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I think this may have gone around LJ a while back, but I'm importing it now from the blogosphere via Chad's book log.
- Piers Anthony (not for years, though!)
- Lawrence Block (just the funny ones)
- Steven Brust (everything except To Reign in Hell, which I got out of the library, read ten pages of, and then never picked up again until it needed to go back)
- Lois McMaster Bujold (everything)
- Jennifer Crusie (everything except that novella Sizzle which is apparently not to be found for love or money)
- Stephen Donaldson (both Covenant trilogies, before I realized I wasn't enjoying myself, and the Gap series—which I actually kinda liked, though I haven't dared re-read them)
- Debra Doyle & James D. Macdonald (seven Mageworlds books, six Circle of Magic YAs, Knight's Wyrd, and the solo Apocalypse Door)
- Diane Duane (the stuff set in the Wizardry-verse and the Door books)
- Dave Duncan (Man of His Word/Handful of Men, the two Omar books, two of the King's Blade series, and Past Imperative which I found boring)
- David Eddings (I stopped after the second trilogy, but sixteen was still too many)
- Neil Gaiman (counting the Sandman collections as separate books, plus the other books, except picture-books)
- Georgette Heyer (not everything, but quite a lot)
- Stephen King (not a lot of recent stuff, but at least twenty)
- Mercedes Lackey (I stopped reading her automatically after the Gryphon trilogy, though I've picked up the occasional one since. Apparently The Fairy Godmother doesn't suck?)
- Anne McCaffrey (I think I stopped reading the Pern novels with, umm, Masterharper?)
- L.M. Montgomery (I thought I'd read all of her novels (except Jane of Lantern Hill which is ripening on a shelf), but in checking a bibliography, there are several I'd never heard of: Kilmeny of the Orchard, The Story Girl, The Golden Road, and Magic for Marigold)
- Ellis Peters (though I'm not done with the Cadfael books yet)
- Tamora Pierce (everything)
- J.D. Robb (everything)
- Nora Roberts (vast quantities, even still occasionally)
- Terry Pratchett (everything except either Strata or The Dark Side of the Sun, I forget which)
- Dorothy Sayers (everything)
- Rex Stout (all of the Nero Wolfe books)
- Donald Westlake (all the Dortmunders, and a few other funny ones)
- James White (all twelve Sector General books)
- Patricia Wrede (everything but the tie-ins)
- Roger Zelazny (Amber, of course)
I am inordinately amused that I stopped reading Robert Jordan before I would have to list him here.