Monday, December 29, 2008

Fantasy Trilogies & Other Related Books

I must admit that this blog has certainly brought to light books I have not looked at for decades. They have mostly all been hidden behind other books more recently purchased. No wonder I hardly buy anything new these days, I've got enough to keep me going until the day I die.

This post will concentrate on fantasy trilogies, the foremost of which is the Riddlemaster of Hed trilogy, a superior fantasy trilogy by Patricia McKillop. It has worn well through the years and I do enjoy rereading it every so often. As usual my sets are a mix of US and UK paperbacks.

mckillop_riddlemaster mckillop_heir mckillop_harpist


I still reread Meredith Ann Pierce's Dark Angel trilogy, as I have always loved it. The paperback covers are quite lovely. I could never find the final volume Pearl of the Soul of the World anywhere in paperback, so eventually bought the hard cover in order to know the end of the story.

pierce_darkangel pierce_gargoyles pierce_pearl

I discovered the following Marian Zimmer Bradley books in the Science Fiction part of the bookcase. They are more fantasy than Science Fiction, so I'm including them here - more DAW paperback originals. They are part of the Darkover series, which I failed to read in any order and didn't collect in any way.

zimmer_bradley_hawkmistress zimmer_bradley_ruins_of _isis zimmer_bradley_stormqueen

Marion Zimmer Bradley did write a best seller, that being The Mists of Avalon, a fictionalised biography of Morgan Le Fay.

zimmer_bradley_avalon

Another Arthurian type trilogy is Gillian Bradshaw's Gawaine trilogy. Very well written, I remember being very impressed with this series way back in the 1970s

bradshaw_hawkofmay bradshaw_kingdom bradshaw_winter

This post basically concludes the adult fantasy section of my bookcase - or the selected bits I've revealed here.

The next few posts will cover a selection of children's fantasy paperbacks - Tove Jansson, Joan Aiken etc.

2 comments:

Clare Dudman said...

"I've got enough to keep me going until the day I die." That sounds familiar!

These covers are all of a certain style, aren't they? Can't quite put my finger on what it is exactly...

Anne S said...

It's probably because the same artists were used over and over. And the style may be typical of fantasy covers in a particular 1970s way.

My favourite of them was Don Maitz.