Thursday, April 4, 2024

Tracy Cooper-Posey's Top Ten Fantasy Stories Of All Time #Fantasy


Fantasy is a huge, sprawling mega-genre.  Like only a touch of speculative fiction?  Magical Realism is your ticket.  

Like a lot of magic and more?  Epic Fantasy will suit you.  So might contemporary fantasy. 
There’s something for everyone.

I like a whole range of different types of fantasy.  Here’s my top 10 list—will any of them surprise you?

The Pern Series by Anne McCaffrey – The Dragonriders

I know, I know.  Anne McCaffrey would break out in hives if she caught me calling her Hugo and Nebula award winning series “fantasy”, but for most of the very early books in the series, that’s exactly how the series reads, like a deeply fascinating fantasy.  
Besides, there’s dragons.  And very cool dragon-riders. 

The series gets two entries in this list, because the books in it are sharply divided by various parts of Pern society.  The dragons and their dragon-riders are one of the best aspects of the series.

The Gunnie Rose series by Charlaine Harris

The Gunnie Rose series, starting with book 1, An Easy Death, is an alternative history of the North American continent, which features the descendants of the last Tsar of Russia, who escaped to America (in actual history, Tsar Nicholas and his entire family were assassinated in the last days of the Great War).  

I love alternative histories, but this one is special – there’s magic.  Everywhere.  

Charlaine Harris doesn’t pull punches when telling her stories. The first book is amazing.

Mistborn by Brandon Sanderson (The Cosmere series)

Brandon Sanderson is known as an epic fantasy author.  He finished off the Wheel of Time series when Robert Jordan passed, and was already a very successful fantasist even then. 
Mistborn, though, isn’t just a fantasy story.  It’s also a heist story.  Love Ocean’s 11?  Combine it with unique magic systems, and you have Mistborn.

The Dark is Rising Sequence by Susan Cooper

The Dark is Rising series is a kids’ fantasy series that, even if you’re reading it as an adult, packs an emotional wallop.  This series is responsible for my life-long love affair with King Arthur mythology and everything Welsh. 

The fourth book, The Grey King, makes me cry every time I read it.  It deservedly won the Newbery Medal. 

Susan Cooper has been named this year as the 40th Damon Knight Memorial Grand Master by the Science Fiction and Fantasy Writers Association (SFWA).

The Once and Future King by T.H. White

I discovered The Once and Future King not long after finding Susan Cooper’s The Dark is Rising series, and wallowed in more King Arthur.  

This one is on my list because I love, love, love to hate the tragic romance triangle between Arthur, Guenivere and Lancelot.

The Last Pendragon by Catherine Christian

Acquiring copies of this book was once next to impossible.  I had a tattered copy when I lived in Australia, and finally hunted down an equally battered copy when I moved to Canada…and it took me nearly ten years to find it.  (It’s a lot easier, these days, with Amazon and other on-line stores listing old print editions!) 

This book cemented my obsession with all things Arthurian. It tells the tale of King Arthur by, first, placing the story where it should be in history; the sub-Roman era (fifth and sixth century Britain), not in the medieval period where knights in plate armor joust.  
And it tells the tale with a minimum of magic and supernatural elements (although there are some).  It’s a brilliant rendition.

The Lord of the Rings by J.R.R. Tolkien

I’ve seen a lot of best-of-fantasy lists where The Lord of the Rings (not Lord of the Rings—the movie shortened the name) is added as “obligatory” entry, with the list compiler adding a notation that the book is there because fantasy readers would scream if it wasn’t.

That’s not why I’m adding it here.  I love The Lord of the Rings.  I’ve read it every year since I was 14.  

But I’m not nearly the Middle-Earth nerd that I thought I was.  

Recently, I read Why We Love Middle-Earth: An Enthusiast’s Book About Tolkien, Middle-Earth, and the LotR Fandom by Shawn E. Marchese & Alan Sisto.  These guys put me to shame.  

But their book will inspire you to read The Lord of the Rings, and perhaps even more of the books and lost tales set in Middle-Earth.  They unashamedly adore Tolkien’s fantasy world.

The Sookie Stackhouse series by Charlaine Harris

I loved the books long before the True Blood TV series came along and blithely ignored almost everything in the books. 

