Are There Books Like The Infinite And The Divine?

2026-01-06 18:46:37 282
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3 Answers

Grace
Grace
2026-01-07 08:18:41
I’ve been chasing that 'Infinite and the Divine' high for ages! One underrated gem is 'The Library at Mount Char' by Scott Hawkins. It’s got the same vibe of eldritch beings playing games with reality, but dialed up to horror-comedy levels. Imagine Trazyn’s collection obsession, but if he were a dysfunctional god sibling hiding a library of cosmic secrets. The tone’s darker, but the absurdity and heart are there.

For a lighter take, 'To Sleep in a Sea of Stars' by Christopher Paolini has that grand, millennia-spanning scope. It’s more sci-fi than Warhammer, but the protagonist’s journey from human to something… else gives off Orikan-energy. Also, 'Gideon the Ninth' if you haven’t read it yet—necromancers in space, but with meme-y humor and emotional gut punches. The sequels dive deeper into godly politics, too.
Hope
Hope
2026-01-11 14:22:00
Oh, if you’re after the 'immortal beings being petty' angle, 'Good Omens' by Gaiman and Pratchett is a classic. Crowley and Aziraphale’s dynamic is Trazyn/Orikan if they’d teamed up against heaven and hell instead of each other. Less grimdark, more tea and sarcasm. For a deeper cut, try 'The Book of the New Sun' by Gene Wolfe—it’s a labyrinthine, unreliable narrator tale where the protagonist might be a god (or just a liar). Feels like decoding Necron history, but with more swords.
Owen
Owen
2026-01-12 05:35:02
So, you're hunting for books that scratch that same itch as 'The Infinite and the Divine'? I totally get it—that blend of ancient rivalries, cosmic-scale pettiness, and deep lore is addictive. If you loved the Necron shenanigans, you might adore 'The Lies of Locke Lamora' by Scott Lynch. It’s got that same razor-sharp wit and layered scheming, though in a more grounded (but no less brutal) thieves’ world. The dynamic between Locke and Jean echoes Trazyn and Orikan’s bickering, but with more stabbings and fewer time loops.

For something closer to the 40K vibe but with a different flavor, Dan Abnett’s 'Eisenhorn' series is a must. It’s less about immortal robots and more about a human inquisitor’s moral decay, but the dense world-building and philosophical tangents hit similar highs. And if you’re into the 'ancient beings with too much time on their hands' trope, 'Hyperion' by Dan Simmons has gods, time travel, and poets bickering on a pilgrimage. It’s like if Trazyn wrote Canterbury Tales.
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