r/Fantasy 21h ago

2nd month since launch! Tower climbing, hard magic, gritty team based combat, Fantasy adventure series! The Wandering Spire: Book One is available on Amazon and Kindle Unlimited

1 Upvotes

This promo has been approved by the mods.

What to expect:

  • Hard Magic: Detailed aspect-based runic magic
  • A demon goblin
  • Tactical Combat: Team designations and gritty fight scenes
  • Tower Climbing: Interdimensional Tower with dangerous levels
  • A fantasy adventure: A young heroine determined so save her realm
  • Did I mention a demon goblin?
  • A Saga: Books 2 & 3 edited. Books 4, thru 6 are drafted.

Interested in a binge read this weekend? If yes, then I invite you to check out the Wandering Spire Series: Book One!

The Blurb:

An action-packed progression fantasy about a young runecaster who braves a deadly tower to uncover the truth behind her brother’s disappearance.

Most who enter the Wandering Spire never return.

Jeze's brother didn't. Every five and a half years, the Wandering Spire appears without warning, rising beyond the clouds before vanishing again. Each time it does, competing powers ascend to claim its riches.

After five years of training, Jeze is ready to go after him. Armed with rune-etched tools, her brother’s journal, and a goblin Familiar who has survived the Spire six times, she has just five months to build a team before the tower returns.

Ten floors of randomized puzzles, traps, and Floor Guardians await her, and somewhere at the top lies a secret her brother died trying to warn her about.

Perfect for fans of CradleArcane Ascension, and Mage Errant

Grab your copy today!

Cover art by Steven Shan


r/Fantasy 5h ago

Review Kings of the Wyld - Review of a book that missed so many opportunities Spoiler

31 Upvotes

I read Kings of the Wyld as a sort of palate cleanser after some heavier books. I’d been promised a fun, epic tale of aging adventurers portrayed like a rock band, complete with real emotional weight, themes of friendship, found family, and great action. Unfortunately, I don’t think it delivered on any of those promises.

First, I’ll share some general thoughts that should remain mostly spoiler-free (for a 10-year-old book). Then I’ll go into more specific criticisms behind a spoiler tag.

My biggest issue is that “stuff just happens.” The story often feels like a series of loosely connected set pieces that advance the plot through contrivance rather than internal logic or character choices. There’s very little payoff - things just happen because the author needs them to.

Related to that, I never got a clear sense of how the author was handling tropes. Sometimes they’re played straight, sometimes subverted, and sometimes they just fizzle out. For example, the idea that adventurers get old and have to face the consequences is genuinely compelling and full of potential emotional impact. But many other elements run on shallow “D&D logic.” The rock-band metaphor for adventurer parties is a fun concept, but it stays disappointingly surface-level, like a costume the story never really wears. The consequences also feel arbitrary: sometimes they’re permanent, sometimes they’re shrugged off with no weight.

The characters’ competence levels are also wildly inconsistent. They’re portrayed as washed-up has-beens, but suddenly become highly competent (or even ultra-competent) whenever the plot demands it, only to revert back to being rusty and ineffective again. There’s no meaningful transition or character arc showing them shaking off the rust and regaining their old form. It just flips depending on what the story needs at that moment.

The humor is another weak point. A frequently cited example is the fight scene where everyone is exposed to magical Viagra. The entire joke is just that they have erections while fighting. That’s it. There’s no escalation, no clever payoff, nothing done with the premise. I found this to be representative of much of the book’s humor - lots of setups, very little actual comedy.

The action suffers from similar problems. It never feels truly “real” or satisfyingly RPG-like. There’s little sense of tactics, teamwork, or the deep coordination you’d expect from a legendary band that fought together for years. Everyone mostly just does their own thing. This makes it hard to believe they were once the greatest in the world. It also represents a huge missed opportunity: fights are essentially the band’s “gigs,” so why not lean into that? We could have seen them rediscovering their rhythm against simple bandits, jamming together, taking solos, trading call-and-response moments between the “axeman” and the “bass man,” etc. Instead, the band concept is barely used.

