to break away from and return to. In fact, returning is the easy part – it’s the waiting that’s killing us!

We also love the grey and gritty

We miss David Gemmell, but the incredible books he left behind means he will never be forgotten. Not only did his books path the way for many of today’s top authors (many of whom will feature further down this list), but his own work remains completely relevant and consumed by multiple generations. Honestly, I was expecting Legend to be named as Gemmell’s most loved book – the metaphor of a battle against cancer is a powerful one – but most of our community pointed towards Waylander as the book they ‘truly loved’ instead. It could well be because of the more directly emotional scenes, or just simply because Waylander is so damned cool. Other books that got a mention were Ghost King, Winter Warriors, Knights of Dark Renown, Dark Moon and Lion of Macedon.

The inclusion of A Game of Thrones by George R.R. Martin won’t surprise anyone. For many people this book is looked upon fondly by them as ‘adults’. Before A Game of Thrones fantasy had always had a reputation as being ‘for geeks’ or, worse, for ‘kids’. A Game of Thrones exposed the world to what modern fantasy can really offer – grown up storylines, insights to history, a low-magic style that doesn’t take you miles away from reality, etc. But ignoring that, A Game of Thrones changed fantasy for those of us already reading in the genre too. It was one of the first commercially successful novels that was truly epic and truly brutal – it pushed a number of boundaries at a time fantasy was regularly called ‘stale’. Indeed, much of today’s fantasy (which I, for one, love) was only written because A Game of Thrones inspired modern authors. And, far more fantasy is published today (due to increased demand) as result of these books (and the resulting TV series) too. All that said, it is telling and quite sad that no book beyond the third in the series was mentioned by our followers…

The Black Company novels by Glen Cook were mentioned as eye-openers for many. It seems a running theme in this feature is that people hold a special love for the books or series they came across that told them ‘fantasy can also be like this’ – i.e. not simply Tolkien-esque or Arthurian-inspired. Many people who have enjoyed Glen Cook’s books will tell you that he is the true father of ‘gritty’ fantasy, but don’t tell that to our next pick…

Yes, there was a lot of love for Joe Abercrombie this Valentines Day. And not just because he’s a handsome, loveable rogue, he’s also pretty good at that writing thing too. What may surprise you about Abercrombie’s work is how many people say that Joe’s books brought them back to fantasy after years away from the fold. His adult themes, stories that reflect real-life issues and characters that are twisted more extensively than 90% of what’s out there further forced the new direction the genre was moving in. Joe’s books have allowed readers to revisit genres such as the Western, the Military novel and the Epic Fantasy in a recognisable, but equally unrecognisable manner. For me, the power of Joe Abercrombie is his ability to have us experience humour, disgust and wonder all within a single page. Most readers maintained a fondness for his first book, The Blade Itself, but The Heroes was very popular and Before They Are Hanged got its fair share of mentions too. My favourite is A Red Country, just to confuse things further.

And just pure dark too

Although not Fantasy it seems that horror started the love of the ‘not real’ for many people. I guess that a few decades ago, horror was much bigger than it is now – Hellraiser, Friday 13th, Halloween, Critters, etc were all the rage in the movie world. Popular authors mentioned to help our followers make the transition to fantasy were Clive Barker with Abarat and Stephen King with The Dark Tower novels, which I guess are a fantasy-western-horror hybrid. The Drawing of the Three was the most mentioned Dark Tower novel, incase you are interested!

New Generation Genre Giants

Few authors have the kind of following that Patrick Rothfuss does. Fantasy’s answer to Joss Wheadon came from nowhere and took the genre by storm. His protagonist Kvothe allures fantasy readers as much as he does the characters within his novel. Rothfuss’s recipe for success is that he gave us the ending in the very early stages of the first book, The Name of The Wind. The ending seems a tragic one and for us to find out how things got so bad we need to accompany Kvothe across three novels (one we are still waiting for). The thing is, the journey is told through prose so beautiful and the story is so full of wonder and ups and downs, that we’d follow him across ten novels if the author took that long. I think the reason this book is so special to so many people is because, like Hobb’s work, we truly feel as if we know Kvothe as a close friend. Even, at times, as though we are bonded to him.