Harris’ series is the only one in this list to feature vampires, which is odd, because I’ve written a lot about vampires in my own stories. 

This is the second Charlaine Harris series on my list.  She writes stories that seem gentle and slow, until you get to the end, when blood is spilled, stakes are astronomical, and her main characters rarely walk away unscathed.  

My favourite in the series is Book 4, Dead to the World.  I can’t explain why without laying down massive spoilers.  But I will say that Sookie, toward the end of the story, is forced to make a decision that is utterly heartbreaking.  

The Witcher series by Andrzej Sapkowski

This is one series where I usually recommend that the TV series be watched as you’re reading the books.  There’s connective tissue here and there, but the books tell the story of the Witcher in a different way to the TV show.  Neither is better than the other, which is why I suggest reading/watching.  It’s like a braid, with the TV show weaving over and under the stories. 
But it’s classic fantasy, with a distinctly European flair.  I grew up (re)reading classic fairy tales, and this series has the same “feel” as those tales.

The Pern series by Anne McCaffrey – the Masterharpers books

The second entry for this series, focusing this time on the Harper Hall and its residents, and the Masterharpers, too.   

What I like about this sub-series of books isn’t the music, but the fact that the harpers of Pern are political lobbyists, activists, and far-thinkers.  They quietly direct the affairs of Pern while the dragon-riders take all the glory. 

Fascinating!





Crossroads Magic
Witchtown Crossing
Book One
Tracy Cooper-Posey

Genre:  Paranormal Women’s Fiction, Paranormal Romance, Contemporary Fantasy
Publisher:  Stories Rule Press
Date of Publication:   March 21, 2024
Amazon ISBN: 9781779431943
ISBN: 9781779432018
ASIN:   B0CP3CKP12
Number of pages: 306 pages
Word Count:  74,000 words
Cover Artist:  Dar Dixon, Wicked Smart Designs

Tagline:  I’m just an ordinary, middle-aged woman, and my life is falling apart….

Book Description:

When did I become such a cliché?  I’m divorced, working a crappy job, living on next to nothing, and wondering how it all went so wrong. 

Then it goes even more wrong.  My grown daughter turns up after not speaking to me for two years, with stunning news of her own, and to cap it off, I’m summoned to a tiny, isolated hamlet in northern New York called Haigton Crossing, where my mother has lived for decades.

Haigton Crossing looks like a throwback to another time.  For such a small place, it is stuffed full of secrets.  The people there are different, including the town’s doctor, Benedict Marcus.  And Haigton Crossing is way, way too small to host a murder….

This book is part of the paranormal women’s fiction series, Witchtown Crossing
1.0: Crossroads Magic …with more to come!

A Paranormal Women’s Fiction novel.



Praise for Crossroads Magic:

Love this new series. Once I started reading, I didn’t want to put it down.

Now I must wait for the next book which is pure torture.

Nice to read about a woman starting over after her daughter has grown.

As I adore everything Tracy writes...I am on cloud nine with the start of a new series.

It was wonderful to read a book about a woman who is closer to my age facing problems that I might actually have.

She explains the sights, sounds and smells in a way that makes you feel like you are there. I am eagerly awaiting the next book in this series!

What a delight! A heroine with some life experience, with real world problems.

A NEW Series From TRACY!!! EEEK!

Tracy's strong suit in her writing is her character development and knowing when a good twist and turn is needed to further captivate her audience.

An excellent beginning to what promises to be a most intriguing series, Crossroads Magic is a fascinating story in itself, though there are so many different directions this series could take.

Excerpt Chapter One

The only thing I was worried about as I headed back to my apartment building was the spot on the back of my hand where hot fat had left a burn the size of a nickel.  Small, but mighty, the burn throbbed and ached, reminding me it was there.  It was worse when the sun hit it, which it did frequently.  It was one of those perfect, mild days in December, when you could actually see the sky over L.A. and it was blue.  

Who am I kidding?  The burn spot wasn’t the only thing I was worried about.  If you were to ask me, I could rattle off a dozen major and minor problems, including the sumo-sized rat I suspect was trying to take up residence under my kitchen sink.  But those were all chronic problems.

