Fantasy · Political Intrigue · Social Commentary

4 hand-picked fantasy, political intrigue, and social commentary books curated by NextBookAfter.

FantasyPolitical IntrigueSocial Commentary
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 Last Chances

City of Last Chances

If you loved watching vampires and werewolves claw for power without romance or morality in A Bargain So Bloody, City of Last Chances throws you into the same cutthroat arena—revolutionaries, demons, and opportunists scheming in a decaying city where survival trumps ideals. Same raw cynicism, same visceral thrills, zero sanitization.

Cover of Foundryside

Foundryside

The Scar rewired your brain with its unflinching weirdness—steampunk biology, prickly anti-heroes, and revolutionary politics that cut deep without preaching. You need fantasy that refuses escapism, where power is dissected with surgical cynicism and worlds feel viscerally, chaotically real. This recommendation delivers that same fever-dream intensity through magic systems as rigorous as code and protagonists as morally compromised as Bellis Coldwine.

Cover of The Will of the Many

The Will of the Many

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.