Neil Gaiman is a fantasy rockstar and anything Neil Gaiman touches turns to gold. Is there an author whose works are each so varied and yet each so brilliant? Whether Neil writes for adults or children, for television or comics or novels – it is always going to be incredible. The books that got the most mentions in our ‘books we truly love’ replies were the ones where Neil takes real-life and touches it with his magic or twists it in a way that makes life fantastical, but reveals more truth than he could even with non-fiction. American Gods was the one that readers pointed to as their favourite – an incredible tale about how the Gods of old could (or could not) fit into the modern world. His latest novel though, The Ocean At The End of The Lane, is one that can be read by adults, by children and by adults to children and for that reason seemed to have found a special place in many hearts already. Neverwhere remains a strong favourite amongst many Londoners too.

Brandon Sanderson was another modern master who unsurprisingly got a lot of mentions. Something I, personally, have come to love about Brandon’s work is that it is what I consider a successor to the ‘true’ fantasy of old… the kind that is a descendant of Tolkien’s. At a time where a lot of novels are quite grim and full of realism/history, Brandon’s works are always fantastical, on worlds that can’t possibly be our own and are loaded with mind-bending concepts. Another plus with Sanderson is that although his concepts can be pretty complex, his almost YA style of writing sees him explain everything in a way that you can’t help but fully understand them. By the end of Mistborn, for example, you understand the benefits and weaknesses of huge amounts of different powers that the characters harness and when the big battles happen you begin weighing up the characters’ abilities in the same way you would playing Final Fantasy. It wasn’t Sanderson’s Mistborn that got the most love, however – it was The Way of Kings, which is the first title in Sanderson’s ‘big epic’; his Wheel of Time. So far the series shows a lot promise: we have quickly come to care about its characters and although far from being fully realised yet, Sanderson has foreshadowed some HUGE plot threads that could see The Stormlight Archives get as epic and grand as any fantasy. EVER.

One author I knew was popular, but never expected a HUGE response for was Steven Erikson. The author’s Malazan books were mentioned over and over and over again. Whereas many invested in A Wheel of Time and found the series lolled frustratingly, readers appreciated the more consistent pacing of Erikson’s epic that hit almost the same scale. Even more impressive was that few could agree on a single book being their favourite in the series. The one that got the most mentions was Deadhouse Gates with a special mention for how heartbreaking it was, but Reaper’s Gale and Memories of Ice had their fair share of votes too.

I hesitate to put R.A. Salvatore in here, because he seems to have been writing books forever! However, his books aren’t just being picked up by those who have been reading fantasy for decades, but also by those who are only just stumbling across our beloved genre too. R.A. Salvatore’s work contains our favourite elements from traditional fantasy: epic plot lines, dastardly villains, multiple species and so on, but also much of today’s modern elements too: the grey protagonists, the comic book style prose. One of my favourites, and one I’m glad to see got so many mentions was The Demon Wars. I’d advise you head over to Amazon and check out the first chapter of the first book in the series, The Demon Awakens… that’s a lesson in creating intrigue right there! Streams of Silver (the second of the Icewind Dale books) is the ‘single’ book most people point towards as a favourite.

The Painted Man / The Warded Man by Peter V. Brett got huge numbers of mentions, as did Brent Weeks’s Night Angel Trilogy. These two authors seem to be reaching a new kind of audience: those who enjoy playing video games and reading comic books, but don’t usually read… so many people who I’ve met that have read these two books start their conversation with me along the lines of: ‘I don’t usually read, but…’. The Painted Man indeed reads like a 10 hour play through of Dark Souls or Skyrim, etc. Brent Weeks’s novels read like a 10 hour play-through of Assassin’s Creed. These two authors are what I think of as the leaders in ‘modern fantasy’. Modern Fantasy in my eyes is written by people who have grown up playing video games, reading comics and generally submerged in geek culture – they know what’s cool and that not everyone has time for overly vivid description.

