Oh, good, I'm glad you are enjoying the discussion.
You know, when I read this paragraph I got this image of two parallel but distinct universes that come together and mix every so often, in a cyclical fashion – both major and minor cycles. The 70s seem to have been a “major” cycle of this, when fantasy and sf bled together and mixed. One of my favorite series, CJ Cherryh's Morgaine Saga, is a good example – where the book reads like fantasy, is experienced as fantasy by the viewpoint character, who is from a fantasy world (so to speak), but there are science fictional underpinnings to the whole set-up (Gene Wolfe's Book of the New Sun is similar, as are many of the Darkover books). That is an example of subtlety and craft, whereas the warrior with a laser gun in one hand and a sword in the other is more crass and obvious. But yeah, I hear you. And the line is fuzzy, the definitions of genre a “fuzzy set” as Brian Attebery would say.
They are less universes perhaps than parallel tracks and you can flip back and forth between them pretty easily. The line between them isn't that fuzzy -- authors make choices. They choose to use unreal material rather than just real material, which puts their stories in the speculative unreal areas. And then they choose the cause of all of the unreal material and that choice -- natural or unnatural -- makes it science fiction or fantasy. Science fiction doesn't have unnatural stuff in it. (Of course, t.v. shows like to sneak it into their sci-fi shows anyway.) Fantasy may have natural and unnatural stuff in it, as long as it has the unnatural stuff. But readers often like to bend that basic division because they like different descriptions of it.
Again, fantasy authors most of the time don't write just one style of fantasy all their lives, also a good chunk of them also write science fiction, and/or suspense fiction, maybe romance, or contemporary realism stories -- and all of these things affect each other. Writers don't write in a vacuum. If you're trying to nail down epic fantasy, it's a bit hard without also including contemporary, historical, etc., and certainly portal and multiverse fantasy, and a few science fiction ones as well. Anne McCaffrey's Pern books are science fiction and included a seminal YA trilogy, but they had a big impact on fantasy writing and inspired a lot of fantasy writers to play with dragons. So when we talk about works shaping or defining the history of epic fantasy fiction or fantasy fiction the whole field -- it's a lot of works.
You can make lists that are about interesting works that were popular, awarded, talked about by many and which many authors cite as influences. There's a difference between these are the masters of all lists and reading lists.

I am inclined to the latter.
To put it another way, if you were to think of 100 writers (or novels, or even just stories) that best define and essential the entire history of fantasy as a genre, which would they be? My guess is that there are about 50+ authors (or books) who we could all mostly agree upon, and then it would get rather challenging.
Oh I don't think we'd even get to 50 before it got challenging.
To be clear, I wrote sprouted with Tolkien not from, meaning that the various strands or roots that would become epic fantasy, came together and gave birth to (sprouted) Tolkien as the modern archetype of the quest fantasy.
I have never read that Tolkien was greatly influenced by Howard and Conan the Barbarian. But Jason and the Golden Fleece? Yes. Tolkien wasn't writing modern -- he was writing old, deliberately, in style and using the material of the far past, particularly the medieval works as his archetypes -- Greek myth, Norse myth, Beowulf, Song of Roland, The Morte d'Arthur, Chaucer, British history, etc. He did have some of the World Wars material there, which did give it a modern reflection of old archetypes, but again, he was not inspired by American fantasy and comics. But American modern writers of epic fantasy? They very much were. They were also influenced by fairy tales, Disney movies, adventure stories and noir suspense fiction. He's a major influence. He's just not the trunk, as I was saying. It's not that linear.
It is almost as if every post-Tolkien epic fantasy and/or secondary world fantasy is, in some way, in relation or even dialogue with Tolkien and Middle-earth, even if it is completely different.
