Yes, I've read all/most the suggested books, including The Song of Roland in Dorothy Sayers's translation (I tell you, when we switched to a classical/Great Books educational model? Best day of my life). ...
The King of Elfland's Daughter by Dunsany (
reviewed here) was interesting, in some places glorious, and more than any other book gave me the constant feeling of being reminded of something I couldn't quite remember. I did catch a couple of the references, but no more. It was stunningly rich...and just a bit soulless.
Oh, I forgot the Kalevala! I've only read the first half of it (stupid university library only let me borrow one volume at a time) but am considering reading in ebook form for my Annual Epic this January (Previous years: the
Orlando Furioso, Le Morte D'Arthur, The Faerie Queene). And I forgot to add the
Divine Comedy to the list as well--I liked that much better than the
Furioso.
Conan is trashy fun.
And YES--Morris! I was forgetting him!
The Well at the World's End, right? Thanks for the reminder!
I do read the occasional post-Tolkien fantasy too

. But I've never had a huge amount of success. I loved Jeri Massi's "Bracken" trilogy when younger. Also,
ND Wilson is my favourite living author (Empire of Bones is coming out this year--can't wait!).
My objection to most of the fantasy I've read by non-Christians is just that sense of soullessness mentioned above. Actually, that bothers me across all genres, not just fantasy. On the other hand, I do read and enjoy really good authors like Terry Pratchett and
Jorge Luis Borges--in moderation.
By contrast, there's often a satisfaction to reading fantasy or anything else by Christians, even when you'd never know it from the book. And again, there are books by non-Christians that satisfy. You will never hear me complain about Robert Louis Stevenson, for example, and I must recommend John C Wright's spectacular
Last Guardian of/
Mists of Everness books--loved them to pieces, and he was an atheist when he wrote and published them (...now he's a Christian).
OK, so maybe I am asking the wrong question here. Let's try again.
What's some really worthwhile post-Tolkien, non-derivative, non-soulless fantasy I could be reading?