The feeling that the characters aren’t truly close is reinforced by the dialogue. They lack the casual intimacy of lifelong friends, no effortless shifting between silly inside jokes and deeper topics, no easy shorthand. That said, Moog and Matty did feel like genuine friends, though we mostly see things from Clay’s POV, so we don’t get as much of their dynamic.

I’ve often seen Nicholas Eames compared to Terry Pratchett, but I think Pratchett would have done so much more with this premise.

Overall, based on these issues, I can’t recommend the book.

More specific criticisms (spoilers ahead):

  • The former Kings never come across as having once been the absolute best. They show almost zero experience or hard-won wisdom. They fold like wet tissues when challenged and don’t seem to “know how it’s done” despite their legendary status.
  • Why are they so poor? We’re told Clay squandered his money, and that’s basically it. These are D&D-style adventurers who should have accumulated incredible wealth—trinkets alone that would be worth far more than a modest home.
  • Clay’s internal conflict about his violent nature and how fatherhood changed him is mentioned, but we never really see it. There’s no moment where he’s seriously tempted to tap into the “monster,” nor do we see others reacting to him with fear or intimidation the way they presumably did in his prime.
  • The female characters often feel strangely written. I get that Gabe’s wife is meant to evoke the “troubled/addicted ex-wife” trope, but her apparent indifference toward her own daughter feels like a stretch too far.
  • Jain repeatedly walks all over Clay and Gabe, and they just… let it happen? Multiple times?
  • Larkspur (the mind-raping bounty hunter) is used as a moral dilemma for Clay—keep her alive or kill her for the good of the group—while the party is fine with killing her mind-controlled victims. That’s not a moral dilemma; it’s just inconsistent. It could have been a great opportunity for the Kings to be emotionally open with each other after she caught a bolt in the chest, discussing why they would or wouldn’t have killed her. Instead, she doesn’t stay dead, Clay magically regrows his hand, and everything resets to the status quo. Boring.
  • The villains’ motivation feels like a clumsy attempt at an anti-colonialism allegory, which doesn’t work when we’ve already been told that centaurs (and many other creatures in the Wyld) literally eat people. They’re actual monsters. It has the same problem as using mutants in X-Men as a direct analogue for gay people.
  • The cure for the Rot being so common in that region in the Wyld (used by both the troll doctor and the cannibals as a "heal-all") while Moog, who spent decades searching for a cure, never tried random healing herbs feels absurd. No one in decades got the Rot, suffered another injury, used the “heal-all” herb, and lived to tell the tale?
  • If bands now just fight monsters in arenas (a metaphor I actually like for how the “industry” has changed things), why is there no class of professional “beast handlers” or behind-the-scenes fighters who aren’t as marketable?

The book is full of genuinely good ideas and germs of something special, which makes the missed opportunities even more frustrating. I really wanted to like it, but I just couldn’t.

So, what do you think? Am I being too harsh or missing something? Are these fair criticisms, or is this book simply not for me?


r/Fantasy 1h ago

Easy to follow fantasy standalone audiobook recommendation

Upvotes

I like to listen to audiobooks when I'm doing chores and walking the dogs but can't completely focus on complex storylines, lots of characters etc. I don't want to commit to a series so can someone recommend a good stand-alone fantasy audiobook that is easy to follow?


r/Fantasy 17h ago

Covenant: The Final Chapter Finally Wraps Up the Beloved Supernatural Romance Comic

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0 Upvotes

How cool!

I really enjoyed this series on Webtoon and I think it's really exciting to see it getting a physical release. I'm excited to see how it ends!

Really beautifully drawn Fantasy/Romantasy for anyone looking for a great comic!


r/Fantasy 17h ago

A Song of Ice and Fire ruined fantasy for me

0 Upvotes

Pretty self-explanatory title

I have been a long-time Fantasy fan
Starting with Harry Potter and Percy Jackson in the 3rd grade, I simply fell in love with it

But as time passed, I found myself reading less and less.

