Ok, I like reading but haven't really got into the whole fantasy genre. I tried LotR a couple of times but really didn't get along with it, nothing really sparked my interest or wanted me to keep reading, especially after watching the movies.
Every time I read the blurb of a fantasy book I groan, it always seems to be about some improbably named and unambiguously good hero going on a quest against some equally improbably named and unambiguously evil foe, sandwiched between turgid prose about the history of some non-existent land.
So, what do you recommend to challenge my scepticism?
Some other points:
"Sceptic" is the accepted UK English spelling of "skeptic"
I'm 19
Preferably no more than 300 pages (Edit: ok, this may be unreasonable, but lets just say something I could reasonably read in a week or 2*)
It would be nice if it had some breakout success (ie. acclaim outside normal fantasy readers, not some obscure personal favourite)
Some authors I like: Philip K. Dick, Kurt Vonnegut, Jack Kerouac, Bukowski, Alan Moore, John Steinbeck, Kafka
I do like Terry Prachet, but he is the Douglas Adams of the genre, whereas I'm looking for the Philip K. Dick or Frank Herbert.
*My new years resolution was to read more, as, looking back at it, I was very poorly read before this age, maybe reading a few books a year. As of yet, I have been averaging out at about 1 book per week (the longest being Crime and Punishment). I have been focusing mainly on getting through "classics" while also getting a good range of books in. So if someone recommends me a 7 book series, averaging out at about 1000 pages each, I do think "well, I could read that, or I could read the Great Gatsby, On the Road, Grapes of Wrath, Slaughterhouse Five and about 20 other books". I can read at a pace of between 1 and 1.5 minutes per page.
Every time I read the blurb of a fantasy book I groan, it always seems to be about some improbably named and unambiguously good hero going on a quest against some equally improbably named and unambiguously evil foe, sandwiched between turgid prose about the history of some non-existent land.
So, what do you recommend to challenge my scepticism?
Some other points:
"Sceptic" is the accepted UK English spelling of "skeptic"
I'm 19
Preferably no more than 300 pages (Edit: ok, this may be unreasonable, but lets just say something I could reasonably read in a week or 2*)
It would be nice if it had some breakout success (ie. acclaim outside normal fantasy readers, not some obscure personal favourite)
Some authors I like: Philip K. Dick, Kurt Vonnegut, Jack Kerouac, Bukowski, Alan Moore, John Steinbeck, Kafka
I do like Terry Prachet, but he is the Douglas Adams of the genre, whereas I'm looking for the Philip K. Dick or Frank Herbert.
*My new years resolution was to read more, as, looking back at it, I was very poorly read before this age, maybe reading a few books a year. As of yet, I have been averaging out at about 1 book per week (the longest being Crime and Punishment). I have been focusing mainly on getting through "classics" while also getting a good range of books in. So if someone recommends me a 7 book series, averaging out at about 1000 pages each, I do think "well, I could read that, or I could read the Great Gatsby, On the Road, Grapes of Wrath, Slaughterhouse Five and about 20 other books". I can read at a pace of between 1 and 1.5 minutes per page.