If you want fantasy-
Zelazny: The Chronicles of Amber, Quest for the Faradawn by (?), The Land of Laughs by (?), various novels by Charles DeLint, Brokedown Palace by Stephen Brust and one of my all-time favs: To Reign In Hell by Stephen Brust-a story of Lucifer vs the maniac in charge of Heaven
this is all serious stuff, below is the funny
The Myth series by Asprin
Pratchett and his Discworld
The first four Xanth novels(then let it go-he hacks the rest)
Grunts! by Mary Gentle(possibly the funniest fantasy I've ever read-if your sense of humor leans towards the truly twisted)
The Wizardry Compiled by Rick Cook
The Warlock In Spite of Himself by C. Staffesh(an absolute classic that continued on in several books, this one stands as somewhat unique as it uses technology to create magic. If you read Brin's The Practice Effect and thought it was even a little amusing you will love this. Any author that makes an epileptic, robotic talking horse a major character is touching pristine literary ground, IMO)
Zelazny: The Chronicles of Amber, Quest for the Faradawn by (?), The Land of Laughs by (?), various novels by Charles DeLint, Brokedown Palace by Stephen Brust and one of my all-time favs: To Reign In Hell by Stephen Brust-a story of Lucifer vs the maniac in charge of Heaven
this is all serious stuff, below is the funny
The Myth series by Asprin
Pratchett and his Discworld
The first four Xanth novels(then let it go-he hacks the rest)
Grunts! by Mary Gentle(possibly the funniest fantasy I've ever read-if your sense of humor leans towards the truly twisted)
The Wizardry Compiled by Rick Cook
The Warlock In Spite of Himself by C. Staffesh(an absolute classic that continued on in several books, this one stands as somewhat unique as it uses technology to create magic. If you read Brin's The Practice Effect and thought it was even a little amusing you will love this. Any author that makes an epileptic, robotic talking horse a major character is touching pristine literary ground, IMO)