there's not a ton of aspec books that are solidly horror, vs fantasy/sf-horror, or more thriller adjacent. It's hard to draw clear lines, but I'm splitting these up into a few posts! this is mostly ones that are in a sci-fi direction.
It Looks Like Us - YA, ace girl MC
Cradle and Grave - aroace woman MC
This World Is Not Yours - ace man MC (1/3)
Bury Your Gays - aroace woman SC
cosmic/eldritch
The Crows - aroacespec man major character (this is the most check-CWs of the horror books here)
No Gods, No Monsters - ace man MC (ensemble) (I'd say this is part cosmic horror, part supernatural)
Winter Tide - (aro?)ace coded woman MC
Hallowed Be Her Flesh - ace woman MC, erotica
Demon Engine - demisexual trans woman MC (1/5)
The Summer Hikaru Died - manga, aroace (monster) MC
The Ocean Hugs Hard - ace man MC (this is more mystery+eldritch, not as heavy on the horror)
see here for: fantasy/supernatural horror, thrillers
#aspec books / aspec database / tumblr masterpost
info included here is brief! please see my database for full details of the books 3/7/26
Do you like movies like Alien vs Predator, Venom, and Kingdom of the Planet of the Apes? Do you enjoy dragon riders and talking animal companions? Friendly yet deeply inhuman aliens? Monster children and monster parents? Consider yourself less of a monster fucker and more of a monster best friend? Watch horror movies and fantasize about befriending the horrifying ghosts and ghoulies? Then this is the list for you!
A note: some of these books do have romance subplots, but not as the most important relationship or focus.
A (second) note: the criteria for "monster" are subjective. I looked mainly for titles featuring creatures who neither look nor act/think human. In cases where they are more human looking, I wanted a distinctly inhuman mind and morality, meaning most books featuring vampires, werewolves, fey, etc are excluded. I may have included books you feel aren't monstrous enough, or excluded ones you feel are sufficiently monstrous but I don't agree about. Again, it’s subjective.
Feel free to leave your own recs in the notes, but please know that if you rec books featuring mostly human vampires and werewolves I will be judging. I have separate lists for those, go look there instead.
For more details on the books, continue under the readmore. Titles marked with * are my personal favorites. If you want more book recs, check out my masterpost of rec lists!
Project Hail Mary by Andy Weir*
Ryland Grace just woke up from a coma, unable to remember anything. He finds himself alone on a space ship, and as his memories slowly trickle back, he realizes he’s been sent on a mission: to find a solution to the impending doom of the earth. Still struggling with holes in his memories, Ryland tries to fulfill his mission, but as he gets closer to his goal, he discovers someone else got there first. And they aren’t anything close to human. Funny, heartfelt, and heavy on the science.
Fragment by Warren Fahy*
The reality TV show Sealife is having a rough time - as it turns out, a ship full of scientists doesn’t make for the kind of drama they hoped for. Hoping for some excitement, they reach Hender’s Island, a fragment of a lost continent that may contain an interesting new ecosystem. But as they step foot on the island, they quickly come to realize the ecosystem isn’t just new, it’s highly dangerous and very hungry. Among all this life is one single species that may be more dangerous than any other, but which may also be the salvation of the scientists on the island. A bit wonky, but genuinely one of the most fun books I have read, I love it so much.
The Road to Roswell by Connie Willis*
Francie has just traveled to Roswell to attend her college friend’s wedding to a UFO conspiracist. Not a believer herself, Francie is shocked when she finds herself abducted by an alien. Her abductor is not much what popular media would have you believe, looking more like a tumbleweed than a grey alien, and is clearly on some kind of mission it isn’t willing to put on hold for the sake of Francie attending to her duties as a bridesmaid. As more people get roped along - among those a conman, an old lady, a ufo conspiracist, and a retiree with an RV - Francie finds herself getting closer to the alien and wanting to help it succeed.
The Last Human by Zack Jordan
Young adult. Sarya is a human - the only one of her kind. Living with her adoptive mother - a vicious, insectile alien - on a space station surrounded by hundreds of other alien species, Sarya spends every day staying below the radar and hiding her true identity. But when an odd new alien arrives on the station, she may finally get an answer to her biggest question: why humanity was deemed too dangerous to be allowed to exist.
