The Sword and Laser discussion
Are there any "high fantasy" books that take place in the 20th century?

I know there are other examples, I just can't think of them right now.

The Talisman by Stephen King and Peter Straub
The Knights of Breton Court by Maurice Broaddus
Sword Art Online by Reki Kawahara (well, it's high fantasy in a VR game)


This is really more along the lines of Urban Fantasy. That said, Charles De Lint's stories and novels set in Newford might be a place to start. Emma Bull's War for the Oaks is sort of in there.
I haven't read them, but there seem to be a number of YA novels that fit this criteria.
The Lightning Thief
The Field Guide

I don't have a lot of experience with urban fantasy, but what i am looking for is sort of the same social or world structure as we would see in high fantasy set in a modern place setting. Give me a king and a queen and all that, but have them living in a penthouse. Most of the urban fantasy I have read has the fantasy part hidden from the rest of the world. I am looking for something where the fantasy part is explicitly the the world we all live in
First that came to mind were the novels of Charles Williams. The Greater Trumps and The Place of the Lion for instance. His books are so weird (yet good) they often get overlooked.
Next That Hideous Strength by C. S. Lewis. It has Merlin and the Pendragon in mid-twentieth century England.
Next That Hideous Strength by C. S. Lewis. It has Merlin and the Pendragon in mid-twentieth century England.

+1 for Percy Jackson (gods instead of royalty, but living in mortal world)
Most of Gaiman's books, like American Gods are set in modern times
Are you perhaps looking for alternate history scenarios where royalty retain power?

First book in the series is The Family Trade

I guess so. I guess it is tough for me to articulate what I am looking for. It doesn't have to by "our" 20th century. I mean, what would middle earth be like in it's 20th century technology phase is more of the world I am looking for.

I don't have a lot of experience with urban fantasy, but what i am looking for is sort of the sa..."
I've been looking for this exact thing. Urban fantasy doesn't really fit with it, as it is, as you put it, hidden magic.
The closest thing I got recommended was Keeping It Real, which has magic, set in present day, with current technology, but, not really "our" earth.
It's an OK, book, but wasn't exactly what I was looking for.
It's a series, and the books aren't that long, so try the first one, and if it doesn't strike your fancy (it didn't for me), you can easily skip the rest of the books.
You could always try tracking down some of the Shadowrun books, which are set 50 or so years in the future, but in our world, where in 2012, magic reappears. The world itself is a cyperpunk/fantasy mashup.
I haven't read the Shadowrun books myself, as it is a pen and paper RPG world and I don't want to "ruin" or "change" the world me and my friends have built on, but if might fit well for you, link provided below.
Shadowrun Series

https://www.goodreads.com/series/4091... for the series page.





But fundamentally, it's hard to have 'middle earth in the 20th century', since the whole point of the 20th century is the way that technology, in order to be implemented, must change the social fabric.

Larry Correia





Did Terry Goodkind stop spouting Ayn Rand nonsense? After spending a good part of a year masochistically reading Sword of Truth up to around Confessor/Book 11 and seeing them go steadily downhill, I vowed to cut my losses, such as they were.

So, I think the answer might be a world, that the inventors use science to adapt magical or fantastical elements to technology. So instead of an nuclear reactor, let's say this fantastical-modern world is using dragons' fire to produce electricity in a "dragon reactor"; or Eleves using mithril to build spaceships, and palantirs for astronomy. Kinda like the concept of "alchemy" with a modernist angle.. I'd like to see what bizarre devices creative minds of genre authors can invent with such a fun premise...

He has already released one book, called the Alloy of Law that takes place 300 years after the first trilogy and the era that it takes place in would be comparable to the 1910s of our world. They have trains, the beginnings of automobiles, skyscrapers in the process of being built, electricity, and guns.
I would give the Mistborn series a go if you haven't already.

https://ideas.lego.com/projects/69949

Rachel Pollack's Temporary Agency might be close, I remember people in the city going out to shop for spells and charms.
Most other stuff I can think of is in the past, or the 'magic comes back' subset, or the 'we don't talk about it' subset.




Max Gladstone's Craft Sequence. It's one of the only secondary-world fantasy novel series I can point to and say this is what an archetypal medieval fantasy world would look like if it developed 21st century notions of law, governance, and social structures. You have modern-feeling metropolises full of millions of people who rely on utilities like lights and running water--only the utilities are provided by imprisoned gods kept in line with magical contracts enacted by necromancers who operate like lawyers and hedge fund managers. Oh, and there's parkour practitioners, police who turn into justice golems when on duty, and goddess-powered poker games.
There are several tabletop RPGs in a similar vein--Eberron comes to mind--but the Craft Sequence is the first thing I can think of with regards to prose fiction.



Newton's Cannon and the other three books of the quartet deal with this subject really well. If it was set in the 20th century instead of the 18th, it might have been perfect for this thread.

I bought Newton's Cannon after reading Stephenson's Baroque Cycle. Guess I was on a Newton kick. Never got around to reading it though. You enjoyed it?


Yes, I did. I thought Newton's Cannon was extremely well done. You might call it alternate science, rather than magic but that would be a matter of opinion, particularly later in the series.
I haven't read the Baroque Cycle so I can't really compare the two but, if it was anything like Cryptonomicon, these books are muuuuch shorter, more lively and more popcorn-ish reading - but that's a comparative thing. Stephenson is way more idea-dense than most authors.

The superhero novels by Jackie Kessler and Caitlin Kittredge, Black and White and sequel Shades of Gray take place in a world that has technology plus the usual inexplicable powers of superhumans. No explanation is given, it's just the way the world is.
The Bartimaeus Sequence by Jonathon Stroud has djinn and wizards in the modern world. The Amulet of Samarkand is the first one.
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I'm not looking for anything steampunk or supernatural, just something like what would all of these worlds be like if the technologically progressed like we have over 2000 years.