It used to be that way in some circles, not really as much anymore. It was a thing some fans liked to do in the 1970's and 1980's, mostly in the wake of LOTR turning into a phenom. But it was a perception thing, not a thing that the writers were doing and what was all going on in the market. Tolkien was the lit boy -- a linguist British Oxford don who wrote a massive fairy tale saga, had no connection with the magazine/category market (respectable outsider,) but had let an American category press do the paperbacks of his work to deal with a copyright infringement, and that had been a large success. So that was the respectability touchstone -- writing big fairy tales wasn't silly, so there! So if you wrote a book, thick or thin, that was pre-industrial and involved a group of characters getting together to deal with something, which most fiction does, certainly most suspense fiction which is what SFF mostly is, they would compare you with the not only popular but respectable Lord of the Rings as to whether you were just a trashy copy (establishment,) or an innovator (rebellion) moving away from Tolkien's supposedly not dark, heroic quest tale (which is actually a war tale, not a quest tale.) It didn't matter if it had anything to do with what authors were doing or not or whether they'd actually read LOTR or not -- it was a way to trash authors you didn't like or elevate authors you did. You could think of it as sort of a transitional marketing reaction as category fantasy grew as a market in tandem with SF. When they did the movies, the Tolkien comparisons started up again for a bit -- and that's why Game of Thrones and Harry Potter are used too, and Twilight to bash women writers -- they had hit films/t.v. made which make people more aware of those titles in addition to their popularity as books.
I would also broadly agree with what you say in that it almost seems that Tolkien wasn't really copied until Terry Brooks, whose popularity basically told us that copying Tolkien can lead to massive commercial success.
Except Brooks
didn't copy Tolkien. He
blended bits from Lord of the Rings and then a lot of other bits from other places, as writers do. Sword of Shannara isn't even an epic fantasy novel. It's a post-apocalyptic futuristic fantasy story set on Earth with mutated humans. Brooks was borrowing heavily from previous science fiction stories, particularly planetary romances (Burroughs' Jack Carter,) and post-apocalyptic fiction with nuclear mutations, and things like John Wyndham's novels. And also, once again, Jack Vance's Dying Earth, because that got used again and again. He also borrowed from Leiber, because many writing past 1969 or so did, and adventure legends like Robin Hood, and he also borrowed a little from D&D (and later provided material for them.) But the main ones he used were Dumas' The Three Musketeers and the story of King Arthur --
the sword in the stone. A good chunk of Shannara's plot is lifted from the Musketeer stories, more than Lord of the Rings, and the principle conceit is the story of Arthur, especially as interpreted popularly by T.H. White.
Now, everybody knows that Gandalf is Merlin. Tolkien took Merlin and borrowed him whole cloth. Which is fine. Brooks has a sorcerer who is younger, temperamental, impatient, guilt-wracked, ruthless and largely incompetent at his job. Other than being tall and a wizard, he's nothing like Gandalf or Merlin. But he is tall and a wizard and comes to get the chosen young Arthur in the story. Tolkien borrowed a good bit from King Arthur, but flipped it in that Frodo isn't the chosen one king but an ordinary person (minor gentry) who volunteers (he's more Galahad, who was an important figure for Tolkien.) Aragorn became sort of the King Arthur figure in Tolkien's story, whereas Brooks made the King Arthur story central and his protagonist. The books have very different themes, world building elements and quite a number of plot points, and obviously the writing styles are completely different, but they are in the same neighborhood -- as were many other fantasy works both before and after LOTR.
Brooks was published by the same folk who did the official paperbacks of Tolkien and they marketed the book as the next Tolkien, since LOTR was the big phenom of the time, which pissed a lot of people off. The book did enormously well -- just short of being a phenom -- which also pissed a lot of people off who didn't think Brooks' writing was good enough to be liked and resented that lots of people liked his book anyway. Did Brooks bring in a lot of new readers and open things up for publishers to fund more fantasy works? Yes. He also was an influence in secondary world fantasy, portal fantasy and post-apocalyptic futuristic fantasy. But the idea that it was a linear line of Tolkien to Brooks to everybody following Brooks and
that changed everything is not what was actually happening in fantasy publishing. Brooks' work helped fund the on-going fantasy market, letting them continue to expand in the 1980's. Other major works published around and shortly after Brooks' first would also have influences and provide funding, because fiction is a symbiotic market. Brooks' story is really much more sword & sorcery in the end, with a touch of science fiction elements, but people again tended to put different types of fantasy land fantasy as the same, which is why epic fantasy became the wider term.
A few things. I think you understate Tolkien's influence and in a way contradict yourself by saying that most epic fantasies after 1980 or so were judged in relation to Tolkien, but then minimize his influence.