And, because fantasy isn’t all about being EPIC, it’s no surprise that Jim Butcher got mention after mention. Back in the 1930’s (ish) P.I. novels were all the rage. Everyone wanted to be a P.I. (because it was the next best thing to being James Bond – and slightly more plausible). Jim Butcher’s novels take this idea (everyone wants to be a spy) and add to it (everyone wants to be a spy; and magical powers would be cool too). Told in the first person, in a very familiar style to that of the P.I. novel masters – Raymond Chandler especially – The Dresden Files have become increasingly read by fantasy and non-fantasy fans alike. The Dresden Files put you inside the mind of Harry Dresden and batter you with action, plot twists, and most of all: unforgettable characters and unforgettable storylines. The book most often mentioned was Dead Beat (with a special mention to Sue the Zombie T-Rex) and Changes got a fair few too. Oh, and although we said fantasy isn’t all about the epic – Jim Butcher’s Codex Alera series, which is Epic Fantasy, got a handful of mentions.

Kids never forget

Many of the books mentioned were books that our users read when they were younger. This isn’t surprising really – for most children reading is a chore. Schools force textbooks upon us and told us off if we didn’t get through them or answer the questions to the level the Government were currently pushing teachers to ensure we achieved. So, when we first came across a book that we wanted to spend time with, a book that we didn’t want to put down in favour of watching television, playing games or even – heaven forbid – going outside: it was a startling treat.

Alan Garner is an author who uses mythology (typically Welsh) to write the most amazing, intriguing, immersive tales. The Owl Service is probably the book that brought him most recognition. It is a haunting book that draws upon legend and has all the elements of a good YA book – that ensures a younger reader’s attention. However, when Adults return to re-read it they commonly report that they didn’t truly understand or appreciate it until they did so. The book has many, many layers and as such has picked up praise by the mainstream – The Guardian, The Observer, The Times all speaking very highly. Other books by Alan Garner that got mentioned were The Stone Book Quartet, Weirdstone of Brisingamen and Elidor.

When I was at school everything was advertised as ‘the new Harry Potter’. One series I picked up from a table in a bookstore running such a promotion was the first in The Bartimaeus Trilogy by Jonathan Stroud. The trilogy has beauty and humour and, in my opinion, is a YA unlike any other. The young protagonist summons a demon far beyond his ability to control and this demon is rather unhappy about it. That said, this demon is interested in the young man who has summoned him and an incredible dynamic is born from the rules that govern their magically bound relationship. It’s a series with action, but the reason I and many of my followers enjoy it is because below the surface it has a huge heart. Stroud’s Lockwood and Co. has been a bit of a slow burner, but it still got multiple mentions with the mutual feeling that things are about to go down big time.

The Belgariad series from David Eddings certainly feels old in 2015 (having recently visited it), but if you hadn’t read a coming of age tale beyond Tolkien then it’s an easy one to fall in love with. Indeed, many readers say their ‘memories’ of enjoying that series are what give it a firm place in their heart – discovering and caring about a young character and watching him grow for the first time. The series David wrote with his wife, Leigh, The Redemption of Althalus, got noted as having been read ‘time and time’ again too.

The Lion, The Witch, & The Wardrobe by C.S. Lewis (part of The Chronicles of Narnia series) rightly got lots of mentions. Many people think of this series as a long fairy tale, but in actuality it is one of the first great Epic Fantasy series written for younger readers. It has come under a bit of heat over in modern times for its various religious themes (some people felt much of the books was meant to scare children into following God), but if you ignore that discussion and focus purely on the books: it is a truly magical tale and one that features some of the most tearjerking and heart-thumping moments in Literature. The Last Battle was also called out as being the best book in the series – one often overlooked for the catchier title of The Lion, The Witch, & The Wardrobe.

Talking of references to religion causing a stir, His Dark Materials / Northern Lights by Phillip Pullman was said to have been responsible for making many of my Twitter followers cry: “it breaks my heart whenever I read it!” said one use and “I cried and cried” said another. All of the books got a mention, but the most love was shown to The Amber Spyglass.

