The Fantasy Masterworks – how many have you read?

An easy post to start off the weekend. A wweek ago I asked how many science fiction masterworks y’all had read, today it’s the turn of the Fantasy Masterworks. Somewhat less succesful than the first series, only fifty books were released in it. This relative lack of succes may be explained by the schizophrenic nature of the series. Most of the books published were well known and much loved genre classics, by writers like Dunsany, Leigh Brackett or Zelazny, but the more modern books tended towards the more literary end of the spectrum, with writers like Jonathan Carroll , Sheri Tepper or John Crowley. Nothing wrong with that, but not everybody’s cup of tea.

Some strange choices there as well: Song of Kali is not a good book, let alone a Fantasy Masterwork. (Who was it who said something like “this book does to India what the Black Death did to Europe”?) You could also argue that some of the books here are more at home amongst the science fiction masterworks, but that’s always going to be the case.

Anyway, here comes the bragging. As per usual, in bold are the ones I’ve read, italic means I’ve got them in my library and both means the obvious.

1 – The Book of the New Sun, Volume 1: Shadow and Claw – Gene Wolfe
2 – Time and the Gods – Lord Dunsany
3 – The Worm Ouroboros – E.R. Eddison
4 – Tales of the Dying Earth – Jack Vance
5 – Little, Big – John Crowley
6 – The Chronicles of Amber – Roger Zelazny
7 – Viriconium – M. John Harrison
8 – The Conan Chronicles, Volume 1: The People of the Black Circle – Robert E. Howard
9 – The Land of Laughs – Jonathan Carroll
10 – The Compleat Enchanter: The Magical Misadventures of Harold Shea – L. Sprague de Camp and Fletcher Pratt
11 – Lud-in-the-Mist – Hope Mirrlees
12 – The Book of the New Sun, Volume 2: Sword and Citadel – Gene Wolfe
13 – Fevre Dream – George R. R. Martin
14 – Beauty – Sheri S. Tepper
15 – The King of Elfland’s Daughter – Lord Dunsany
16 – The Conan Chronicles, Volume 2: The Hour of the Dragon – Robert E. Howard
17 – Elric – Michael Moorcock
18 – The First Book of Lankhmar – Fritz Leiber
19 – Riddle-Master – Patricia A. McKillip
20 – Time and Again – Jack Finney
21 – Mistress of Mistresses – E.R. Eddison
22 – Gloriana or the Unfulfill’d Queen – Michael Moorcock
23 – The Well of the Unicorn – Fletcher Pratt
24 – The Second Book of Lankhmar – Fritz Leiber
25 – Voice of Our Shadow – Jonathan Carroll

Three women in the first twentyfive entries; that’s better than the science fiction masterworks series already.

26 – The Emperor of Dreams – Clark Ashton Smith
27 – Lyonesse I: Suldrun’s Garden – Jack Vance
28 – Peace – Gene Wolfe
29 – The Dragon Waiting – John M. Ford
30 – Corum: The Prince in the Scarlet Robe – Michael Moorcock
31 – Black Gods and Scarlet Dreams – C.L. Moore
32 – The Broken Sword – Poul Anderson
33 – The House on the Borderland and Other Novels – William Hope Hodgson
34 – The Drawing of the Dark – Tim Powers
35 – Lyonesse II and III: The Green Pearl and Madouc – Jack Vance
36 – The History of Runestaff – Michael Moorcock
37 – A Voyage to Arcturus – David Lindsay
38 – Darker Than You Think – Jack Williamson
39 – The Mabinogion – Evangeline Walton
40 – Three Hearts & Three Lions – Poul Anderson
41 – Grendel – John Gardner
42 – The Iron Dragon’s Daughter – Michael Swanwick
43 – WAS – Geoff Ryman
44 – Song of Kali – Dan Simmons
45 – Replay – Ken Grimwood
46 – Sea Kings of Mars and Other Worldly Stories – Leigh Brackett
47 – The Anubis Gates – Tim Powers
48 – The Forgotten Beasts of Eld – Patricia A. McKillip
49 – Something Wicked This Way Comes – Ray Bradbury
50 – The Mark of the Beast and Other Fantastical Tales – Rudyard Kipling

And four more women in the last twentyfive. Still nowhere near enough, but still better than in the other series.

1 Comment

  • skidmarx

    July 17, 2010 at 9:18 am

    5 – such an unexpectedly great book, with grand ambition and a page-turning style.