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18 votes
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Best of all time book lists can get repetitive, I'm asking for your top five to ten
I think the most interesting and individual suggestions come not from someone's absolute favorite book, but from the contenders, the runners up. These are more likely to reflect a niche interest...
I think the most interesting and individual suggestions come not from someone's absolute favorite book, but from the contenders, the runners up. These are more likely to reflect a niche interest or unique perspective imho. Anyway, if you are willing, please name some of your best lifetime book experiences.
66 votes -
I love fantasy books with quality plot, character development and well written romantic content - These are my favorites
Reddit refugee here, I've been posting my book reviews on /r/Fantasy for years and figured some of you all would be interested in a best of list. My full list of all book reviews can be found...
Reddit refugee here, I've been posting my book reviews on /r/Fantasy for years and figured some of you all would be interested in a best of list. My full list of all book reviews can be found here, but most of the links are broken right now because the Fantasy subreddit is still private. Still, perhaps the titles, authors and keywords are helpful.
What I enjoy
A brief list of things I care about in books, to help you jugde whether your taste overlaps:
- a good balance of romance and plot, where there is prominent romance but never feels like the story is just about that
- quality prose and dialogue
- believable relationship development, including romantic tension and explicit payoff for it
- high stakes drama, be it interpersonal, warfare, duels, court politics or heists
- LBGTQ+ main characters and queer romance
Note that these aren't the only qualities of the books listed below, just generally what I look for. I'll also gladly take recommendations for fantasy books that fit these criteria if you have any!
Books
Kushiel's Legacy by Jacqueline Carey
A divinely blessed masochistic courtesan and spy uncovers conspiracies against the crown of fantasy France. This series is probably my absolute favorite for how it combines intrigue, romance, kink and action, all with excellent prose and characterization. It has deliciously horny worldbuilding and ends up telling an epic fantasy story with an incredibly unique protagonist.
Silver Under Nightfall by Rin Chupeco
A recent addition to my absolute favorites. The author described the book as "vampire couple finds himbo in the trash and takes him in". If you're not sold on that, imagine a vibe like Netflix Castlevania and The Witcher - vampire hunter who's highly competent but looked down upon, vampire science, undead threat, dark gothic kind of setting, sprinkled with some "who's the real monster actually?" philosophy.
A Dowry of Blood by S.T. Gibson
A Dowry of Blood is about healing from abusive relationships through murder. It's also walks an excellent line between being sexy and horrible. It tells the story of Dracula's "brides", and the beautifully messed up relationship the four of them have.
Note: this one can't be described as having a "romantic subplot", since that implies some sort of happy ending. You know, because of the murder. (that's not a spoiler, it's revealed on page one)
A Charm of Magpies by KJ Charles
A disgraced nobleman returns to England years after escaping his father and finds himself and his family estate haunted. He hires a magician - who happens to bear his family a grudge. The Magpie series is fast paced, highly entertaining, well written, and plays with some delicious power dynamics between its initially hostile and soon reluctantly mutually attracted main characters.
Folk of the Air by Holly Black
The only YA series on this list, Folk of the Air holds a special place in my heart for its delicious fairy court politicking and for not pulling its punches. The titular Cruel Prince is a wonderfully hateable love interest, and even though I feel a few years too old to properly enjoy this series, the stabby and vicious dynamics between the two leads is just wonderful.
Nightrunner by Lynn Flewelling
A young man gets innocently imprisoned and receives unexpected help from his cellmate: a spy, rogue, thief and nobleman. The latter offers him a way out and an apprenticeship, which leads to well... spying and thievery, but also sinister necromantic plots against the throne. The highlight of this series is the ongoing relationship development between its leads. Book 1-2 are fantastic, book 4-5 are really weird, but the whole series remains a favorite despite some strange choices.
Rook & Rose by M.a. Carrick
A skilled con artist, a masked vigilante that challenges aristocrats to duels, and a dashing crime lord turned nobleman. The Rook & Rose series shines in its rich worldbuilding and prose, but especially in its handling of its main characters' multiple secrets, cons and identities. And especially shines when those schemes start crumbling down and some of the secrets become unveiled.
