I don't read sci/fi and fantasy as much as i want to and recently i have been thinking of reading the Hyperion Cantos and The Book of the New Sun since i heard good things about both. Any tips or advice on which one i should read first or how i should approach them when reading?
Simmons is a straightforward read here.
Wolfe is. . . not so much, but he's earned his rep. Pick Simmons if you like variety here. Pick Wolfe if you want to be challenged a bit.
So far, I've not dipped into it much, but the few works I read and can certainly vouch for are Geza Gardonyi's Eclipse of the Crescent Moon (or Stars over/of Eger), a work focusing on the Ottoman siege of Eger, a truly miraculous victory of the Hungarian defenders in 1552, when two thousand Hungarians beat back 30-40 thousand Ottoman besiegers and his other popular work, Slave of the Huns/Invisible man/Hidden amongst Huns, a work focused on a Eastern Roman slave who defects to the Huns and fights on the Catalaunian fields.
I've also been reading Cornwells Warlord trilogy on a more historical version of king Arthur and I can recommend the first book (Winter King) as a standalone as it ends on a very high note.
As for works I'd like to read, Maurice Druon's Iron King seems to be rather interesting. We could also slip in more Dan Simmons as his Terror is also focused on a historical even, but with a supernatural twist (and Terror is such a good book). I'd also be interested in the Hussite trilogy by Sapkowski, with the first book being The tower of fools.
Historical fiction and fantasy I think would be good. I think alt history could be good for its own month.
I feel like Historical Fiction probably belongs in a general "Men's Fiction" reading thread where we could just smash classics, historical fiction, adventure, pulps, and crime/mystery material.
Avram Davidson's got a lot of really good stuff. The Phoenix and The Mirror was a good historical fantasy work based on the medieval idea of Vergil being a sorcerer/alchemist. Davidson shows his breadth of knowledge and his high level prose in this. I'd definitely call him one of the literary descendents of Clark Ashton Smith just because of what I've read of his prose.
As for the Davidson I wanna recommend? Peregrine Primus. Historical Fantasy of sorts.
For other options
Tim Powers is supposedly pretty good. The Anubis Gates, On Stranger Tides, and The Drawing of the Dark are all on my shelf waiting for a read.
F Paul Wilson could also be fun. I've got the start of his big universe in "The Keep", ready to read. It's a pulpy horror adventure involving Nazis and Vampires.
Thinking of other "historical fantasy" options. C. L. Moore's Jirel of Joiry tales are historically set. So are Howards' Solomon Kane stories. There's David Drake's Vettius stories and Richard Tierney's Simon of Gitta stories if you want more S&S in Rome.
If you all want something purely historical fiction, there's always Flashman by Fraser, or Captain Blood by Sabatini. Or go a little more out there with Talbot Mundy or Harold Lamb.