Fantasy · Historical Fantasy · Moral Ambiguity

5 hand-picked fantasy, historical fantasy, and moral ambiguity books curated by NextBookAfter.

FantasyHistorical FantasyMoral Ambiguity
Cover of She Who Became the Sun

She Who Became the Sun

If Among the Burning Flowers had you hooked on morally gray women dismantling patriarchal power through ruthless ambition and slow-burn queer desire, you need this. She Who Became the Sun weaponizes identity itself in a reimagined Mongol-era China where fate, gender, and brutal political chess games collide—no apologies, no sanitized fantasy, just raw power and forbidden intimacy earned through blood.

Cover of She Who Became the Sun

She Who Became the Sun

If Calla's feral climb through godly bloodshed left you breathless, Zhu Chongba steals a dead boy's fate and torches every moral line to claim an empire. Same intoxicating ambition, same forbidden tension crackling beneath alliances, but swap Greco-Roman decay for 14th-century China's collapse—historical epic meets queer reimagining with prose sharp enough to draw blood. Betrayals cascade, cliffhangers ambush at 2 a.m., and legacy devours identity in ways that understand your existential ache.

Cover of The Anubis Gates

The Anubis Gates

If Ayesha's immortal flame still haunts you, Tim Powers unleashes time-twisting Egyptian gods and enigmatic sorcerers through Regency London's shadows. Ancient prophecies collide with relentless magical pursuits, obsessive passions burn without apology, and every page drips with the same forbidden mysticism that made uncharted ruins irresistible—only now the labyrinth spans centuries and the melodrama cuts deeper.

Cover of The Wolf and the Woodsman

The Wolf and the Woodsman

If Spinning Silver's fusion of Eastern European folklore, economic hardship, and morally complex heroines kept you reading past midnight, this is your next obsession. Ava Reid weaves Hungarian mythology and Jewish influences into a world where persecution drives every desperate alliance, magic extracts brutal costs, and survival demands cunning over heroics. No vapid fantasy here—just raw folklore where power always demands payment.

Cover of The Wolf and the Woodsman

The Wolf and the Woodsman

If The Familiar hooked you with its blend of historical persecution, Jewish mysticism, and slow-burn erotic tension amid moral ambiguity, you'll crave this follow-up's dive into medieval Hungarian folklore and pagan magic clashing with religious strife. Évike's defiant wit mirrors Luzia's sharp survival in oppressive worlds, delivering that same atmospheric immersion in enchanted forests and ritualistic dread. It's the perfect escapist hit for fans of flawed heroines navigating cultural displacement and brooding romance without YA fluff.