If the third book in the trilogy sticks the landing later this year, this series will firmly establish itself among my all time favorites.
The Stariel Quartet by AJ Lancaster
Years after leaving her family, a young woman returns home for her father's funeral and soon needs to deal with a magical estate that has a mind of its own, and discover that there may be more magic in the world around her than she's realized. The Stariel series is cozy and home-y in many ways, but doesn't shy away from tension either, and I find myself still in love with the main characters even long after finishing the series. I also really enjoyed the spinoff, A Rake of His Own recently!
Harrow Faire by Kathryn Ann Kingsley
Most of the books on here are fantasy with romance, while this one sits more firmly in the capital R Romance genre. But it is dark romance ("villain gets the girl"), and features an absolutely unhinged love interest, a lot of murder, and an evil circus. The series isn't without flaws (some of the side characters get a bit too much page for
how flat they are, and the pacing is a tiny bit uneven in parts), but I blasted through all five (short) books in a week because I had so much fun with it.The Last Binding by Freya Marske
This series takes place in an early 20th century England where a secret magical society exists in parallel to the world 'as we know it'. There's even a bit of magical British bureaucracy that reminded me of aspects of the Harry Potter books, though the series have little in common otherwise.
Every book in this trilogy follows the same overarching plot, but features a different pairing of main characters and romantic leads. It's queer, fun and fast-paced, though sometimes a bit on the fluffy and romancey side for my taste.
That's just a brief selection of favorites, I highly recommend heading over to the reddit post (I should back that up at some point with Reddit's future being a bit shaky rn) to find more titles.
Thank you for reading! There's lots more to say on each of theses books of course, but I didn't want this to get way too long.
Let me know if you found this interesting, if you have similar books you'd recommend to me, or just share if you also enjoyed any of these books. This is my first post on Tildes and I'm happy to meet new fellow readers :)69 votes -
Top ten best Judge Dredd stories of all time
12 votes -
Seven amazing accomplishments the James Webb Space Telescope achieved in its first year
44 votes -
NFL’s ten highest-graded wide receivers against man coverage
14 votes -
The fifteen greatest Nintendo DS games of all time
36 votes -
What belongs in your "base" hard-copy library?
I finally have the space to finish a project I've been working on which is a study with 3 bookcases. So far, my idea is to have 1 with books that will always be there, such as classic reads, or...
I finally have the space to finish a project I've been working on which is a study with 3 bookcases. So far, my idea is to have 1 with books that will always be there, such as classic reads, or even an encyclopedia maybe?, or other reference material. Basically, a permanent bookcase whether or not I've read the material. The other two will be rotated in and out of stuff that I'm reading, have read recently or on my backlog before swapping or donating.
Anyways, what's in your "must have" bookcase? Reference, fiction/non-fiction, Calvin & Hobbes even! (Although that's more of a coffee table piece)
18 votes -
What happened to Digg?
36 votes -
Premier League fixtures: Man City away to Burnley, Chelsea host Liverpool, Luton at Brighton
10 votes -
List of recurring threads and their schedules?
Do we have a list of recurring discussions and their schedules anywhere? I know they're generally weekly, but I often find myself having to do a quick search for when the last one was and...
Do we have a list of recurring discussions and their schedules anywhere? I know they're generally weekly, but I often find myself having to do a quick search for when the last one was and determine whether or not I should hold onto my contribution to that thread until the next one occurs. eg if the new discussion is created tomorrow, I may as well just post my comments tomorrow rather than today. Admittedly a very minor inconvenience.
Having a list somewhere easy to see could also help prevent folks from unintentionally creating duplicate discussions during the period between one week's discussion going quiet and the next week's starting.
And maybe eventually it could be something like we subscribe to a recurring discussion and then it shows up in the sidebar somewhere in a list of upcoming discussions? Just spitballing here.
Any thoughts?
11 votes -
My completely subjective ski town tier list
Intro & Tier Definitions I've been mulling over a ski town tier list in my head for a few weeks and I was just thinking of putting it on paper when all the reddit stuff happened. So instead of...
