Richard Powers
Jack Vance
Tom Perrotta
Lawrence Block
Neal Stephenson
Philip Jose Farmer
Elinor Lipman
Robert Shea
Robert Anton Wilson
Iain Banks
I stopped after coming up with the ten, although I could have added another author or two, if needed. I've certainly read more than 10 by R.A. Lafferty, Roger Zelazny and by Gene Wolfe. Probably also Heinlein, Harlan Ellison, Isaac Asimov, Arthur C. Clarke and the Strugatsky brothers. With Vladimir Nabokov, I am pretty close.
Some authors, of course, simply haven't written very many books. I've read all six of Jane Austen's canonical novels, and a seventh book that collected two unfinished novels with a novella called "Lady Susan," but that only brings me up to seven. Poor Jane wrote until shortly before her death and she was only 41 when she died.
Tom Perrotta has a new novel out this month and there's a new Stephenson novel coming out in October, so that makes me happy.

11 comments:
Authors I've read 10 books by:
Robert Anton Wilson
William Burroughs
Thomas Pynchon
E. J. Gold
Buckminster Fuller
Lon Milo Duquette
Aleister Crowley
Dr. Seuss
Jerry Cornelius
Kenneth Grant
Timothy Leary
Tom Robbins
I forgot to include Gilles Deleuze which seems hilarious given that I currently read him.
It's funny how memory works. I live in the Cleveland area, where Roger Zelazny was from, and I didn't realize for awhile that I had overlooked him when making up my list.
Robert Anton Wilson
Charles Rosen
Thomas Pynchon
P G Wodehouse
Robert Heinlein
Aleister Crowley
Dr. Seuss
Timothy Leary
Joseph Kerman
David Thomson
Philip Jose Farmer
Colin Wilson
Robert Anton Wilson
Jack Vance
Edgar Rice Burroughs
John D. MacDonald
Ross MacDonald
Roger Zelazny
Poul Anderson
Michael Moorcock
I could easily make a second list.
Mark, I'm curious what some of your other names would have been. I have been meaning to try Ross MacDonald.
I’d forgotten how I loved John MacDonald’s Travis Magee books.
Alan Watts, Robert A. Heinlein, William S. Burroughs, Philip K. Dick, Rex Stout, Louis L'Amour, Arthur C. Clark, Larry Niven, Ian Fleming, L. Frank Baum, James Branch Cabell, etc.
If you like Chandler, Ross MacDonald is the next best thing. Especially the books published in the sixties.
And George Bernard Shaw!
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