Get book recommendations that actually understand why you liked something. Built for readers who know why a book worked.

Fantasy · Queer Fantasy

12 hand-picked fantasy and queer fantasy books curated by NextBookAfter.

FantasyQueer Fantasy
Cover of A Taste of Gold and Iron

A Taste of Gold and Iron

If Alchemized showed you magic as identity transformation, A Taste of Gold and Iron makes court intrigue into foreplay. Anxiety-riddled protagonists navigate power imbalances with the same raw authenticity that made Bryn's alchemy sing—neurodivergent representation that refuses to be metaphor, wrapped in slow-burn romance where every political move doubles as emotional excavation.

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.

Cover of Light from Uncommon Stars

Light from Uncommon Stars

You adored The House in the Cerulean Sea for its magical misfits forming unbreakable found families, subverting bureaucracy with kindness and affirming queer love that blooms without trauma. The whimsical tone and emotional catharsis offered a hopeful sanctuary from real-world drudgery, perfect for pandemic-era comfort seekers yearning for low-stakes wonder. Dive into Light from Uncommon Stars for more quirky ensembles, interdimensional whimsy, and quiet rebellions that deliver the same restorative glow of belonging and joy.

Cover of Malice

Malice

For fans of Wicked's sympathetic villain origin story and moral complexity, Malice offers a queer retelling of Sleeping Beauty that flips the script on fairy tale tropes, exploring prejudice, power, and forbidden love through the eyes of a misunderstood enchantress.

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 Bruising of Qilwa

The Bruising of Qilwa

Craving more forbidden magic that crawls under your skin after Gideon the Ninth? This one trades space tombs for colonial tension and plague mysteries, delivering a healer protagonist whose blood magic could save or destroy. Same irreverent wit, same queer chaos, same emotional gut-punch—just with magic that demands a price and found family forged in desperation.

Cover of The House in the Cerulean Sea

The House in the Cerulean Sea

If the unapologetic queer romance and lyrical heartbreak of The Song of Achilles left you aching for more emotional depth, The House in the Cerulean Sea delivers with its whimsical found family and subtle love story that blooms amid acceptance and quiet rebellion. Fans adore how it mirrors the slow-burn tension and cathartic release, trading tragic fate for defiant hope and magical whimsy. Dive into this cozy fantasy where vulnerability wins, perfect for those hooked on intimate, character-driven narratives.

Cover of The Jasmine Throne

The Jasmine Throne

If Immortal Dark hooked you with its intoxicating blend of Ethiopian folklore, moral ambiguity, and steamy forbidden desire, The Jasmine Throne amps up the sapphic slow-burn in a South Asian-inspired world of political betrayal and vengeful heroines. Readers who devoured the gothic academia vibes and unflinching trauma will thrill to this story's lush temples, dark rituals, and characters who weaponize their pain for empire-toppling power. It's the raw, blood-soaked romantasy fix you've been dying for.

Cover of The Jasmine Throne

The Jasmine Throne

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.

Cover of The Jasmine Throne

The Jasmine Throne

You fell for The Priory of the Orange Tree's sprawling worlds, fierce female leads, and authentic queer romances that burned slow amid political chaos and mythical wonder. The Jasmine Throne ramps it up with South Asian-inspired lore, where women warriors ignite rebellions and sapphic tension fuels the fight against divine decay. It's the uplifting, steamy epic that heals divisions without skimping on high-stakes spectacle—perfect for sharing your next obsession.

Cover of The Jasmine Throne

The Jasmine Throne

If you fell for The Ten Thousand Doors of January because it turned prose into portals and made belonging feel like an act of rebellion, The Jasmine Throne offers that same intoxicating mix—two women wielding forbidden magic against an empire's rot, where identity is claimed in whispers and love between women rewrites the rules. This is fantasy for readers who want their escapism laced with grit, their magic steeped in cultural myth, and their heroines flawed enough to feel real.