Tamora Pierce picked up an incredible number of votes. Also, she was the author you guys really struggled to pick a favourite work of. You also didn’t pick novels (as were the rules) – instead you cheated by picking series: The Protector of the Small Quartet and Song of the Lioness Quartet. Both were mentioned around about the same number of times. I guess it doesn’t matter too much though, because the books are both part of one large timeline (The Protector of the Small featuring girl who follows in Alanna’s footsteps from The Song of the Lioness).

It’s a real shame ‘The Seeker’ (USA) / ‘The Dark is Rising’ (UK) movie was so bad, because The Dark is Rising books by Susan Cooper are remembered as favourites by so, so many. Had the movies contained even a fraction of the books’ magic they could have inspired a whole new generation to pick up Susan Cooper’s masterful work. Not unlike Harry Potter in terms of plot, the series follows Will Stanton (aged 11) who discovers on his birthday that he is destined to weird the power of light against the rising dark.

Diana Wynne Jones passed away fairly recently. She left behind some of the most memorable, magical novels you could ever hope to read. In addition to inspiring adult readers of today as children, her books are timeless in a way that ensures they will continue to touch readers for generations to come. Howl’s Moving Castle and Chronicles of Chrestomanci (Charmed Life gaining the most mentions) were just two of a long-list that was mentioned. Although we’ve put Diana’s books in the ‘young adults’ section, her books can be – and thankfully, are – enjoyed by all ages.

OK, so the guy’s a complete ****, but you can’t do a ‘books we love’ list without including Ender’s Game by Orson Scott Card (the ****). Before we knew OSC was a **** we loved this book and even after knowing that OSC is a **** it’s hard to forget how much we loved it when we first tore through the pages. I couldn’t get into any of the sequels and I’ve heard that the further you get the more OSC’s opinions on certain groups filter into the novels, but the first time you read Ender’s Game you can’t help put be pulled into the world and dazzled. Unsurprisingly, the majority of people who picked up Ender’s Game as their ‘first’ foray into SFF tended to stick with the more Science-Fiction type novels.

Harry Potter , of course. We spoke earlier about how A Game of Thrones changed fantasy – but there’s no denying that Harry Potter did even more for the genre. Harry Potter showed people that fantasy is something we can all relate to. In essence, there’s nothing about Harry Potter that we won’t find in other novels: a young boy with a destiny fighting against an evil foe. I think as great as the books were, what was truly magical about Harry Potter was that we, as a planet, came to love these books together. The shared love for Harry Potter added mass-excitement and reading became an almost communal thing for a while. You didn’t need a Harry Potter bookclub, because you could talk to any of your friends or colleagues about your theories and that is incredibly rare. I’m not sure that as long as I live it will happen again and so my memories of that time are pretty special.

And the rest…

Of course, love is such an individual thing. Some of us have a specific reason for the love we hold for a certain book and although others may not understand why we don’t think their ‘Brad Pitt’ or ‘Angelita Jolie’ is as hot as as our ‘Tom Cruise’ or ‘Cameron Diaz’ nothing will sway us. Here are books that weren’t mentioned as much as the ones we’ve given a special feature to above, but that each have a place in our community’s heart:

