I just finished rereading the Wheel of Time series, and have also read and enjoyed series by Terry Goodkind and George RR Martin. Any recommendations for other books (or series) in a similar vein?
Epic Quest Fantasy basically, and those are the big modern 3. Eddings (the Belgariad) and Brooks (Shannara) are a couple of OK authors who have made their names with epic fantasy, but neither have the depth of those.
Steven Erikson "Malazan" series gets a lot of recommendations, including a couple earlier in this thread. I haven't read it, but I finally found the first book used, so it's in my to be read list
Another author I haven't read his main series, but it's in my to be read pile is Brandon Sanderson. "Final Empire" is his main series, and his style was similar enough to Jordan to be named to finish book 12 of the Wheel of Time after RJ died. I did read Elantris, which was OK and well written, but not that interesting in the end.
I HIGHLY recommend Jacquiline Carey, but her best series (Kushiel's Legacy) is more Alternate Historical fantasy. That, along with the main character who is a masochistic prostitute spy (much better than it sounds) means mileage may vary, but the series ranks top 3 overall for me. Her epic fantasy series (The Sundering) was more of an experiment and just OK. It was basically LOTR, written from Sauron and his lieutenants POV.
Stephen R Donaldson's Thomas Covenant is extremely well written, but depressing as hell and has probably one of the most unlikeable protagonists ever.
Joel Rosenberg's Guardians of the Flame was definitely readable as well. It's a bunch of real world D&D players who get transfered into their fantasy realm. And speaking of D&D, the first 6 Dragonlance books by Weis and Hickman are outstanding as well. There is some other D&D adaptations that are decent, but they are pretty derivative.
Peter David has a 3 books series (Sir Apropos of Nothing) with a main character who is the evil sidekick instead of the hero of the book. A lot of humor, but very enjoyable.
Dave Duncan has a series (The Kings Blades) which is very solid. He has other series, but this one is the best.
Lastly, Lois McMaster Bujold's 3 Chalion books are outstanding (won 2 Hugos) but another more Historical fantasy than epic.