Fantasy · Morally Ambiguous Characters

3 hand-picked fantasy and morally ambiguous characters books curated by NextBookAfter.

FantasyMorally Ambiguous Characters
Cover of Black Sun

Black Sun

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.

Cover of City of Saints and Madmen

City of Saints and Madmen

You fell hard for Perdido Street Station's teeming urban nightmare of remade freaks, slake-moth terrors, and socialist undercurrents ripping apart New Crobuzon's gritty sprawl. China Miéville's baroque prose and morally ambiguous anti-heroes subverted every fantasy trope, delivering visceral horror laced with sharp critiques of power and exploitation. Now, amplify that weird fiction rush with City of Saints and Madmen's fungal labyrinths and eccentric scholars unraveling colonial dread.

Cover of Gideon the Ninth

Gideon the Ninth

If you fell hard for the gritty ambition and moral ambiguity in 'Bury Our Bones in the Midnight Soil', where broken characters chase power through trauma and eternal grudges, you'll crave this rec's razor-sharp necromancers blurring hero-villain lines in visceral power plays. The unapologetic queerness fuels intense rivalries and desires, mirroring Schwab's authentic tension, while intricate world-building turns death into philosophical warfare with emotional gut-punches that linger. Dive into skeletal armies and betrayal as scripture—it's the intoxicating follow-up your dark fantasies demand.