williamjm Posted May 12, 2016 Share Posted May 12, 2016 47 minutes ago, Mandy said: However, Daniel Abraham should really be on there like second, but he writes under so many pen names it doesn't recognize him as the same person. I didn't think about that, but he'd move up into my top 10 with 15 books if I included James S.A. Corey (and his share of Hunter's Run along with the books he wrote on his own. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Darth Richard II Posted May 12, 2016 Share Posted May 12, 2016 Collected volumes screw things up too. I think counting New Sun and Long Sun as individual books would bump Wolfe up to the top 10. And Latro. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
maarsen Posted May 12, 2016 Share Posted May 12, 2016 Number one has to be Asimov. The man wrote over 450 books, fiction and non-fiction and I tried to read them all. Patrick O'Brian as I read the complete set of Jack Aubrey novels might be second. Stephen King for third as I was on a binge over the last few years. Roger Zelazny maybe fourth as again I read absolutely everything he wrote Kurt Vonnegut as again in my impressionable youth, I read his entire output. Come to think of it, just about any writer I can think of, I have read pretty well everything they wrote. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Jiriki Posted May 12, 2016 Share Posted May 12, 2016 I think my top six most-read are Tad Williams, Tolkien, GRRM, Anne McCaffrey, Elizabeth Moon, Robert Jordan... probably in that order. After that, it's a little hard to judge. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
RedEyedGhost Posted May 13, 2016 Share Posted May 13, 2016 23 for Neil Gaiman (mostly Sandman graphic novels) 21 for Lois McMaster Bujold 20 for Daniel Abraham (+4 if we count the Expanse novellas) 19 for Jim Butcher 12 for Charlie Huston 12 for Robin Hobb (will be 16 by the end of this year, and 19 by the end of next) 10 for GRRM 10 for Timothy Zahn listed on my librarything, but I read a lot of him as a teen, so it might be double that 9 for Graham Joyce - I was going to stop at > 10, but I couldn't leave him off when he was so close Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Darth Richard II Posted May 13, 2016 Share Posted May 13, 2016 Yeah, my teen reading screwed things up. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
baxus Posted May 13, 2016 Share Posted May 13, 2016 I think that the author I've read most books from is Anne McCaffrey. I've read every Chronicles of Pern book I could've got my hands on and I have 15-ish of those books on my shelves. As for others, I have no idea. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
TheRevanchist Posted May 13, 2016 Share Posted May 13, 2016 10 hours ago, Darth Richard II said: Ha, yeah, GR only has books I own, so my insane LIbrary reading days are not included: 1 Bernard Cornwell 44 2 Margaret Weis 32 3 L.E. Modesitt Jr .27 3 Glen Cook 27 5 Troy Denning 26 6 Terry Brooks 22 6 Stephen King 22 8 Michael A. Stackpole 21 8 Mine Yoshizaki 21 8 David Weber 21 Yeah me and my teenage self need to talk. King should be Higher cause I've read almost all his books. So I think he edges out Cornwell by just a smidgen. And it counts Manga too? This was unexpected! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
HexMachina Posted May 13, 2016 Share Posted May 13, 2016 7 hours ago, RedEyedGhost said: 23 for Neil Gaiman (mostly Sandman graphic novels) 21 for Lois McMaster Bujold 20 for Daniel Abraham (+4 if we count the Expanse novellas) 19 for Jim Butcher 12 for Charlie Huston 12 for Robin Hobb (will be 16 by the end of this year, and 19 by the end of next) 10 for GRRM 10 for Timothy Zahn listed on my librarything, but I read a lot of him as a teen, so it might be double that 9 for Graham Joyce - I was going to stop at > 10, but I couldn't leave him off when he was so close Are any of those planned Hobb books the Windsingers Quartet? I've been meaning to get around to them for a while now but something else always gets in the way. I can recommend the Reindeer People and Wolf's Brother, if you've not read them yet. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
