Can Anyone Recommend me Magic/Superhero School or Guild Stories?
Here’s what I’ve read so far.
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Worm by Wildbow (Superhero “guild”)
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Mage Errant (Magic School)
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Harry Potter Series (Magic School)
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Vita Nostra (Magic School)
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Super Powereds (Superhero School)
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The Circle Series by Sara Elfgren (Magic within normal School)
I’ve also read The Magician but I didn’t liked it.
I may have forgotten some other books but hopefully this narrows it down.
Bit of a stretch, but Rick Riordan’s mythology books (Percy Jackson and its sequels/spinoffs) tend to involve magic school-type settings.
Way back, I believe I read the first 10 books of Percy Jackson + Jason. I liked it, I don’t know why I dropped it in the end. (or maybe the latter books weren’t released yet because this was in 2013).
Thanks for the suggestion thoug.
IIRC, Trials of Apollo went from 2015-2020, so the timelines do add up. He’s also done similar books for Egyptian and Norse mythology (Kane Chronicles and Magnis Chase)
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A wizard of earthsea has the best magic school. It’s the start of a very loose series, but can be read by itself.
A few off the top of my head:
- The Reckoners series by Sanderson (organized evil superheros, completed series)
- scholomance series by novik (magic school, unfinished)
- The Kingkiller Chronicle by Rothfuss (magic school, unfinished and probably never will be, but excellent)
- Scythe by Shusterman (guild of death kind of thing. More scifi, but has the vibe I think you’re going for.)
- Rangers Apprentice series by Flanagan (no magic, but guild of rangers with bows. Similar vibe to some of what you listed as well.)
Novik’s Scholomance is finished, and was a pretty fun read. It was a very unique take on magic school.
The Kingkiller Chronicle by Rothfuss (magic school, **unfinished **and probably never will be, but excellent)
Wait it’s unfinished? I thought it was a trilogy. It even had some side stories.
Thanks for the recommendations, I’ll proobably look at The Reckoners.
It is, but book three hasn’t released, and probably never will. :(
He released a few novellas and stuff, but “Doors of Stone” is in development hell unfortunately.
It’s only one book, but in my childhood I read Wizard’s Hall by Jane Yolen, which takes place in a magical school.
Forgot to add, I’d be happier if it’s a complete series.
- Sanderson’s Mistborn
- Sanderson’s Warbreaker
- Jade City (it’s a trilogy, something different)
- Codex Alera
Annette Marie has a number of series set in her world of The Guild Codex. Urban fantasy where guilds of “mythics” (mages of various sorts) live hidden from the mundane world. The first series The Guild Codex: Spellbound is a good place to start, featuring a normal human woman stumbling into a bartending gig for such a guild. That 8 book series within the world is complete. Book one is “Three Mages and a Margarita.”
Super engaging, and has great audio narration if you’re into that as well.
The Book of the Ancestor series by Mark Lawrence.
Mother of Learning by Nobody103 - free webnovel, complete now I think. Wizard student gets stuck in a time loop and uses this opportunity to become OP and solve the mystery.
Diane Duane’s Young Wizards series, if middle grade is okay.
I second Earthsea.
Spellwright seems like it might be good but I haven’t got far in it yet.
The Black Magician trilogy by Trudi Canavan. It’s been a long time since I read this, but Canavan is one of those authors who’s popular and has a lot of books out but is weirdly never mentioned online.
Also try L.E. Modesitt Jr. If you haven’t. Either the order mage series, or Imager maybe. Most anything by him will have a lot of studying. They’re very good if you like his specific flavor of writing.
Edit: Vita Nostra being described as just “magic school” is very funny to me, although I do see where it comes from lol.
Edit 2: I remember the Charlie Bone books being good, but again those are middle grade and it’s been ages since I read them. No idea if they hold up.
The Young Wizards series by Diane Duane if middle grade is okay.
Spellwright also seems promising but I haven’t finished it myself.
Myth books by Robert Aspirin.