I've been a bit too busy to read much lately, but did pick up and read all of Brandon Sanderson's short stories, along with Charlie Stross's Singularity series. I actually like the second book in the series (
Iron Sunrise) better but all three are good.
Next: Um... yeah, I'm actually going to have to find something since my current schedule leaves me with 15 minutes to half an hour where a book is to be my sole escape from simply sitting in my car and waiting. A few of the things I've been considering
1) The Hunger Games, but I'm not sure how much I want to get into the book versus film mess, so I may just stick to watching
2) Discworld, but where to start?
3) the WH40K Caiaphas Cain novels, since I've heard they're pretty good. But I'm hesitant to launch into anything so long (also an issue with Discworld) or to give GW so much as a cent right now.
Since I've got problems with all my ideas, I'm also up for recommendations in any of these spheres...
* Space-faring Science Fiction (Hard or soft doesn't matter much to me, but I tend to get way more into stuff that can leave Earth and Sol behind even if they're a setting in the work)
* Dark Fantasy and/or Cosmic Horror (Lovecraftian stuff, including/especially in the vein of his Dreamlands work)
* Sword and Sorcery/Fantasy Adventure (often including that branded "young adult", amidst which I have found gems of if not surpassing quality than at least vast enjoyment in the past)
Too lazy to go back and see what you've already read, or even what i've already recommended, so my usual recommendations:
Discworld:
Small Gods is a brilliant novel and a good place to start.
Night Watch is among my favorites but works better if you're close to the characters, so maybe begin with
Guards, Guards!.
Thief of Time is fun.
Space-faring sci-fi: My standard recommendations are Stephen Baxter's Xeelee sequence and Lois McMaster Bujold's Vorkosigan Saga. My particular favorite of the Xeelee books is
Vacuum Diagrams, but it's a bit less plot-driven so maybe
Exultant will be more your style. Of the Vorkosigans, pretty much all are fantastic;
Cordelia's Honor is chronologically the first in the series and is great; or, start with the hilariously-funny
Young Miles to meet the central character for most of the books.
Iron Sunrise, referenced above, is also a good fit into this category.
Cosmic Horror: Charlie Stross's Laundry Files series is a bunch of books that are 50% Lovecraftian horror, 50% days-in-the-life-of-a-Government-employed-necromancer, and all style tributes to various authors.
Fantasy Adventure: omg Brandon Sanderson. Start with
Mistborn and watch his writing get progressively better. The Stormlight Archive series has only 2/10 books done but both are amazing. If you'd like a novella
The Emperor's Soul is great. and best of all, most of his books take place in the same universe with the same underlying logic and there are a ton of cross-references to find if you like that sort of thing.
Like rstnme said, Jasper Fforde is a fantastic author if you've read a lot of books. Brilliantly surreal.
I then read "The Ocean at the End of the Lane," which I don't think was very good and would never have been published if Gaiman's name wasn't tacked onto it.
i will fight you
But actually, yeah, it wasn't great overall; I just dearly love the writing style and particularly the prologue.