I don't minimize Tolkien's influence. He was a huge influence (except in writing style, he mainly was not.) What I am countering is the mythologizing that occurred as Tolkien as the wellspring shaper of all modern fantasy, meaning usually category fantasy titles. He really wasn't and when he's put in that position, you can't really talk about all the influences and what was out there because you're trying to squish everything into Tolkien. It's trying to make him the seismic event, and he wasn't. He was a big money event, mainly for Ballantine Books, and he was directly for some and indirectly for other writers an important influence.
But he tends to get credited for being the source of a lot of things he's not the source of. Again, Tolkien didn't invent Merlin, or talking trees, willowy elves, dwarfs and other small fairy races, orcs, giant spiders, magical inscribed rings, ghost armies, women dressing up as men to be soldiers, nomadic horse tribes, corrupted evil entities who can't be easily killed, etc. All of these things were common myth, folklore, past fantasy stories sorts of things. And writers using similar things didn't all go to LOTR and then borrow from there. But they got accused of it a lot for awhile there. Using folklore plots and adventure plots, you are going to have a lot of the same stuff in plot structure or elements. So accrediting it to one book just isn't a really analytical thing -- it's a desire to have a holy bible of fantasy writing. So that's something you run into with some fans.
My favorite example of this currently is still the uproar when The Vampire Diaries t.v. show came on the air and was denounced as a rip-off of Twilight when it was actually the adaptation of a book series that came out years before Twilight. Because you know they both had teenagers and vampires -- like hundreds of other fantasy novels in the past. People assume that when a book is very popular that everybody is simply copying it, rather than writing in the same neighborhood or sometimes sampling bits of it and blending them with other things. So the influence of big books goes from being an influence to being an origin event. And they really aren't. Those titles that you would put on your list post-Tolkien as major influences weren't all Tolkien's descendants or reactions to LOTR.
I would also say that Moorcock “was not inspired by Tolkien” in a similar way that a rebellious son is not inspired by his father. As I said above in my response to Matthew, with Moorcock—as with Gary Gygax—there's an element of “thou dost protest too much.” His reaction to (or against) Tolkien—and deliberate subversion—is a form of influence.
Again, Moorcock started being involved in the British SFF scene when he was not even out of his teens and before LOTR was on the scene. His big thing was constructing a multiverse which included Elric, contemporary fantasy and science fiction parts as well. On the fantasy side, he was much more influenced by Howard, Burroughs and Eddison. And that was the source of a lot of his criticism of Tolkien -- he and many other authors weren't doing what Tolkien had done and they resented the insistence that they were and that everything was being declared some offshoot of Tolkien by many fans. The other part of it was that Tolkien came from the Old World, Catholic, classical, upper social classes colonialism, etc. that Moorcock regarded as problematic and in need of change, as he's an anarchist. Tolkien's pastoralism was not where he thought literature and fantasy literature should be heading or believed it was heading. In particular, a lot of writers of fantasy in the mid-1950's to 1970's era were upset that Leiber was being over-looked as a main influence in favor of Tolkien in discussion, given that Leiber really had an impact, especially on epic fantasy. (And Zelazny as well.) So for awhile there, 1970's into maybe the early 1990's, there were a lot of theories of a binary of fantasy fiction, that Tolkien and Moorcock (and/or Leiber,) were the twin suns of fantasy -- the high and the low, the pastoral, classical and heroic versus the more contemporary, edgy, dark and horror tinged adventures -- any of this sounding familiar to the same sorts of binaries that people put up now? Moorcock and his magazines and Elric really weren't a well-spring either, just an influence and sometimes a sales platform for writers of various eras. But for some, they made a handy rebellion to Tolkien's supposed establishment.
Yes, agreed. Not sure what the right metaphor is for Tolkien's influence and relationship to fantasy post-1955, but certainly we can say that his shadow looms large, and larger than anyone else's.
There's a difference with Tolkien being a looming shadow over how fantasy publishing is done and Tolkien being a very familiar name that most people know but which thousands and thousands of fantasy fans have never read, although many do end up studying his work in school. Fantasy publishers are not, nor did they in the past, build everything around whether it was like LOTR or not like LOTR. Most writers didn't write their stories around that. So his shadow doesn't necessarily loom. He's just a well-known author. He did not change fantasy publishing; though he did help bring more readers into the category market.
Again, not sure if I agree with this general argument. I think you are, because of your deep knowledge of the field, seeing too many “trees” and missing the “forest.”