Intro & Tier Definitions
I've been mulling over a ski town tier list in my head for a few weeks and I was just thinking of putting it on paper when all the reddit stuff happened. So instead of posting it to /r/skiing I'm posting it here. This is completely subjective and is only based on the relatively small number of ski towns I've lived in or visited. My ulterior motive here is to get your thoughts on additions to this list along with which tier they should fall into... specifically S Tier places I haven't visited. I'm not doing any research - this is strictly based on my opinions from places I've personally been to.
A quick note: I'm only thinking about the towns themselves here. Not the quality of skiing, snowfall, or anything else. For the purposes of this ranking system, a 200' hill in the Midwest with a great little town at the base would fall into S Tier while 10,000 acre mega-resort with a $10B purpose-built resort village would fall into B Tier.
Here's my completely subjective ranking system:
S Tier: S tier is the "perfect mountain town". These towns typically existed prior to the ski area, and still have a strong community of locals living right in town keeping things vibrant (admittedly, in most places short term rentals have made that community smaller). The towns are also right at the base of the mountain; if they didn't run the plows you could ski from the top of the highest peak right down onto main street, pop your skis off, and start après.
A Tier: These towns are S Tier towns but for one problem - they're just a little too far from the actual ski area to ski right into town. You're going to have to hop in your car or take a bus, or take a long bike ride to get to town. While these towns are still amazing, beautiful places, they're not quintessential perfect towns for that one reason alone. I think for the purposes of this discussion the town has to be within a few minutes of the ski area. Most of these towns will have a B Tier style village at the base as well, but the village isn't the focus here.
B Tier: These towns aren't really "towns". They're purpose-built shopping malls or villages made for the ski area with condos and hotels. Unlike A Tier towns, they don't have a nearby "real" town to tie onto. They may be big and vibrant villages, but they don't have (many) locals living in the core village area, and they never have.
C Tier: Basically a parking lot. Maybe a bar, cafeteria, and a ski rental shop. Usually have a larger town nearby to support some locals, but it's going to be too far away to feel like it's part of the ski area scene. Finally, I'm not really filling out C-Tier that much unless it has an interesting anchor town within 30 minutes or so. I'm also leaving off the dozens of Midwest and East Coast ski areas that I've been to because I frankly haven't skied east of the Rockies in so long that I don't think I could properly categorize them based on memory.
S Tier
- Telluride
- Breckenridge
- Park City
- Aspen (Ajax)
- Heavenly: If memory serves, you can't actually ski to town. But you take a gondola down to town instead of a car/bus so I'm counting it as S Tier. Also South Lake is an interesting take on a ski town. I was on the fence but I'm leaving it in S Tier.
- Kleine Scheidegg-Männlichen-Grindelwald-Wengen: you have to take a train to Interlaken but I think the "villages" here count as actual towns, so this is S Tier.
A Tier
- Steamboat Springs: Almost S Tier. I think if you really tried you could ski from the top of Pony Express into town.
- Silverton
- Whitefish: should maybe be B Tier. I can't remember how close Whitefish (the town) was to the actual ski area.
- Crested Butte: I initially had this in S Tier based on memory, but after looking at the map I realized it was a little further from the base to town than I remembered.
B Tier
- Jackson Hole: this was a tough one. Jackson, WY is one of the coolest towns I've ever been to. Teton Village is also a great little base area. But Jackson is just too far from the tram to really bump this up to A tier.
- Vail: I've lived here since 2015 and I haven't met a single person who lives in Vail Village or Lionshead year-round. The north side of the highway doesn't count as a town, it's really just an amalgamation of box stores, strip malls, and parking lots...
- Keystone
- Beaver Creek
- Aspen (Snowmass & Highlands): not really close enough to Aspen proper to go into A Tier. But close...
- Winter Park
- Big Sky
- Copper
- Squaw
- Kirkwood
C Tier
- Arapahoe Basin: close to Dillon / Frisco / Breck.
- Aspen (Buttermilk): I've only been here during X Games but I think without all that infrastructure they bring in it would just be a parking lot and a cafeteria. I might be wrong. Close to Aspen.
- Monarch: close to Salida.
- Ski Cooper: close to Leadville.
- Bachelor: close to Bend.
Edit: I'll append this list with your suggestions if you'd like to add to it.
