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Who do you consider a Great Author of the last 50 years or so (first well-known work after 1970)? I'd like to get a feel for who's who in modern literature. Any language/culture. Fiction only.

Bonus points for any books you believe are classics from that time period. Any language, but only fiction please.

I'm really excited to see what Lemmy has.

222 comments
  • 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."

    • Oh wow I was legitimately surprised that Adams even fit in this thread. I'd have thought he was a mid-20th century author, writing at around the same time as Tolkien. But nope. The book of Hitchhiker's Guide came out in '79…

  • 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.

  • 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'm a big John Scalzi fan. Whenever one of his books release, it's basically xmas for me. There have been a few less than stellar books, but overal they are very enjoyable.

    • Scalzi - the first few books yes, afterwards I just lost interest and read them for the sake of reading them.

      • For me I enjoyed both of Scalzi's series, the story written in a plain language but it's still exciting and captive, with some plot twists added.

        Each series is set in different universes with their own limitations.

    • Dennis E. Taylor - Bobiverse

      That was pretty fun except the 4th book.

  • 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.

  • Gene Wolfe - the style of his sci-fi is mesmerizingly mysterious, even the mundane things described take on sinister tones

222 comments