I think it's more that you're talking about writers and publishers in fantasy but what you really mean are
fans and what fans are most familiar with. People again are very familiar with Tolkien's name and a lot read him for pleasure or study his work in school and/or saw the movies more recently. But LOTR doesn't run the fantasy fans either, and certainly not the market. He's part of the history of it. He didn't direct that history. He did not change fantasy fans' interaction with the category fantasy market, etc.
But rather than go around in circles on this, let me take a different angle and ask, which fantasy authors do you think had a comparable influence to Tolkien?
Greco-Roman myths and history
Norse and German myths
Celtic myths
Legend of King Arthur/Le Morte d'Arthur
Legend of Robin Hood/Ivanhoe by William Scott
Grimm's Fairy Tales
A Thousand and One Arabian Nights
Judea-Christian Bible
Beowulf
William Shakespeare
The Bronte Sisters
Alexandre Dumas
Jonathan Swift
Charles Dickens
Robert Louis Stevenson
Bram Stoker
Oscar Wilde
Mark Twain
Rudyard Kipling
Arthur Conan Doyle
H.P. Lovecraft
Edgar Allan Poe
Edgar Rice Burroughs
Jules Verne
H.G. Wells
Lord Dunsany
The Wonderful Wizard of Oz by Frank Baum
Alice in Wonderland by Lewis Carroll
The Chronicles of Narnia by C.S. Lewis
The Wind in the Willows by Kenneth Grahame
Dashiell Hammett
Robert E. Howard
Susan Cooper
Roald Dahl
T.H. White
A Wrinkle in Time by Madeline L'Engle
Watership Down by Richard Adams
Ursula Le Guin
Ray Bradbury
Fritz Leiber
Andre Norton
Mary Stewart
Stephen King
Anne Rice
Terry Pratchett
J.K. Rowling
Robert Jordan
George R.R. Martin
Glen Cook
R.A. Salvatore
Pern books, Anne McCaffrey
Xanth series, Piers Anthony
Charles de Lint
Peter Beale
Dungeons & Dragons Role Playing Game
Etc. I'm probably forgetting several people, and then of course there are Asian myths, etc. Influence, especially when we are talking about fantasy writers putting out titles, is again, not a direct thing.
I'm also not sure what Tolkien's “interest” has to do with anything. His influence was unintentional, yes, but no less for it (maybe even more for it, as “intentional influencers” often fade and/or are perceived as contrived...like trying to write the Great American Novel or the Next Big Thing...that attempt always falls flat, at least as a primary motivator).
You keep saying that he shaped category fantasy publishing. I'm saying he was not involved in the development of category fantasy publishing.
But if we're talking about sales, one thing that sets The Hobbit and LotR apart from almost every other fantasy, is that it is a consistent big seller, not only year in and year out, but decade after decade. It is the classic in the field, with other classics that have strong perennial sales, but none quite on the level of those two books. And this was even before the films.
Well no, there are a number of fantasy novels and science fiction novels that sell year in and year out -- they're called classic literature and they sell that way because they are studied in schools and universities and so sell lots of copies every year. It's not the classic in the field. It's a classic in the field. Le Guin's Earthsea trilogy is a big seller decade after decade (and it's never even had a good movie/t.v. adaptation.) Dracula sells year in and year out, so forth. J.K. Rowling's fantasy novels sell year after year and she has outsold Tolkien. Stephen King's fantasy novels sell year in and year out. Dr. Seus does. Ray Bradbury, etc. The Chronicles of Narnia. The Hobbit is a staple of school curriculum in North America and Britain at this point. And Lord of the Rings has a firm place at universities. The Silmarillion is a harder nut to chew, though it was Tolkien's dearest project, but it also has a decent academic reputation.
And it should. But being an important book/author and selling well does not mean that Tolkien has had the
most impact on
all fantasy writers of the past several decades. If he's going to have a "shadow loom," it's on epic fantasy obviously, but even there, the fantasy writers aren't mainly building their works around Tolkien and tons of epic fantasy fans have not read Lord of the Rings. That will change as the books are part of academics and people are required to read them through generations, and many may have seen the movies, but it is the reality.
