Honestly, most of the big fantasy releases felt pretty familiar last year. One that actually felt different was 'The Stardust Thief' by Chelsea Abdullah. It’s inspired by Arabic folklore, not the usual European medieval stuff, which was a huge breath of fresh air. The world is this vast desert full of jinn, treacherous markets, and buried myths. The magic feels ancient and capricious, tied to stories and deals rather than wands or elemental systems. It just operated on a different wavelength for me, more about atmosphere and consequence than rigid rules. Really stuck with me.
Finally, someone asking the real questions. The standout for me is Babel by R.F. Kuang. It’s this dark academia fantasy that’s built around the power of translation and etymology. The magic system is literally fueled by the gaps in meaning between languages, which sounds like it could be a dry textbook but is actually the engine for a brutal critique of colonialism and empire. The world is our 19th century, but twisted through this linguistic lens that makes every conversation and silver bar inscription feel politically charged and dangerous. It’s not an escape to a far-off land; it’s a magnification of the hidden gears in our own history.
Another one that messed with my head was 'The Spear Cuts Through Water' by Simon Jimenez. The world-building is so deeply embedded in the narrative style—it’s a story within a story within a dream, told in this shifting second-person plural that makes you feel like you’re part of a collective memory. The landscapes and rules don’t feel explained; they feel lived in and half-remembered, like folklore. You get this empire with three tyrannical moons and a journey with a grieving warrior and a fallen god. It’s less about maps and magic rules and more about a pervasive, mythic atmosphere that’s utterly consuming.
For a left-field pick, 'Nettle & Bone' by T. Kingfisher crafts a uniquely grubby, practical fairy-tale world. It’s a princess-rescue story where the ‘heroine’ is a nun who’s really bad at being a nun, she has a dog made of bones, and her allies include a witch who lives in a swamp of curses. The uniqueness is in the tone—it’s dark, funny, and grounded in the mundane troubles of its characters despite the magical horrors. The world feels worn and used, where magic has consequences and fairy-tale logic has sharp, painful edges.
2026-07-10 14:11:42
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Anya Moore is a pop sensation with lots of people who look up to her, though her passion is something else. Sadie Ozoa wants to chase her dreams and doesn’t want to take no for an answer, but it feels like she doesn’t have a choice. But unexpected decisions they made had created unfaithful circumstances that have brought two different individuals together. Next unthinkable move: run as far away from the situation that could have led to their wishes.
They don’t know how they ended up walking together and they don’t know why. But all they want to do is to escape from the environment they were surrounded in. Anya and Sadie thought they would be distant but with every step they took, they started to know so much about each other and what they have one thing in common: they hated how the world has become. They then thought what if they rebuild Earth where it is all ruled by them--and only both of them. The two then thought what if we start to make it a reality?
As they go on the journey to create their own world, Anya sees that Sadie is more than an outcast and Sadie sees that Anya is more than just a star--they are each other’s world.
But with the world that is against their odds, will they be able to show their truth?
In this first debut comes a coming-of-age story about realizing that in order to survive the world, you must choose whether to follow the rules or break them for the sake of doing something right.
One moment he had just read the strangest book he had ever come across, the next he was stumbling into the world of that same book.
Now Mars is trapped in a fantasy world as a nobody, and the gorgeous, cruel Crown Prince who just kidnapped him thinks he's a spy. Keith Elarion's solution? Keep Mars under his personal, infuriatingly attractive supervision.
Mars’s plan is simple- survive, avoid the plot, and find a way home. But the prince is nothing like the two-dimensional villain from the book. Keith is all intense green eyes and confusing, rough kindness, and he’s decided Mars is his to keep. When Mars accidentally unleashes a power he should not possess, he becomes the key to a conspiracy that runs deeper than the novel ever revealed.
His meddling changes everything, accelerating a plot that was supposed to take years.
To top it off, a cryptic bird-god just told Mars he's not just a lost college student.