Edit 2: The lists within the tiers are in no particular order. I just happened to type them in that order when I thought of them.
17 votes -
Five podcasts for supervillains who are also database professionals
2 votes -
The top 100 games played on the Steam Deck
7 votes -
WGA Awards: ‘Everything Everywhere All At Once’ takes top film prize
4 votes -
ACE Eddie Awards: ‘Top Gun: Maverick’ and ‘Everything Everywhere’ take top film honors
4 votes -
Indie Spirit Awards: ‘Everything Everywhere All At Once’ takes Best Feature, dominates top film prizes
5 votes -
SAG Awards: ‘Everything Everywhere All At Once’ wins top film prize; Michelle Yeoh and Brendan Fraser take lead acting honors
7 votes -
PGA Awards: ‘Everything Everywhere All At Once’ takes Best Picture
4 votes -
BAFTA Film Awards: ‘All Quiet On The Western Front’ named Best Film; Cate Blanchett Best Actress, Austin Butler Best Actor
5 votes -
DGA Awards: Daniel Kwan and Daniel Scheinert win for ‘Everything Everywhere All At Once’
3 votes -
Our imperfect list of books like "Tomorrow and Tomorrow and Tomorrow"
2 votes -
Grammys: Harry Styles wins Album Of The Year for ‘Harry’s House’
7 votes -
Grammy Album Of The Year winners through the years
7 votes -
The year’s biggest art shows and exhibitions
5 votes -
Oscar nominations 2023: The full list
5 votes -
SAG Awards: ‘The Banshees of Inisherin,’ ‘Everything Everywhere All at Once’ lead nominations
5 votes -
Golden Globes: 'The Fabelmans,' 'The Banshees Of Inisherin' win Best Picture
5 votes -
‘Tár’ named Best Picture by National Society of Film Critics
5 votes -
BAFTA Film Awards longlists unveiled: ‘All Quiet on the Western Front,’ ‘Banshees of Inisherin’ and ‘Everything Everywhere’ lead pack
4 votes -
What did we get stuck in our rectums last year?
15 votes -
The ten best comics of 2022
4 votes -
Twenty directors praise 2022’s best films: Guillermo del Toro on ‘Elvis,’ Wes Anderson on ‘White Noise’ and more
3 votes -
‘Everything Everywhere All At Once’ leads 2023 Critics Choice Awards film nominations
4 votes -
Bandcamp's best hip-hop of 2022
7 votes -
AFI 2022 Awards
https://www.afi.com/award/afi-awards-2022/ Movies of the year: Avatar: The Way of Water Elvis Everything Everywhere All At Once The Fabelmans Nope She Said Tár Top Gun: Maverick The Woman King...
https://www.afi.com/award/afi-awards-2022/
Movies of the year:
Avatar: The Way of Water
Elvis
Everything Everywhere All At Once
The Fabelmans
Nope
She Said
Tár
Top Gun: Maverick
The Woman King
Women Talking
AFI Special Award: The Banshees of Inisherin
TV:
Abbott Elementary
The Bear
Better Call Saul
Hacks
Mo
Pachinko
Reservation Dogs
Severance
Somebody Somewhere
The White Lotus
3 votes -
Year in Review: Music of 2022
Spotify Wrapped and Apple Replay are out. Soon we'll start being deluged with annual Best Of lists like this one. It's that time of year! What were your favorite listens this year? What new finds...
Spotify Wrapped and Apple Replay are out. Soon we'll start being deluged with annual Best Of lists like this one. It's that time of year!
What were your favorite listens this year? What new finds did you unexpectedly love? How did your tastes change/evolve (if at all)? What do you consider the best albums of the year? What did the critics get wrong?
Discuss any and all end-of-year music stuff here. Share your Wrapped/Replay/Last.fm/Listenbrainz summary if you'd like. Hype up that hidden gem you think deserves more attention. Anything goes!