Valdemarian saga by Mercedes Lackey

To Say Nothing of the Dog by Connie Willis

Crown of Stars by Kate Elliot

The Diplomacy of Wolves by Holly Lisle

The Deverry books by Katherine Kerr

The Raven Ring by Patricia C. Wrede

Myth Series by Robert Asprin

Sabriel by Garth Nix

Conan the Adventurer by Robert E. Howard & L. Sprague de Camp

The True Game by Sheri S Tepper

Deed of Pakssenarion by Elizabeth Moon

Moonheart by Charles De Lint

A Love Like Blood by Marcus Sedgwick

Tschai by Jack Vance

The Island of the Mighty by Evangeline Walton

The Raven series by James Barclay

Spindle’s End by Robin McKinley

Lord Foul’s Bane by Stephen R. Donaldson

Blackdog by K.V. Johansen

Dune by Frank Herbert

Godstalk by P.C. Hodgell

Enchanted Forest Chronicles by Patricia C. Wrede

The Book Of Illusions by Paul Auster

Night Unbound by Dianne Duvall

The Last Unicorn by Peter Beagle

Eragon by Christopher Paolini

The Eight by Katherine Neville

Night Watch by Sergei Lukyanenko

Illusion by Karen Volsky

The Nightrunner series by Lynn Flewelling

The Book of Lost Things by John Connolly

The Acts of Caine by Matt Stover

The Book of Lies by James Moloney

The Reality Dysfunction by Peter F. Hamilton

Into The Darkness by Harry Turtledove

The Curse of Chalion by Lois McMaster Bujold

Thousand Names series by Django Wexler

The Tales of the Ketty Jay series by Chris Wooding

Checkmate by Dorothy Dunnett

Gormenghast trilogy by Mervyn Peake

The Winter King by Bernard Cornwell

Komarr by Lois McMaster Bujold

Snow White and Red Rose by Patricia C. Wrede

Daughter of Smoke & Bone by Laini Taylor

Altered Carbon by Richard Morgan

The Gift Series by Alison Croggon

Wolf of Winter by Paula Volsky

The Giant Under the Snow by John Gordon

Go, Dog, Go by PD Eastman

Obernewtyn by Isobelle Carmody

Fire Logic by Laurie J. Marks

The Troupe by Robert J Bennett

Dorian Grey’s Portrait by Oscar Wilde

Paladin of Souls by Lois McMaster Bujold

Libromancer by Jim C. Hines

Windhaven by G. Martin & L. Tuttle

The Walrus and the Warwolf by Hugh Cook

The Slow Regard of Silent Things by Patrick Rothfuss

The Hero and the Crown by Robin McKinley

Dracula by Bram Stoker

The Sparrow by Mary Doria Russell

Geek Love by Katherine Dunn

The Shadow of the Wind by Carlos Ruiz Zafon.

The Eagle of the Ninth by Rosemary Sutcliff

Prince of Thorns by Mark Lawrence

Symphony of Ages by Elizabeth Haydon

Soulless by Gail Carriger

The Gone Away World by Nick Harkaway

The Devil’s Armor by John Marco

Lud In The Mist by Hope Mirrlees

The Morgaine Cycle by C. J. Cherryh

Nijntje in het Ziekenhuis (Miffy in the Hospital) by Dick Bruna

The Player of Games by Iain M. Banks

Cordelia’s Honor by Lois McMasters Bujold

The Doomsday Book by Connie Willis

Cordelia’s Honor by Lois McMasters Bujold

Chaos Walking trilogy by Patrick Ness

Artemis Fowl by Eoin Colfer

The Troy Game Quartet by Sara Douglass

Barrayar by Lois McMaster Bujold

The End of Mr Y by Scarlett Thomas

Whit by Iain Banks

A Wrinkle in Time by Madeleine L’Engle

The Second Apocalypse by R. Scott Bakker

The Night’s Dawn Trilogy by Peter F. Hamilton

The Sword In The Stone by T. H. White

Foundation by Asimov.

Alice in Wonderland by Lewis Carroll

Bitten by Kelley Armstrong

Kushiel’s Dart by Jacqueline Carey

Flat Earth series by Tanith Lee

Tékumel by M. A. R. Barker

Shattered World by Michael Reaves

The Wood Beyond The World by William Morris

Dwellers in the Mirage by A. Merritt

Witch World by Andre Norton

Armor by John Steakley.

The Princess Bride by William Goldman

Phantom by Susan Kay

La Horde du Contrevent by A.Damasio (not yet translated)

Bridge of Birds by Barry Hughart

Finally, I’d just like to say thank you to all our Twitter followers and Forum Users who got involved with this feature. What was pretty awesome was that authors such as Guy Gavriel Kay, Terry Brooks, Peter V. Brett and many, many more were retweeting and thanking the many users involved. To interact with an author who has created a book you fell in love with is an experience I’ve had a number of times and one that I know means a great deal to each and everyone of us. Love to you all, guys 🙂

Title image by KachurrynCreations.