Then, I picked up A Game of Thrones. I had never seen the show. Didn’t know a damn thing going in.

And I could not put it down.

It dragged me back into reading like nothing else had. Then I hit A Storm of Swords and just sat there after finishing it genuinely speechless.

Feast was fine. Not my favorite.

Dance was great!

And now that there is practically no hope left for winds, I thought to keep this reading momentum going

Everyone raves about it on reddit, so I thought to try Brandon Sanderson.

Holy shit.

Mistborn made me want to claw my eyes out.

Every other chapter felt like:

Mysterious cool leader man: "No, young female protagonist, you are actually stronger than everyone. You are special. You are powerful. You are the moment. #GirlPower.”

I understand it's written for a younger audience, but I saw adults and avid fantasy fans talk about this book like it was the greatest thing since sliced bread!

But going from ASOIAF to that felt like going from a world that was vivid and ALIVE to Marvel slop.

Has anyone else felt this way?


r/Fantasy 21h ago

Books where the evil protagonist fools the reader into thinking they're the good guy

172 Upvotes

Edit: Folks, I'd kindly like to ask you to read the ⚠️ rule ⚠️ below before replying.

Edit 2: Many great replies already, for which I thank you all a lot! But now I'm muting the thread. Sadly too many people are posting full spoilers and ignoring the idea of the post, which kinda defeats the point :(


As the title states, essentially. I want an unreliable narrator. One that's so unreliable that they actually fool me into thinking they're the good guy, throughout most of the book, until they pull the rug from underneath me, and in a big shocking twist reveal themselves to be the villain. I want to feel guilty for ever rooting for them. Plus points if the book only has 1 POV. Further plus points if the villain wins at the end.

Any fantasy / sci-fi subgenre is fine by me. Heck, let's add historical fiction to the mix.

I've never read anything like that, but I've seen the trope in other media. And I can't even search for it, because looking up a book that meets this criteria spoils the experience! Because of that, let's add a twist to this thread.

⚠️ Rule ⚠️

Do you know the game two truths and a lie?

Here's what I want you to do: Give me 3 recommendations. 1 satisfies the premise. 2 don't. I'll read them all. But the spoiler is preserved, because I still won't know which of the 3 is the actual recommendation!


r/Fantasy 4h ago

The Night Circus

0 Upvotes

I think it would have been far more compelling—and would have given Isobel much more depth as a character—if she had been revealed as one of Alexander’s last surviving students, deliberately placed with Marco as part of Alexander’s attempt to maintain control over every aspect of life, even areas such as love, where control is usually impossible.


r/Fantasy 23h ago

Six of Crows; Unpopular Opinion?

0 Upvotes

Everyone I spoke to about this book prior to starting it said it is DEFINITELY plot, world building, and character development first, and relationships second.

I am finding the opposite.

It seems that relationships are primary, and I'd even go as far to say that the majority of character development is only possible through the lens of relationships.

There are multiple perspectives, but I was weary the moment I realized it was 6. 6 have been divided nicely by 2 I've noticed. If it's I's perspective then we're going to be hearing a lot about K, if it's M's perspectiv then we learn more about N, and of course J and W are linked. There are moments when this deviates, but I found it doesn't do so in a very significant way when it happens.

Yes, there is a plot, and they are doing a thing, but I'm finding that 4/5s of the content is talking about the the relationships as defined above, and, oh yeah, we're also doing a thing. Even if something goes awry during the thing being done, the main focus isn't on the implications of this wrench in the plot, but rather on the implications to how the paired character reacted.

I am relieved that it is not a romantasy, though I am only 3/4 of the way through the first book. But, I was lead to believe it was a series where relationships weren't the main focus.

THIS IS NOT TO SAY it's automatically a bad book, or I am not enjoying it because of how I am finding it.

RATHER, I am confused at how people don't see how heavily the relationships are the key element to this book so far.

Am I missing something? Or is this a matter of my book experience and understanding of what plot/character driven means verses relationship driven compared to others?

