Regarding Epic fantasy series (and noteing you enjoy Martin, thus have some sene of good taste), I'd recoomend these:
-R. Scott Bakker's
Prince of Nothing trilogy:
The Darkness that Comes Before
The Warrior Prophet
The Thousandfold Thought
This was recently completed, and will be extented by another duology or trilogy in the future. Bakker is a powerful writer. To get some background onthe series I briefly interviewed Scott
here.. I recently reviewed the last book, but to avoid spoilers, I reviewed the first book,
here, if looking for a general idea of the series, This is a incredibly unsentimental book, andemplys a narrative style thatis perhapsthemsot ambitious in epic fantasy.
- Steve Erikson's
Malazan Book of the Fallen:
u]Gardens of the Moon[/u] (available in the U.S)
DeadHouse Gates (available in the U.S)
Memories of Ice (available in the U.S)
House of Chains
Midnight Tides
BoneHunters
Dust of Dreams (forthcoming)
Hounds Toll (forthcoming)
Reapers Cale (forthcoming)
Crippled God (forthcoming)
There are also two Malazan related novellas by Erikson,
Blood Follows and
The Healthy Dead, as well as a novel written by Ian Cameron Esslemont, called
Night of Knives, that serves as a prequel to
Gardens of the Moon. Esslemont is also working on his next effort,
Return of the Crimson Guard.
Those 2 series (and Martin's) represent he 3 outstading spiec series in recent years IMHO (and some of the best ever).
On a level below that (but still good) I also liked JV Jones,
Sword of Shadows trilogy:
A Cavern of Black Ice
A Fortress of Grey Ice
A Sword from Red Ice (forthcoming)
Greg Keyes'
Kingdom of Thorn and Bone:
The Briar King
The Charnel Prince
The Blood Knight (forthcoming - but I read it, it's solid)
Book IV forthcoming
Guy Gavriel Kay's
Sarantine Mosaic:
Sailing to Sarantium
Lord of Emperors
Robin Hobb's
Farseer Trilogy:
Assassin's Apprentice
Royal Assassin
Assassin's Quest
Braided Path by Chris Woodling
The Weavers of Saramy
Skein of Lament
The Ascendancy Veil
You may also went to check ou John Macrco and Paul Kearney.