The burn on my hand was new and painful.  I didn’t need new problems and was trying my best to ignore it until I could slather aloe vera gel on it.  Marjorie, at the diner, had hacked off a leaf from the plant sitting in the pot outside the kitchen door when Deborah, the assistant manager, hadn’t been looking. Marj had wrapped the leaf in plastic. It was in my bag, along with the serving of pecan pie which Deborah had ordered the waitresses to throw out because it was too old.  Three days old…there was nothing wrong with it, and it had more calories in it than the egg and toast I had lined up for dinner.

In this world that wasn’t the one I would voluntarily choose, today was turning out okay. Pecan pie, and Hobgoblin of History in my ears.  I had been waiting weeks for book fifteen of M.K. Lint’s fantasy series.  The library had doled it out to me yesterday and I was on chapter three.  Harry the Hobgoblin was looking for the Fairy Eloise, this book; he’d lost her at the end of the last one, because he hadn’t closed the Doors of Eternal Flame in time and a demon had abducted her.  

I like reading.  I like it a lot.

 My building was a white monstrosity that did nothing to enhance the L.A. skyline.  The white had long ago turned to a stained, dull grey.  Five years ago, a fire had broken out on the top floor and burned out a few apartments.  The black smoke had billowed up out of the windows, staining the walls above them.  The stains were still there and every time I saw them, I had to remind myself they were smoke stains, not black mould taking over the building.  Black mould seemed more appropriate.

I turned off the audiobook, stashed my phone in my pocket and headed for the front door.  I only used the front door when I came home from work.  Usually, I used the side door, because it was closer to the bus stop.

There was another homeless person sitting on the front steps, leaning against the wrought iron bannister as if they couldn’t prop themselves up, their jean jacket pulled in tight.  It wasn’t that cold, although this late in the afternoon, any warmth in the day was beginning to fade.
I swung around the homeless person’s worn boots, and up the steps, digging out my key.

“Mom?”  The voice wavered.

I whirled, my heart rate climbing, to face the woman rising from the steps, a denial on my lips.  

Blue, short, spiky hair.  A nose ring.  Black eye makeup that had run…or that she had been wearing for too many days.  The black looked like bruises.

“Ghaliya?” I asked, for the high cheekbones, narrow chin and high forehead were hers.  So were the blue eyes—even if they were blood shot.  The next question was right there, behind my teeth.  What the hell are you doing here?

Ghaliya pulled the jacket in around her once more.  She’d lost weight since the last time I’d seen her…two years, two months and five days ago.   And about thirty minutes.  

“The super said you’d be home around now,” Ghaliya said.  She bent and picked up a small black backpack that had been sitting under her knees and straightened.

Was it possible she’d got taller?  She’d been an inch shorter than me.  I didn’t think she was shorter than me anymore, and I am nearly always the tallest woman in the room.

I didn’t ask why she was here.  That was obvious.  She needed help.  

I hefted my keys instead.  “You’d better come in.”





About the Author:

Tracy Cooper-Posey is the author of the popular Once and Future Hearts historical fantasy romance series, among others. She writes romantic suspense, historical, paranormal, fantasy and science fiction romance, plus women’s fiction. She also writes under the pen names of Cameron Cooper (science fiction) and Taylen Carver (fantasy).  She has published over 200 titles since 1999, been nominated for five CAPAs including Favourite Author, and won the Emma Darcy Award.

She turned to indie publishing in 2011. Her indie titles have been nominated four times for Book Of The Year. Tracy won the award in 2012, a SFR Galaxy Award in 2016 and came fourth in Hugh Howey’s SPSFC#2 in 2023. She has been a national magazine editor and for a decade she taught romance writing at MacEwan University. 

She is addicted to Irish Breakfast tea and chocolate, sometimes taken together. In her spare time she enjoys history, Sherlock Holmes, science fiction and ignoring her treadmill. An Australian Canadian, she lives in Edmonton, Canada with her husband, a former professional wrestler, where she moved in 1996 after meeting him on-line.

 


Barnes and Noble: https://shorturl.at/fhsu7 
 
 



Facebook Fiction Page:  https://www.facebook.com/TracyCooperPosey   

Facebook Readers' Hangout:  https://www.facebook.com/groups/TCPHangout/ 






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