Lenora Rose
Farmer
So Gaiman, Pratchett, and de Lint have all been mentioned. Who else...
Ursula Vernon/T. Kingfisher is my current go to to shove in people's hands and say they have to read. And she does everything from kids' books to adult horror. My faves are "A Wizard's Guide to Defensive Baking", the Paladin books, Swordheart, and The Twisted Ones (the first is straightforward fantasy, with a child protagonist but not *for* kids, the last is horror, the others fantasy/romances).
Martha Wells deserves more attention, and is finally getting it with her Murderbot Diaries. Start with All Systems Red, but be aware the first four novella-length books make one story arc, even if the first two make complete stories.
My actual favourite of hers is the Fall of Ile-Rien trilogy, starting with the Wizard Hunters. They're set partly in a fantasy realm with early 20th century tech (a ship very like the Titanic and other luxury liners of the era makes a major role in books 2& 3). It's also a textbook example of how to show a clash of cultures with different tech levels without either one stereotyping the other and without many colonialist fails.
Diana Wynne Jones is on the shelf beside Pratchett for me, literally and figuratively. Yes. most of what she wrote was for kids but I discovered her as an adult and feel no shame. A couple of specific things haven't aged well (Fire and Hemlock's entire plot is about a child who befriends an adult then grows up to fall for him) But Archer's Goon is brilliant plotting and Hexwood is similar.
Ursula Vernon/T. Kingfisher is my current go to to shove in people's hands and say they have to read. And she does everything from kids' books to adult horror. My faves are "A Wizard's Guide to Defensive Baking", the Paladin books, Swordheart, and The Twisted Ones (the first is straightforward fantasy, with a child protagonist but not *for* kids, the last is horror, the others fantasy/romances).
Martha Wells deserves more attention, and is finally getting it with her Murderbot Diaries. Start with All Systems Red, but be aware the first four novella-length books make one story arc, even if the first two make complete stories.
My actual favourite of hers is the Fall of Ile-Rien trilogy, starting with the Wizard Hunters. They're set partly in a fantasy realm with early 20th century tech (a ship very like the Titanic and other luxury liners of the era makes a major role in books 2& 3). It's also a textbook example of how to show a clash of cultures with different tech levels without either one stereotyping the other and without many colonialist fails.
Diana Wynne Jones is on the shelf beside Pratchett for me, literally and figuratively. Yes. most of what she wrote was for kids but I discovered her as an adult and feel no shame. A couple of specific things haven't aged well (Fire and Hemlock's entire plot is about a child who befriends an adult then grows up to fall for him) But Archer's Goon is brilliant plotting and Hexwood is similar.