What's the Name of That Book??? discussion
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fantasy/ya fantasy with 3 or more books
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1st novelization:
Agatha H and the Airship City
Original comics:
Girl Genius Omnibus Volume One: Agatha Awakens (book)
Girl Genius Online (free online archive, page 1)
(The color in the first volume fluctuates from black and white to bright, to indicate the extent that Agatha's cognition is depressed. This stops in volume two.)


The Daughter of Smoke and Bone series
The Grisha series
The Elemental Trilogy book 3 comes out in October.

The Throne of Glass still lingers unread on my Kindle (the first book), the others I will check out.
From me:
These two series are just starting, so not sure, how the series will be.
But I liked these books a lot (and reviewed them):
The Girl at Midnight, not sure, how many books it will be, I think 3 was mentioned, but am not sure, also this may change.
Review is not really long, I planned to flesh it out, but forgot, sorry:
Girl at Midnight
And this is planned to be 7 books, so it will be epic:
The Bone Season
my review
with the second book already published:
The Mime Order
my review.
As these are all newer, there is a certain risk regarding the unpublished sequels, but these I can highly recommend.
For a series, where all books are published, I suggest Mara Dyer, a trilogy, starting with:
The Unbecoming of Mara Dyer.
Still have to think about how I will review the third book, as I did not like the ending and it was too obvious.
And all in all, there was too much romance, but that may just be me.
Review:
Mara Dyer 1
Mara Dyer 2
These books I reviewed are all solid 5stars from me.
Most other series I read are more like 1 book 1 closed story and a different story-arc for the series, but that is not as significant or as epic.

And I know everyone's read it, but A Game of Thrones is like this too.


An adult (reading age, as opposed to XXX rated) series that spreads over 8 books is the Fisher and Hawk series. Definitely fantasy, but down on the darker end of the spectrum.
There is a prequel that is totally different from the rest of the series and that was written after they were, then the 6 that comprised the "original" series, and finally a postquel (or whatever you call it when you write another book to tie up more loose ends.)
Hawk & Fisher the the first book published, but Beyond the Blue Moon is the prequel (but again, it's the 7th book that was written.) with the final book being Once In a Blue Moon. I know that you can get the 6 original books in omnibus form, with I think it's 2 books per, but it's been a while since I saw one of those, and it could be 3 to a book.
Not sure that it's "spread over the whole series) quite enough for you, but it's still a good fantasy series.
There is a prequel that is totally different from the rest of the series and that was written after they were, then the 6 that comprised the "original" series, and finally a postquel (or whatever you call it when you write another book to tie up more loose ends.)
Hawk & Fisher the the first book published, but Beyond the Blue Moon is the prequel (but again, it's the 7th book that was written.) with the final book being Once In a Blue Moon. I know that you can get the 6 original books in omnibus form, with I think it's 2 books per, but it's been a while since I saw one of those, and it could be 3 to a book.
Not sure that it's "spread over the whole series) quite enough for you, but it's still a good fantasy series.


All that said, I second the recommendation of the The Wheel Of Time. What you're looking for is a common criticism of the storyline.
The Lord of the Rings trilogy would also qualify, I think. It was never intended to be broken up into three parts.
My other recs are the first books in series where each installment wraps up enough plotlines to satisfy but still leaves enough open that you feel like you have to read the next book:
Thirteenth Child by Patricia Wrede. A young girl grows up in an alternate, magical Earth where the US has only spread to the Mississippi river by about 1850. I really liked this one, can't recommend it highly enough.
Steelheart by Brandon Sanderson. The world as we know it ended when super-powered individuals started appearing. Unfortunately, they are uniformly evil, and no superheroes have come forth to counter them. Steelheart is the invincible tyrant who rules what used to be Chicago. The main character is a young man who was there when Steelheart first appeared, and is the only one who ever saw him bleed.
Beguilement is the first book in the Sharing Knife series by Lois McMaster Bujold. A young woman becomes involved with a much older man who's a member of the Lakewalkers that protect humanity from evil magic Malices.

The Belgariad:
Pawn of Prophecy
Queen of Sorcery
Magician's Gambit
Castle of Wizardry
Enchanters' End Game
The Malloreon:
Guardians of the West
King of the Murgos
Demon Lord of Karanda
Sorceress of Darshiva
The Seeress of Kell
There have also been a few other books related to these:
Polgara the Sorceress
Belgarath the Sorcerer
The Rivan Codex: Ancient Texts of the Belgariad and the Malloreon


If anyone has any more suggestions, feel free to add them. I'm always hungry for more recs!


Don't listen to all those Throne of Glass people. They're decent, and the heroine, Celaena, is awesome, but they're a romance/fairy tale retelling series disguised as a fantasy series. It's got a love triangle that eats the plot. Look for Mistborn, His Dark Materials, the Farasala Trilogy, The Keys to the Kingdom, Abarat the Books of Pellinor or Beyonders instead. For an urban fantasy suggestion, Daughter of Smoke and Bone is great, for sci-fi, you should totally check out the Chaos Walking Trilogy and for adult fantasy, you can't go wrong with Game of Thrones or The Wheel of Time.

https://www.goodreads.com/series/44007
Also, these series are good:
https://www.goodreads.com/series/57803
https://www.goodreads.com/series/119513
https://www.goodreads.com/series/44457
I agree with the suggestions of Daughter of Smoke and Bone.

Mindy Klasky (Glasswright)
Maria V. Snyder (Study, then Glass)
Tamora Pierce (check out her author page for the complete lists)
Ursula K. Le Guin (Annals of the Western Shore)
Mercedes Lackey (all of them, but especially everything Valdemar.)
Patricia C. Wrede (Frontier Magic)
Shannon Hale (Books of Bayern & Princess Academy)
Megan Whalen Turner (Queens Thief)
Janice Hardy (Healer's War)


https://www.goodreads.com/series/44007
Also, these series are good:
https://www.goodread..."
The Mortal Instruments are great.

I also enjoy the Woodcutter Sisters books by Alethea Kontis. Each sister has something to do with the days of the week they were born on that corresponds to the nursery rhyme, "Monday's child is fair of face...". Each book resolves fairly neatly but still leaves a few mysteries that compel you to read the next book.

Farworld series by Savage is exciting and full of puzzles about a boy and girl from different worlds who are switched at birth.
Brandon Sanderson has a hilarious series, The Alcatraz series, where magic is real and science and libraries are tools used by the evil Librarians who rule the world (in secret).
Septimus Heap is a long series I got tired of reading, though I did enjoy the books.


I was about to recommend this as well, but just keep in mind if you start this series that the third book is still unpublished.
The Name of the Wind is the first book. It's a really enjoyable read.

I particularly loved the series of 4 about the dragons but all of her books belong to one universe albeit a different part each tome

I love the cover art


The Lady Trent Memoirs is a fantastic series! I've given every book in that series 4 stars.

The Walker series by C.E. Murphy Urban Shaman

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Authors mentioned in this topic
Quinn Loftis (other topics)Mindy Klasky (other topics)
Janice Hardy (other topics)
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Ursula K. Le Guin (other topics)
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Er, example: Seven Realms series
I'm not looking for (at least in this thread) series where the first book could stand alone and the second and third books are expanding on that world.
Example: Lumatere Chronicles, Abhorsen series (Which I both loved! Just not looking for right here.)
Basically if I can set the series down after the first book and be mostly satisfied things are gonna be okay, it's not what I'm looking for right now.
Bonus points for:
~ Slow burn / long game
~ Female protagonist or at least one female POV