Nobody mentioned Margaret Atwood yet! The Handmaid's Tale is excellent https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Handmaid%27s_Tale
Also Mary Shelley for Frankenstein !
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Nobody mentioned Margaret Atwood yet! The Handmaid's Tale is excellent https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Handmaid%27s_Tale
Also Mary Shelley for Frankenstein !
It is a good book (I'm too much of a chicken to watch much of the show).
It is very immersive and a difficult read, but masterful storytelling.
I honestly think it should be required reading.
On alive authors, I think Nina Allan and Niviaq Korneliussen are worth a try.
Many great authors mentioned. I'll add: Marilynne Robinson is magic. Harper Lee. Zora Neale Hurston!!! I'll also add Charlotte Bronte bc Jane Eyre is such a great read.
Probably Agatha Christie
Ursula le Guin is a great SF writer
My first picks have already been mentioned, but I think these women have also been influential
Flannery O' Connor, Shirley Jackson, Emily Dickinson
Off the top of my head Andre Norton is completely overlooked in this thread. Like… what?
Mercedes lackey.
Cj Cherryh.
Katherine Kurtz.
I don't read books that often, so I don't know if she's necessarily the best but I'd have to say Cornelia Funke. Inkheart, while I have yet to actually finish it, is the only normal book that I remember actually liking. It's currently the only book I own a copy of that isn't a manga.
I really liked her Dragon Rider as a kid
Astrid Lindgren, her books are translated to 95 different languages and sold over 160 million copies. Probably the worlds most beloved children’s book author.
Fiction
Ursula K. LeGuin
Octavia Butler
Margaret Atwood
Tui T. Sutherland (J Fic)
Suzanne Collins (YA)
Lois Lowry (YA)
Non-Fiction
Naomi Klein
Margaret Atwood (Massey Lecture)
Angela Y. Davis
Tanya Talaga
bell hooks
Robin Wall Kimmerer
I don't have 'best female author of all time' but I do have favorite writers some of which happen to be female. I don't usually split them by their sex (nor by their height, distaste for bananas, or whatever) as for me they're all in the same 'people who have a great time staining paper with ink making me a happy reader' league but here it is, in absolutely no order beside the first two, as there is them and then there is all the others:
Being French, I realize I have not listed that many French female writers I would consider a favorite. But they are a few I would consider excellent read nonetheless:
Obviously, Mary Shelley. Created the most famous character of all time and the entire genre of science fiction while still a teenager.
I'm a fan of Tanith Lee. She started weird fantasy and Neil Gaiman stole all his best ideas and most of his writing style from her.
Karen Slaughter writes detective novels that make Jack Reacher look like a school boy.
Tana French is Slaughter's Irsih cousin.
Joanna Russ was an out Lesbian back in the 1970s. "The Female Man" is still cutting edge.
No love for Jane Austen? Some of her works are all time classic. They could probably compete with top 10 literature work of 17th-18th century.
Another author that's under appreciated would be Gertrude Stein.
Yeah, Jane Austen's easily one of the top 20 English novelists of all time, and one of my personal favorites. She gets kind of a mixed appreciation these days bc the movies made from her novels usually focus on the romance (often in a way that would have scandalized her) and skimp on her commentary about human nature and society's pressures. And plus her prose is just gorgeous and that is difficult to adapt to film. Probably the best adaptation is the BBC 1980 Pride and Prejudice miniseries ( wikipedia , tubi ) which was adapted by Fay Weldon, who was a novelist in her own right. That miniseries turns a lot of Austen's prose into dialogue, which is beautiful to hear in that context, though as a consequence the series is a little slow for a wide modern audience. Really you have to read the books themselves.
She's also incredibly funny (and sometimes savage) which also gets lost in many adaptations, since it's in her commentary and not necessarily in the dialog.
She was not a woman of many words; for, unlike people in general, she proportioned them to the number of her ideas.
Ursula LeGuin
Margaret Atwood
Diana Wynne Jones
and for personal preference, Robin McKinley
Agatha Christie is definitely one. Agree with Mary Shelley Robin Hobb
Surprised I had to scroll this much to see her being mentioned.
Agatha Christie. While not quite what I like there is no denying her success.
The only female author I am familiar enough with to have an opinion on is Anne McCaffrey because of the Dragon Riders of Pern series. Those are in my top 5 all time favorite series', tho. Above Goosebumps but below Neuromancer, LOTR, and Wheel of Time.
Incorrect answer but I'm very excited every time she has a book, Mary Roach.
Poets are authors too, so I'm tossing mine in for Emily Dickinson