He's the son of the goddess who made this world.
To save Keith, stop a divine war, and maybe finally kiss the man he falls hopelessly in love with, Mars has to do the one thing the book never planned for: he has to rewrite fate itself.
When heartbreak drives Luna into the wilderness, she doesn’t expect to cross into another world.
A place where the seasons have kings, where beauty hides cruelty, and where a single human woman can tip the balance between peace and ruin.
Drawn into the glittering court of the King of Summer, Luna learns that love and power are never what they seem—and survival demands more than hope.
From betrayal and forbidden desire to war among the kingdoms, The Kingdom of Light follows one woman’s rise from broken heart to legend.
Magic. Love. Revenge. Rebirth.
The turning of the seasons will never be the same again.
Amelia Rose Vale has always been ordinary.
Careful. Quiet. Human.
Then an impossible letter arrives at her door, accepting her into Waycross Academy—a school she never applied to and cannot find on any map. By dusk the next day, Amelia steps through its gates and into a world where corridors shift without warning, rules are enforced but never explained, and every student around her is something other than human.
At Waycross, Amelia is not just unusual.
She is impossible.
Her presence draws the attention of seven powerful men: a cryptic cat shifter who appears where he should not be, a dragon shifter who looks at her like he has waited years to find her, a restless fae bound by secrets and time, a demon whose calm hides dangerous hunger, a chaotic vampire who knows too much, an ancient guardian who teaches her how to survive, and a controlled mage mentor determined to keep his distance.
Each of them recognizes something in Amelia that she cannot see in herself.
As her strange power begins to wake, Amelia discovers her family name buried in forbidden records, and her supposed humanity becomes harder to believe. But being noticed at Waycross is dangerous. A jealous incubus queen wants her broken, hidden enemies are watching from beyond the Academy walls, and the school itself seems to be pushing her toward a truth no one will fully explain.
Amelia thought she was falling into a nightmare.
But Waycross did not choose her by mistake.
And the monsters circling her may not be her downfall.
They may be the first ones to kneel.
Zoey Mitchell only wanted a quiet hike after college graduation.
Instead, a hurricane ripped her out of her world and dropped her into Nytherra—a realm of magic, danger, and creatures that shouldn’t exist.
The first thing she saw?
A pack of wolves hunting her.
The second?
A massive black wolf with glowing blue eyes calling her mate.
Alexander Veylor, Wolf King of Nytherra, is ruthless, brooding, and bound to a political alliance with a fae princess. He cannot afford the weakness of a human mate. But the bond between them burns hotter with every stolen glance, every forbidden touch, every dirty word growled in the dark.
Yet in a world that despises humans, love is a liability—and betrayal waits at every turn.
The kingdom of Imperium.
A kingdom of swords and fights and forever passions.
Two powerful, mighty knights, who were also brothers, declared a war the night after their father died and they would fight until one of them was killed. They declared a war of their armies. They were looking for a chance to kill each other for a very long time.
Because of a throne.
Because of a woman.
A poor, abandoned, yet a beautiful looking soul.
That was the day when the Lord of Life returned in the kingdom. It was promised that so much blood would drip when his mark appeared beside the new moon.
There was also a vengeful witch, who was seeking for revenge.
But what happened at last?
Fantasy books are my escape hatch from reality, and I've devoured enough to have some strong favorites. 'The Name of the Wind' by Patrick Rothfuss is a masterpiece—the prose feels like music, and Kvothe's journey is addictive. Then there's Brandon Sanderson's 'Mistborn' series, which flips traditional tropes with its unique magic system and gritty heist plot.
For something more classic, 'The Lies of Locke Lamora' delivers thieves' banter and Venetian vibes that stick with you. And don't skip N.K. Jemisin's 'The Fifth Season'—it’s revolutionary, blending seismic worldbuilding with raw emotion. Each of these pulls you into a different flavor of 'what if,' and that’s the magic of fantasy.