Terry Pratchett.
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Agreed, I'm most of the way through The Colour of Magic and I can't remember the last time I was reading something where at times I have to stop and fully comprehend what I just read because it was so dang well written that I have to go back and read it again immediately.
And you're on one his weaker books! π«£
https://www.lspace.org/books/apf/index.html
This link has always been helpful for explaining his books.
I am on 12 of 42 or however many he wrote, but damn it if his little quips aren't masteries of word play. So far Sorcery, Wyrd Sisters, and Mort are my favorites.
I tell people it's like living in a Monty Python universe with a dash of magic.
Neil Gaiman
Sir Terry Pratchett.
A phenomenal author whose ability to weave a story is fantastic, but was also adept at writing in jokes and references that make re-reading the novels a delight.
He died in 1982 but his works are hugely influential:
Philip K Dick.
Brandon Sanderson
The man is a top flight book generating machine. Where he's taking the Cosmere, I don't know, but I'm gladly awaiting for the novels he'll write the in future to find out. Reading the Stormlight Archive and Mistborn is a joy.
I also really enjoyed how he wrapped up The Wheel of Time. He is much less reluctant to kill off characters than many other authors, and that series needed some serious character culling to bring closure.
Douglas Adams is undoubtedly one of the greatest writers of the period.
He is known for light, surrealistic science fiction comedy, not a genre generally considered "high art" but his mastery of language is superb. He is a master of analogies in a way that is both funny but also makes the reader think about the roles and conventions of symbolism in language.
"The ships hung in the sky in much the same way that bricks don't."
David Foster Wallace
Stephen King
Haruki Murakami
Kurt Vonnegut
Toni Morrison
Just a few names that popped into my head
Edit: some of these are based on popular opinions. For example, I never really got into Toni Morrison
Vonnegut is wonderful but his first book is 1950s and his greatest success is likely the 1960s. Question asked post 1970.
Iβm happy to see someone else mention Murakami.
I went on tear in universityβa long time ago nowβreading everything that had been translated to English by then. And, while they had the most bizarro plots, I found them to be the most compelling reads, wanting to read more and more, until I ran out of things to read.
He definitely deserves a place on this list.
Terry Pratchett (first book 1971 so barely counts haha)
Two authors I haven't surprisingly seen mentioned
Neil Gaiman is great. If you haven't read his works yet, start with *the ocean at the end of the lane". A wonderful, short read.
This second one is going to be controversial.
George RR Martin. The books are actually well written, and yes the final book probably won't get written, but it won't take away from your enjoyment. He is a very good writer.
GRR Martin knows how to write people. I think I learned a great deal of humanism just by reading his works alone
Neil Gaiman. The man can write novels, YA novels, graphic novels, childrenβs books. And they all have such well crafted worlds that you just want to lose yourself in them.
I also think Neal Stephenson and Corey Doctorow deserve WAY more attention than they get.
I'm going to repeat Ursula K Le Guin and Margaret Atwood because it's hard to overstate how much of everything is in their works. Iain (M) Banks I'll also echo, but will add China MiΓ©ville because there aren't enough anarchists in this thread.
Cormac McCarthy, wrote some books you might have seen as movies such as The Road and No Country for Old Men.
Blood Meridian or The Evening Redness in the West is a crazy good book.
Alan Moore
Saga of the Swamp Thing and Watchmen are two amazing runs of comics he wrote.
Huge fan of his recent-ish novel, Jerusalem.
Considering how many of his stories have been adapted to tv and movies, in addition to being great on their own: Stephen King.
Cory Doctorow and I suggest reading Walkaway. I found it transformative.
Terry Pratchett! The Discworld books have kept me busy for years now and I don't even consider myself much of a reader.
Andy Weir -from a not too avid reader
Really love how nobody is hating on any of the replies here.
Ken Follet: Pillars of the Earth. Historical fiction. You're transported back to the 1200s. Cathedral building with raunchy politics, a bit of HBO Game of Thrones mixed in. It was extremely visual... and fondly memorable for me.
I haven't seen Chuck Palahniuk mentioned, and he was very influential to a bunch of us millenials, I imagine. He is very good at writing about the nihilism of modern times.
Fight Club is the most popular example of his novels, and its a great read. I am also really particular to, Rant:The Oral Biography of Buster. Its such a weird story, and was one of the first books to really spark my interest in reading fiction. He has a bunch of other good novels I would recommend, like Snuff, Choke, and Lullaby.
Haruki Murakami. I've liked everything he's written up to 1Q84. I'm sure his newer stuff is good too I just haven't caught up to them yet lol
If you want something more like hard sci-fi/cyberpunk, I recommend the Otherland series by Tad Williams. It's seriously probably the best modern sci-fi I've ever read
- John Scalzi - Old Man's War series and The Interdependency series
- Dennis E. Taylor - Bobiverse
I would say Robin Hobb. She writes easy to read, character driven fantasy novels that gracefully deal with a gamut of difficult topics (e.g., orphanism, otherness, sexual violence, mortality, etc.). The books really helped me build empathy for people and concepts that were far afield of my own experience.
Ones that many people have mentioned: Atwood, Wallace, Murakami
One I don't think anyone has said yet - Paul Auster. I've only read New York Trilogy so far, but I thought it was superb.
My nominations will be limited in scope to fantasy and sci-fi, but there are a few stand outs. Now, on to my nominations.
There are so many amazing authors in our era, but I'll stick to a few only.
-
Brandon Sanderson - he writes like a machine, churning out books in-between other books. He's unstoppable. I haven't enjoyed his latest stuff, but his early stuff is outstanding high fantasy. Way of Kings blew my mind when I read it, and Mistborn was so original and awesome.
-
Joe Ambercrombie - The Blade Itself is a wonderful book, as are all the follow-up novels
-
Dan Simmons - The Hyperion Cantos is the most complex, outstanding, high-minded, thought provoking science fiction I've ever read.
-
N. K. Jemisin - The Fifth Season and it's sequels are some of the most unique ideas I've ever read. It's incomparable to anything else. It stands alone in creativity.
Honorable mentions: William Gibson, Dennis E. Taylor,
Robert Jordan - Wheel of Time Saga.
The Amazon show does not do it justice on my opinion, but it has been explained with how it's another turn of the wheel and a "what if"
And Brandon Sanderson, who wrapped the series after Jordan died and is an amazing author himself.
Not only amazing, but also a freaking machine when it comes to churning out books.
- Greg Egan
- Rudy Rucker
- Vernor Vinge
Hard, computational SF aren't given nearly the respect they should, and these apply math, comp sci, and physics in a way nobody else does. If there's any civilization in the future, they'll be seen as visionary.
Runners-up are Robert L. Forward, Alastair Reynolds, but Forward has very little computation, and Reynolds doesn't show his math too often.
Ray Bradbury. All his books are amazing.
Bah, I don't feel like reading? He wrote tons of short stories.
first well known work after 1970
The Martian Chronicles was published in 1950, Fahrenheit 453 in 1953
Consider Kazuo Ishiguro. I've only read Remains of the Day, and that was because I liked the movie, but the book is basically flawless.