After Brandon Sanderson

4 recommendations for Brandon Sanderson fans who loved Rhythm of War, Tailored Realities, The Hero of Ages, Wind and Truth.

Author Focus

After Rhythm of War

Cover of Foundryside

Foundryside by Robert Jackson Bennett

Rhythm of War hooked you because Sanderson treats magic like engineering—logical, intricate, begging to be theorized. You stayed for characters like Kaladin whose depression felt real, not performative, and for a world so meticulously built you could map its power structures in your sleep. You need that same analytical high, but faster.

After Tailored Realities

Cover of The Will of the Many

The Will of the Many by James Islington

Tailored Realities hooked you because Sanderson respected your intelligence—giving you magic that works like architecture, not wish fulfillment, with protagonists who pay for every shortcut. The Will of the Many delivers that same refusal to pander: a power system so mercilessly logical you'll want to reverse-engineer it, wrapped around characters making the kind of compromises that keep you awake at 2 AM debating whether they're brilliant or damned.

After Wind and Truth

Cover of The Justice of Kings

The Justice of Kings by Richard Swan

Wind and Truth hooked you because Sanderson's rule-based magic and doorstopper worldbuilding rewarded your obsessive theorizing—every fabrial, every Oathpact detail mattered. The Justice of Kings delivers that same forensic satisfaction: a trilogy opener where magic and legal systems demand you dissect an empire's rot through pure intellectual rigor, and flawed protagonists rise through strategy, not luck. It's the next puzzle for readers who outgrew handwaving and crave logic that pays off.

After The Hero of Ages

Cover of The Library at Mount Char

The Library at Mount Char by Scott Hawkins

You loved how Sanderson made magic feel like exploitable physics wrapped in prophecy. The Library at Mount Char delivers that same intellectual rigor through catalogues of forbidden knowledge wielded by damaged savants who've traded sanity for power. Every revelation rewrites what you thought you understood about gods, sacrifice, and the brutal cost of mastery.