13 votes -
“Everything Everywhere All At Once” wins Best Feature at the Gotham Awards
8 votes -
List of all active robots on and around Mars
5 votes -
The nine best Thanksgiving songs I definitely didn’t just make up
2 votes -
Medieval musical instruments
4 votes -
Star Trek: The fifty best alien races
6 votes -
Gotham Awards: ‘Tár,’ ‘Aftersun’ lead nominees
5 votes -
‘All the Beauty and the Bloodshed’ wins Venice Golden Lion, Cate Blanchett and Colin Farrell take acting prizes
7 votes -
Apple’s iPhone 14 event: The nine biggest announcements
11 votes -
2022 Creative Arts Emmys winners list, night one: ‘Adele: One Night Only,’ Super Bowl Halftime, ‘The Beatles: Get Back’ dominate
5 votes -
Venice 2022 lineup: ‘Blonde,’ ‘Bardo,’ ‘The Whale,’ ‘Eternal Daughter,’ and more
3 votes -
The seven best steam train trips in the US
8 votes -
Every movie with Oscar buzz coming out in 2022
I know you all got sick and tired of me talking about awards. But straight after the Oscars happen, award pundits rev up their early predictions. So here's a general list of every movie that has...
I know you all got sick and tired of me talking about awards. But straight after the Oscars happen, award pundits rev up their early predictions. So here's a general list of every movie that has general awards buzz. It's not every movie, but it's a lot of the bigger ones.
I'll link a trailer if there is one (or if there is footage), and I'll put the director and what it's about briefly.
Armageddon Time dir. James Grey (autobiographical drama)
Asteroid City dir. Wes Anderson (romantic dramedy ensemble)
Avatar 2 dir. James Cameron
Babylon dir. Damien Chazelle (Hollywood transitioning from silent to sound loosely based on Hollywood Babylon)
The Banshees of Insherin dir. Martin McDonaugh (Irish friends break up)
Bardo (or False Chronicle of Handful of Truths) dir. Alejandro Gonzalez Iñarritu (Mexican history recreated)
Black Panther: Wakanda Forever dir. Ryan Coogler
Blonde dir. Andrew Dominik (Marilyn Monroe dark and twisted biopic)
Bones and All dir. Luca Guadagnino (coming of age romance horror)
Broker dir. Hirokazu Koreeda (family road drama)
Canterbury Glass dir. David O. Russell (period piece comedy)
Cha Cha Real Smooth dir. Cooper Raiff (coming-of-age)
Decision to Leave dir. Park Chan-wook (neo-noir)
Disappointment Blvd dir. Ari Aster
Don't Worry Darling dir. Olivia Wilde (social thriller)
Elvis dir. Baz Luhrmann (Elvis biopic)
Emancipation dir. Antoine Fuqua (slave drama)
Empire of Light dir. Sam Mendes (romantic-drama period piece)
Everything Everywhere All At Once dir. Daniels (action-comedy multiverse of madness)
The Fabelmans dir. Steven Spielberg (autobiographical drama)
The Greatest Beer Run Ever dir. Peter Farrrelly (Vietnam war drama)
The Holdovers dir Alexander Payne (dramedy)
I Wanna Dance With Somebody dir. Kasi Lemmons (Whitney Houston biopic)
The Killer dir. David Fincher (based on the graphic novel)
Killers of the Flower Moon dir. Martin Scorsese (western)
Knives Out 2 dir. Rian Johnson
Next Goal Wins dir. Taika Waititi (sports dramedy)
Nope dir. Jordan Peele (aliens invade)
The Northman dir. Robert Eggers
Poor Things dir. Yorgos Lanthimos (woman changes brains with a baby)
Rustin dir. George C. Wolfe (Bayard Rustin biopic)
She Said dir. Maria Schrader (journalists who uncovered the Weinstein story)
The Son dir. Florian Zeller (based on his play)
Thirteen Lives dir. Ron Howard (based on the rescue mission in Thailand)
Three Thousand Years of Longing dir. George Miller
Till dir. Chinonye Chukwu (seeking justice for Emmett Till)
TÁR dir. Todd Field (German pianist)
The Whale dir. Darren Aronofsky (based on the play, 400 pound man struggles to connect with his daughter)
White Noise dir. Noah Baumbach (based on the novel, college professor existential crisis)
The Woman King dir. Gina Prince-Bythewood (historical epic)
Women Talking dir. Sarah Polley (based on the novel)
6 votes -
John Batiste takes Album Of The Year for ‘We Are’
6 votes