So for this list you need to consider whether you want it to be about the books that are most famous and selling -- and maybe influential to fans, or the ones that ranged from popular to famous and influenced writers (obviously some overlap.) Twilight was very influential/popular to fantasy fans and a phenom -- but not necessarily to a lot of fantasy writers, even in YA. And whether you want it to be all of fantasy or just epic fantasy. If it is the latter, you might want to just make the cut-off point 1950, because while there were obviously titles that influenced those doing epic fantasy, as we've been discussing, the category fantasy market -- of which then epic fantasy became an official sub-category,started revving up in the 1950's and was fully launched in the early 1960's, mainly in North America.
Again, I think you are making a bit of a strawman out of what I'm saying, Kat.
I'm not trying to make any strawman because I'm trying to help you with the list you want to make. But it is your wants in the list, so the parameters can be various different things as I said above. If you want a list of those most directly linked to Lord of the Rings, we can try to do that.
And I don't necessarily see all sub-genres of fantasy as being offshoots of epic, but I do think that epic fantasy as a central location because of its close relationship to quest fantasy.
I would change that to its close relationship to classic myths and fairy tales, not quests. And that doesn't really cover all of epic fantasy because epic fantasy involves post-industrial worlds and historical blends, plus portals and multiverses, uses war and suspense plots, etc.
I haven't read Jemisin's earlier works, but I almost see The Fifth Season as more in the Sanderson/Erikson school of magic than the Le Guin approach. Maybe it was in response to “them bugging her”? (Whoever “they” are...the minnows?).
Fans who complain in general and sometimes specifically about what they feel proper fantasy should include.

And yes, she did change her approach slightly in the new series, but not because of that. It was the nature of the material she was using -- seismic energy, natural phenomena, past secrets of civilizations. This puts it more in the neighborhood with post-apocalypse and futuristic fantasy fiction, as well as post-apoc dystopian SF.
But there is a distinctly different tonal quality in fantasy and science fiction,
I think that's more wishful thinking than reality.

There are many different tonal styles in fantasy and SF, including both in horror. Certainly there are people who prefer one explanation for the unreal elements more than the other, but I'm not sure the particular use of an explanation produces a distinct tone feeling for all of SF or all of fantasy. It's easier just to identify concrete general elements because that's how we group them into categories. But there are many stylistic similarities between some SF stories and fantasy stories.
Actually, it may be that when we look back at the history of fantastic literature, we will see the mid-90s as a major turning point—similar in importance to the publication of the LotR—not because of any specific author, but because of the internet and how it made the Information Age come alive. But maybe that's another conversation...
See, this is probably where we are doing some of the cross-talking. You keep talking about "turning points" -- seismic events that change everything, the minnows going one way and then they all "turn" the other. And that's not really what happens. Big books aren't like bombs that are dropped into the landscape and change all forever. Instead, it's just lots of different developments and cross-borrowing, and the big books bring in floods of readers who then browse. What is the "turn" that you think Tolkien caused fantasy publishing to make? And the Internet has had a big impact on bookselling -- as did the wholesale market collapse -- but I'm not sure how you think it's affected the writing of fantasy fiction. Do you mean the self-publishing?
Randy said:
Yes and no. Such lists gain the stigma of required reading, when really they serve best as pointers in a direction.
Yes, recommendation lists. But there's a difference between recommendation lists and "best" lists. You can do the recommends list as you know, without making it a best of list. Not that I object to people making their best of lists when they want to. I just don't make Best of lists. I like to talk about authors and works, not pit them against each other in an arena.
There are a lot of books I know about that I actually haven't read (and may not get to.) But I know them. And there are lots of authors I can talk about, but as I said, my knowledge of pre-1960 fantasy fiction not counting classic lit may not be very effective. I think we've got everybody I know of who was major in the time period for the thread, but I couldn't say for sure.
But I'm still nailing down parameters. For instance Tim Powers -- one of my favorite writers, a bestseller, studied along with James Blaylock and K.W. Jeter with Phillip K. Dick, helped invent the steampunk lit movement and urban fantasy designation in the 1980's with Jeter, best known for his time travel fantasy The Annubis Gates, had a big impact on writers doing historical and contemporary fantasy. On the list, not on the list? Not that big an influence possibly on writers when they did epic fantasy, although of course, his works The Stress of Her Regard, On Stranger Tides and The Drawing of the Dark may have influenced epic fantasy writing -- some writers have sited him as an influence and writers who like Glen Cook tend to like him too. But does Alchemist want names not maybe critical to pre-industrial epic fantasy?