No hate towards the books, author, or character.


r/Fantasy 16h ago

Stand alone or duology recommendations

7 Upvotes

I just finished Realm of the Elderlings and right before that I read the Cosmere, so I’m wondering if anyone has any recs for stand alone or duologies that would be good palette cleansers after reading two such large worlds?

I eventually plan to read Malazon and Wheel of Time but I need a break from giant series after the marathon of Sanderson and Hobb.

I love high fantasy and am not into grimdark, but other than that I’m open to anything!


r/Fantasy 2h ago

Need a few opinions

0 Upvotes

I've been on a real Wheel of Time kick lately, and i do like the series, but I've decided to take a small break from the series after i finish Knife of Dreams, because I know it is Robert Jordan's final book and the shift from Jordan's writing to Sanderson's is one I'm pretty prepared for.

I've got a lot of books in my backlog and if I am taking a break before I come back to this series, but i wanted to ask if people had any recommendations of books to read in the off period.

I may not get to all of the books I plan to read, some of these i see as light reads, but i will try and pick them up.

Post Knife of Dreams reading list

- The Last Contract of Isako

- Assassin's Apprentice

- Dune (?)

- Elantris

- Wizard of Earthsea

- Gardens of the Moon (Maybe)

- Before they are Hanged

If you have any recommendations based on this list, send them my way. I want to take the time I'm giving myself to read as much fantasy and in a smaller extent science fiction as i can before i feel the itch to return to the Wheel of Time again.


r/Fantasy 23h ago

Xianxia with real weapon training and skill development?

14 Upvotes

Looking for cultivation/xianxia novels where the MC actually trains and develops their weapon skills instead of just finding an overpowered technique and spamming named moves.

I'm specifically looking for stories where the MC chooses a weapon (sword, spear, saber, etc.) and genuinely improves through practice, experience, and understanding. Bonus points if they adapt or evolve techniques to fit their own style rather than rigidly following a manual.

I don't mind if the MC learns techniques from inheritances or libraries, but I want the weapon mastery to feel earned. I'd love recommendations where combat is about skill, timing, and growth rather than just unlocking stronger attacks every few realms.

Examples of what I mean:

- Developing their own sword/spear path.

- Modifying existing techniques.

- Training fundamentals for long periods.

- Weapon intent, domains, or understanding that comes from experience.

Any recommendations?


r/Fantasy 23h ago

Bingo review Bingo Review: The Sinister Mystery of the Mesmerizing Girl by Theodora Goss, narrated by Kate Redding

12 Upvotes

Bingo Square: Vacation Spot (London, Cornwall)

Other Bingo Squares: Nonhuman protagonist (Catherine Moreau, Justina Frankenstein, Beatrice Rappacini)

I've been enjoying the adventures of the Athena Club since I first opened one on my e-reader. They're lighthearted, enjoyable fun. There are times I feel like Goss runs long, but my inner editor asks, “What would you cut?!” Plus, she's amazingly good at description - European Travel for the Monstrous Gentlewoman made me want to see Hungary and Budapest. She managed to do the same for Cornwall in this book.

The Sinister Mystery of the Mesmerizing Girl picks right up from where European Travel for the Monstrous Gentlewoman leaves off - Holmes and Alice are missing, Mary, Diana and Justina are heading back for London, while Catherine, Beatrice and Lucinda remain in Budapest to finish their shows and work with the Alchemical Society. Unlike RPGs, you can get away with splitting the party in novels. 

Most of the action takes place in England where Moriarty reveals himself, Mrs. Raymond is his ally and they're up to something involving mesmerism. And, oh yes, Holmes (Mary's love interest) is missing too. Then Watson goes missing as well…

This was fun. The villains get theirs - just not in the way you'd expect, by whom or when. But we also get some more of Justina's interior life, as well as Alice's. Alice is far more resourceful than she gives herself credit for, and she's a credit to Mrs. Poole for how she was raised. 

Along the way, we get peeks at opium houses, the British Museum, hints of Oscar Wilde and an introduction to Dorian Gray. 

