My list would be several hundred pages long!
My entire worldview was irrevocably changed at the age of seven with (as it has been with many fans of the genre) Heinlein's youth series. Several years ago I donated my entire first edition collection of Heinlein, Clarke and Asimov to the Hammond Public Library. I'd lugged it around for the past (mumble-mumble) decades, but thought they should find a good, permanent home.
Over the past few years I've become quite enchanted with David Weber (Honor Harrington, et al), David Drake (Cross the Stars, et al), and a neigbor of mine, Eric Flint (1632, et al).
There are also quite a number of relatively new authors I've been following, but they include, Robert Jordan (now deceased) and Brandon Sanderson ("The Wheel of Time" series, 15 volumes!).
Last year I (finally) discovered Anne McCaffrey's most excellent series of novels "<TD class=bibInfoLabel width="20%" valign="top"></TD><TD class=bibInfoData>
The Dragonriders of Pern</TD> ." It is a series based on the (several thousand year) history of a group of colonists who lost contact with the rest of the human universe, and slowly lost most of their technology, and had to revert to a much simpler, existence. There was a "rogue planet" that the system had captured with such an eccentric orbit that it only came close to Pern on a roughly five-hundred year cycle. Unfortunately, during the fifty year period when it was close to Pern, a strange form of life that destroyed all other life would attempt to "migrate" to Pern. The only way to fight this "Thread" was to burn it out of existence.
Before they lost most of their science, the geneticists among them bred huge flying "Dragons" from a native lifeform they had named "Fire Lizards." Hence the title of the series. One of the unique abilities of the fire lizards was the ability to travel "between," instantly moving from one location to another, provided they knew (or someone could "visualize" for them) where it was they were going.
I'm also a far of "alternate history" stories such as Harry Turtledove's "American Empire" (Americal Civil War) and "Great War" (WWI and WWII) series, and his "alternate universe/history" series "Colonization," where an alien civilization attempts to assimilate humanity into their "empire" in order help fight some really nasty aliens who're bent on destroying all life in the universe save their own.
Good thread! While looking up some of this, I've noted no less that
three "New Arrivals" at HPL...
Farland, David "The Wrymling Horde"
Eddings, David "Younger Gods"
Turtledove, Harry "disUnited States of America"
I'm off to the library! See ya! "N4GIX, three, six five!"