SkynJay Posted May 13, 2016 Share Posted May 13, 2016 Number one for me would be Terry Pratchett with 49 books. Timothy Zahn - 24 (My favorite in high school) Anne McCaffrey -17 (Mostly Dragonriders but also the Donna trilogy and a couple others) Dan Abnett - 15 Danial Abraham -14 Lincoln Child -14 (about five too many) Tony Hillerman- 12 books (for some reason I thought I had read more). Lois McMaster Bujold - 12 The author I know I am missing was the lady who I read in Jr. High. I can't think of her name but she wrote teen horror books along with other genres. I bet I would be in the 20's with her works. EDIT: I found it! Joan Lowery Nixon was the author I read the hell out of in Jr. High. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Darth Richard II Posted May 13, 2016 Share Posted May 13, 2016 11 hours ago, TheRevanchist said: This was unexpected! I used to read a lot of poop. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
maarsen Posted May 13, 2016 Share Posted May 13, 2016 2 hours ago, Darth Richard II said: I used to read a lot of poop. As you get older, you will realize that in middle age you had read a lot of poop also. I expect to find out when doddering into my grave that I had read a lot of poop in my senior years. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Darth Richard II Posted May 13, 2016 Share Posted May 13, 2016 A lot of those authors I finally just dropped a few years ago too. Like, wait, why am I still reading this? Thinking about dumping the Weber books too, started out strong and then the last like...5 or 6 years have been, well, poop. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
mgambino Posted May 13, 2016 Share Posted May 13, 2016 25 minutes ago, Darth Richard II said: Thinking about dumping the Weber books too, started out strong and then the last like...5 or 6 years have been, well, poop. But Honor's poop probably smells like chocolate. I gave up on Weber once some dude's wife was like "Go ahead, bone Honor, she's so awesome." Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Darth Richard II Posted May 13, 2016 Share Posted May 13, 2016 Ha. I forgot about that. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
RedEyedGhost Posted May 14, 2016 Share Posted May 14, 2016 12 hours ago, HelenaExMachina said: Are any of those planned Hobb books the Windsingers Quartet? I've been meaning to get around to them for a while now but something else always gets in the way. I can recommend the Reindeer People and Wolf's Brother, if you've not read them yet. Rainwilds this year, Final Fitz next year. Maybe some of her Lindholm works in '18 or '19; your talking about Reindeer People in the reading thread definitely made me want to give it a try. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Darth Richard II Posted May 14, 2016 Share Posted May 14, 2016 It's the Final Fitxdown! DOO DOO DOO DOO DOO DOO DOO DA DOOO Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
wolverine Posted May 14, 2016 Share Posted May 14, 2016 1. Louis L'Amour 35-40 some multiple times and most before I was 14 2. Robert Jordan 15 3. Bernard Cornwell 13 4. Stephen King 10 or 11 I think 5. Steven Erikson 8 Seems kind of odd that if someone asked me about authors I like the only one from that list I would mention is Cornwell. Not that I dislike the others though either. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Darth Richard II Posted May 14, 2016 Share Posted May 14, 2016 Yeah looking at collected volumes individually Wolfe should crack the top 10 and Cook should be no 2. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Larry. Posted May 14, 2016 Share Posted May 14, 2016 Eh, not sure on numbers since I don't track such things much these days, but some authors I've read/own more than others: Henry James (pretty much own everything, fiction and non-fiction alike, published by Library of America, so with 2-5 works/volume, around 30-40 works?) Most everything by Gene Wolfe All fiction and a lot of non-fiction by Umberto Eco (in several translations and the original Italian) All of Borges' available works in Spanish All of Roberto Bolaño's published (posthumous mostly) work in Spanish Most of Mario Vargas Llosa Probably a dozen or more of Ursula Le Guin's novels/collections Virtually all of Tolkien's posthumous Middle-Earth writings and verse translations/compositions And although it's a single story, I have roughly 20 translations (2/3 of which I understand to one degree or another) of Le Petit Prince, one of my all-time favorite stories. One more than the translations of the Bible that I own. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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