After R. F. Kuang

5 recommendations for R. F. Kuang fans who loved Babel, Katabasis, The Poppy War, Yellowface.

Author Focus

After Katabasis

Cover of Black Sun

Black Sun by Rebecca Roanhorse

If Katabasis hooked you with its unflinching critique of academic elitism and systemic injustices through morally ambiguous scholars in a myth-reimagined hellscape, Black Sun delivers that same intellectual ferocity via prophecy-driven power struggles in an Indigenous-inspired world. Kuang's blend of lyrical horror and emotional gut-punches finds its match in Roanhorse's brutal prose that honors diverse myths while dismantling hierarchical decay. No easy escapes here—just the raw thrill of ambition clashing with cultural erasure, perfect for progressive readers hungry for thought-provoking fantasy.

After Katabasis

Cover of Black Water Sister

Black Water Sister by Zen Cho

If Katabasis's savage takedown of colonial theft left you breathless, Black Water Sister weaponizes Malaysian spirits against diaspora erasure with the same intellectual ferocity. Morally compromised heroines, ancestral possession as metaphor, and dialogue that eviscerates cultural hypocrisy—this is fantasy that refuses to comfort you.

After The Poppy War

Cover of The Jasmine Throne

The Jasmine Throne by Tasha Suri

For fans of The Poppy War's fierce female leads and unflinching take on colonialism, The Jasmine Throne delivers a lush, dark fantasy of empire and rebellion, infused with South Asian inspiration and a simmering queer romance that explores the intoxicating pull of forbidden power.

After Babel

Cover of A Master of Djinn

A Master of Djinn by P. Djèlí Clark

If Babel ignited your rage against empire's linguistic theft and systemic racism, this rec delivers that same cathartic takedown through steampunk Cairo's supernatural resistance. Readers who loved Kuang's messy revolutions and ethical tightropes will devour Clark's empowered protagonists dismantling oppression with unflinching intensity. It's the anti-colonial fantasy fix that validates radical action without compromise.

After Yellowface

Cover of Disorientation

Disorientation by Elaine Hsieh Chou

Yellowface hooked you with its brutal satire on white authors stealing Asian stories for clout, delivering that delicious schadenfreude as June Hayward's empire crumbles in a storm of backlash. Disorientation amps up the chaos in academia, skewering orientalist profs and tokenism with the same wicked wit that made Yellowface unputdownable. If you live for morally messy protagonists unraveling spectacularly, this is your next obsession.