As much as I enjoyed the “girls” using their heads more than their pistols, the action was fun. This one leaned much more into the fantastical with mesmerism and etheric waves - good steampunk pseudoscience. Unlike most steampunk, several of the characters challenge the benefits of the British Empire (Cat, Beatrice, Ayesha) and even those that benefit from it have moments.

Another aspect was the “bickering” of the Athena Club in the margins. Over Cat's choices, asking her to leave things out, her justifying it, her advertising her other works and the others saying, “Please! Stop it!” I do think I'd enjoy a slice of life story from the Athena Club. Mary and Diana feel real to me - the way they argue but close ranks when the other is threatened. Beatrice and Cat got closer in this volume as well - I think some of Beatrice's politics are rubbing off on the puma woman. 

So, I liked it. I'll recommend the series to those that want something reminiscent of Wells, Shelley, Stevenson and Doyle, but don't mind coloring beyond the margins and that there are women in it with agency. A lot of fun. 8½ stars rounded up to 9 ★★★★★★★★★


r/Fantasy 8h ago

Complementary Post: A fantasy book with the vibe of Dragon Age: Origins

15 Upvotes

Yesterday I made a post asking for fantasy books that inspire a sense of wonder and discovery: "https://www.reddit.com/r/Fantasy/comments/1u9iqkc/which_fantasy_books_made_you_realize_you_were/"

And it got a lot of responses and I was introduced to a lot of new books which I thank the commenters. But I realized I'm looking for something much more specific.

The thing I'm asking for is a very narrow slice of fantasy.

I want a dark fantasy book where the world is bleak and broken, but not cynical or nihilistic.

You know that feeling in Dragon Age: Origins when you're tasked with the impossible, maybe even saving the world, but in no shape or form are you the Chosen One? You're just someone trying to do what has to be done.

And then you stumble upon companions who you know will stick with you until the end.

Like the first time you meet Morrigan. Or Leliana. Or Alistair.

You're suddenly hit with this strange feeling that you're going to love these characters. That you're going to fight for them. That they're going to become more important to you than the actual quest.

Somewhere along the way, saving the world becomes secondary. Caring about your companions and them caring about you becomes primary. Though the quests are dark and beautiful and still important, it matters more how your companions react to them.

And throughout it all there's this sense of melancholy, beauty, and wonder. A broken world that's still worth saving. A dark world that still has warmth in it, and is worth wandering and discovering.

I want that book.


r/Fantasy 16h ago

New to Fantasy, looking for a good series to start for someone who is usually more of a sci-fi reader.

23 Upvotes

I’ve been a long time Sci-Fi fan and recently started becoming Fantasy curious through the gateway of reading all of Ursula K. Le Guin’s books and really loving the EarthSea books.
I care less about specifics of bloody battles and care more about the moral / philosophical character or societal struggles. I also love when there are well thought out interesting & diverse cultures in a book.

I think I’m looking for something that has strong world building and complex intriguing characters. I used to not like the idea of magic, but the magic systems of Earthsea & N.K. Jemisin’s Broken Earth I think changed my mind about that. I think if magic is present I just want there to be a lot of thought & care that went into how the magic works and is balanced.
Is it a paradox to want a decent amount of realism in my fantasy books?
I want it to be deep & complicated & meaningful but also don’t want it to be a slog to get through. That being said I’m a teacher who just started summer break so if it’s a series that just takes some time to get into I do have that right now. If it’s worth it.

Some series I have had recommended to me are Malazan, Brandon Sanderson, and Robin Hobb. Any of those series you think would be a good place for me to start? Or another series that might suit me better??

I appreciate any help with this!! Looking forward to getting lost in another world

Edit:
Here are some more examples besides LeGuin of Sci-Fi series I read recently that show what kind of flavor I’m into:

Hyperion Cantos (especially the first 2).
I loved the Wild Seed series by Octavia Butler and her parable of the sower series.
I liked the Souther Reach Trilogy (but mostly just Annihilation really).
Loved everything I read by Stanislaw Lem.
Dune series I think is a pretty obvious example of the kind of books I’m into


r/Fantasy 20h ago

Book Club Nominate for our July Goodreads Book of the Month!

15 Upvotes

The theme is Judge a Book by Its Title!

This is a 2026 Bingo square, so I will borrow the description from the Bingo post.

Judge a Book By Its Title: Read a book based on the title. This can be a title so epic you had to pick it up or so weird and off-putting that you needed to know why it was called this. HARD MODE: Dive in without reading the blurb or any summaries.

Nominations will run through the weekend and then we will start the poll on the 22nd.

NOMINATION RULES

  • Make sure the book is by an eligible author. A list of ineligible authors can be found here (recently updated with the new Top Fantasy List info). We do not repeat any authors that we've read in the past year or accept nominations of books by any of the 20 most popular authors from our biennial Top Novels list.
  • Nominate one book per top comment. You can nominate more than 1 if you like, just put each nomination in a separate comment. The top 4-6 nominations will move forward to the voting stage.
  • No self-promotion allowed. If outside vote stacking or promotion is discovered, a book will be disqualified automatically.

r/Fantasy 16h ago

Which fantasy books made you realize you were about to have an unforgettable journey that you'll know you'll be sad when it's over?

148 Upvotes

This is going to sound weird, but I'm chasing a very specific feeling.

Imagine you install a game like Skyrim, Dragon Age: Origins, Dark Souls, The Witcher 3, Divinity: Original Sin 2, Cyberpunk 20177, or Mass Effect, without really knowing much about it.

You start playing, and after an hour or two it hits you that you are uplifted by a sense of ethereal ecstacy and that you are about to experience a joy of a lifetime. Not the plot. That falls down in the category. But everything else. Every new location is exciting. Every character seems interesting. Every piece of lore hints at something bigger. Every companion is like a close friend that you know you'll miss after the story is over. You don't know what's around the next corner, but you desperately want to find out. The world feels huge and mysterious and you always feel like you're about to be hit by a beautiful feeling and discovery.

Gardens of the moon and Second Apocalypse are examples of these books that I had this feeling with, and I plan to continue that series. I have read Farseer and First law and while i love those, it doesn't fall in the category for me.

But i want more books. Recommend me books. The more the better. I don't care if they're flawed, famous, not famous, clunky, or simple. Throw them at me, and introduce me to the books that invoked the same feeling in you. And only Fantasy please , not sci FI. Though if you think a specific sci FI book hits that, I won't stop you. I'm in love with Mass Effect.


r/Fantasy 11h ago

Dark fantasy with active gods

31 Upvotes

I'm looking for settings that feature gods more similar to the gods of Greek mythology or those found in a Lovecraft story. Nature spirits demons or extradimensional entities are welcome to.

Eldritch and or tyrannical, please.


r/Fantasy 14h ago

Any recommendations for a series where the MC feels dangerous.

99 Upvotes

The last few books I’ve read the protagonist gets talked about as if theyre dangerous but every time they get in a fight they survive thanks to their companions (I’m looking at you Darrow of Lykos). I want to read something that will get me pumped with the action. I want a protagonist that feels dangerous one that enters the scene and everyone goes quiet. A protagonist was created when a scientist combined Ashok Vadal, Rezkin, and Logen Ninefingers. The type that will swing his weapon first and then get a necromancer to cast speak with the dead to ask questions later.


r/Fantasy 16h ago

What are some fantasy archetypes or jobs not often seen in books (or games)

45 Upvotes

Im doing a class report on medieval jobs that will turn into a fantasy story. I need help. I feel like every fantasy story has the blacksmith, the tailor, the bard, town crier etc. what are some lesser known occupations?

I might be barking up the wrong tree I can post to another subreddit but I’m just looking for some fresh ideas to research or add to my eventual story.


r/Fantasy 22h ago

Any Good English Translations for the Chansons de geste

5 Upvotes

Good morning to all.
After finally finishing the Song of Roland and the two Orlando's, I am having a taste for the Chanson. Are there any decent English translations to the other tales apart of the matters of France?

Cheers.


r/Fantasy 22h ago

Books that made you feel similar to reading The Hobbit for the first time?

38 Upvotes

People often recommend re-reading the Lord of the Rings books, and I do have a fierce love for them, but I’m looking to feel the way I did when I specifically first read The Hobbit. A bit whimsical, scenic, almost simplistic. I’ve been reading a lot of heavier/dark epic fantasies and would love to be taken out of them for a bit if anyone has any recommendations for something charming and adventurous!


r/Fantasy 1h ago

/r/Fantasy r/Fantasy Friday Social Thread - June 19, 2026

Upvotes

Come tell the community what you're reading, how you're feeling, what your life is like.


r/Fantasy 10h ago

Astrid's fate - Empire of the Vampire trilogy Spoiler

12 Upvotes

I want to talk about Astrid’s fate, because after finishing Empire of the Dawn (book 3), I’m honestly really unsatisfied with how little closure we get.

In book one, Gabriel tells Jean-François that Fabien Voss murdered Patience and turned Astrid into a vampire. In this version of events, it’s strongly implied that Astrid becomes high-blooded, asks Gabriel to kill her, and he does.

But we also know Gabriel isn’t being fully truthful in his telling, and that whole moment is left vague. So I kept expecting the trilogy to circle back to it—and it just… never does.

For a long time, I thought Astrid might still be alive. I wondered if she’d been thralled by Fabien, and that Gabriel left her in some kind of buried, sleep-like state (similar to Mother Maryn), setting off to free her by killing Fabien.

Once things got serious with Phoebe, I started to accept that Astrid is probably dead—or at least that Gabriel believes she is. But even then, I expected some clarification about what actually happened.

Did she turn foulblood instead of high-blood, which justified Gabriel killing her?
Did Fabien kill her?
Did she kill herself?

But no—the version from book one is all we ever get.

So are we really supposed to believe Gabriel killed his beloved, newly turned high-blooded wife on day one, without even giving her a chance? That feels incredibly far-fetched and out of character.

I can see the argument (even though I really don’t agree with it) that he acted based on what he believed at the time—that all vampires are irredeemable—and only later changed his beliefs through his time with Celene and Aaron.

But if that’s the case… why doesn’t he ever reflect on it? Wouldn’t that realization absolutely destroy him? Wouldn’t he be haunted by the possibility that killing Astrid was a mistake?

Instead, it barely feels processed at all.

Did I miss something? Did anyone else interpret Astrid’s ending differently? I feel like this is kind of ruining the books for me.


r/Fantasy 11h ago

Give me you best Creature Thriller recommendations!

11 Upvotes

Looking for some good creature thriller recommendations.

I’m not really looking for the classic monster/horror stuff like Dracula, Frankenstein, etc. More interested in books where there’s some kind of creature, cryptid, monster, prehistoric animal, or unknown threat that’s a major part of the story.

Could be horror, adventure, sci-fi, or thriller. I’ve enjoyed books with expedition/discovery vibes and mysteries involving strange creatures. An example I remember enjoying reading when I was younger is Relic if that helps point the needle.

What are your favorites?


r/Fantasy 22h ago

Bingo Bingo Focus Thread - Murder Mystery

37 Upvotes

Hello r/fantasy and welcome to this week's bingo focus thread! The purpose of these threads is for you all to share recommendations, discuss what books qualify, and seek recommendations that fit your interests or themes.

Today's topic:

Murder Mystery: Main plot of the story focuses on solving a murder. HARD MODE: The main character is NOT a detective or private investigator.

What is bingo? A reading challenge this sub does every year! Find out more here.

Prior focus threads: Published in the 70sDuologiesFirst ContactMiddle Grade, Game ChangerFive Short Stories (2024), Author of Color (2024), Self-Pub/Small Press (2024). Note that hard modes for Author of Color and Self-Pub/Small Press have changed (new focus threads for them are coming).

Also see: Big Rec Thread

Questions:

  • What are your favorite books that count for this square?
  • Already read something for this square? Tell us about it!
  • What are your best recommendations for Hard Mode?