Alien vs. Predator: Prey by Steve Perry & S.D. Perry*
On desert planet Ruyshi, businesswoman Machiko Noguchi is about to take over the leading position in a small human colony. Her job is made infinitely harder when the colony comes under attack on two fronts as two species of vicious aliens choose it as their battle ground. If you're reading this list, you probably already know of the movie by the same name. The book, while completely different in setting and cast, does feature many similar plot points, among those a third act team-up between a human woman and a murderous alien.
Children of Time by Adrian Tchaikovsky*
Millenia and generation spanning scifi. After the collapse of an empire, a planet once part of a project to uplift other species to sentience is left to develop on its own, resulting not in the intelligent monkeys once intended but in sentient giant spiders. Millenia later, what remains of humanity arrives looking for a new home, only to be met by the artificial remains of the ancient woman who once led the uplift project - and she is not willing to let them on her planet.
The Moon and the Sun by Vonda N. McIntyre
You can’t go wrong with a Vonda McIntyre novel just, like, in general. This one is set in 17th century France, where a young woman and her brother travel to live at the royal court, where they are to care for and study a strange captured sea monster fabled to have the ability to grant eternal life. A lot of focus on court politics as well as the cultural and biological differences between the humans and the mermaid. Also available as a movie (but it’s not very good, please just read the book).
Winter Tide by Ruthanna Emrys*
Lovecraftian fishpeople! Aphra and her brother are the only survivors after the government raided their home, Innsmouth. Their only living family are the amphibian people of the deep, whom they will one day join, but until then they are bound to land where they struggle to build new lives for themselves after the great loss of their home and loved ones. Then rumors start to spread of a russian agent seeking dangerous and ancient magic, forcing Aphra to involve herself as they try to stop it. Does contain horror elements but is generally a much more optimistic look on cosmic horror than most lovecraftian stories, told from the perspective of one of his monsters. Lots of focus on found family and rebuilding of community.
The Doors of Eden by Adrian Tchaikovsky*
The Doors of Eden is something of an experiment in speculative biology, featuring versions of Earth in which various different species were the one to rise to sentience, from dinosaurs to neanderthals. Now, something is threatening the existence of all timelines, dragging multiple different people and species into the struggle, among those a pair of cryptid hunting girlfriends and a transgender scientist. Together, can they find a way to save the multiverse?
The Spider and Her Demons by sydney khoo*
Young adult. All teenager Zhi wants is a normal life (and possibly for her harsh aunt to be a bit nicer), but it’s hard when she’s half spider demon. Every day she must conceal her true nature and hide in human guise. When she slips up and eats a man in front of her rich, aloof classmate Dior, Zhi thinks her life is over. But Dior has secrets of her own, and she is dead set on making herself a part of Zhi's life.
Vespertine by Margaret Rogerson
Young adult fantasy. Artemisia prefers the dead to the living, and is training to become a Gray Sister, a nun who helps the souls of the deceased pass on to the afterlife rather than remain as dangerous spirits. To defend her convent, Artemisia accepts the help of a dangerous revenant, a powerful spirit which grants her great power but also could possess her the moment her guard is lowered. As evil threatens her homeland, Artemisia and the revenant must find a way to work together.
Slewfoot: a Tale of Bewitchery by Brom
Historical horror. Young Englishwoman Abitha has only recently arrived and married into a Puritan colony when she unexpectedly becomes a widow. As she strives to save her small farm from going under in the wake of tragedy, something dark and dangerous stalks the surrounding woods. He doesn't know whether he's spirit, devil, or god, doesn't even know his own name, and in requesting Abitha's help, both their lives are changed forever.
Lycanthropy and Other Chronic Illnesses by Kristen O'Neal*
Young adult. Priya had plans to go to Stanford, but is derailed when the fallout from lyme disease puts her back, making her question if she'll ever get back to normal. Luckily she has her discord support group with whom she can chat and vent about her illness. Even more - she has Brigid, online fandom friend and fellow chronic illness sufferer. But when Brigid disappears from the web without warning, Priya must drive to Pennsylvania to make sure her friend is okay - and finds that Brigid's condition is a bit hairier than she expected.
Sorcery of Thorns by Margaret Rogerson
Young adult. Elisabeth is a librarian, trained to handle grimoires - books of magic which, if mishandled, can turn into horrifying monsters. When an act of sabotage leads to the release of one of the library's most dangerous grimoires, Elisabeth finds herself implicated in the crime. Forced to team up with an enemy sorcerer and his loyal and unpredictable demon servant, Elisabeth sets out to find out the truth of what happened.
The Girl With All the Gifts by M.R. Carey
In a post apocalyptic, zombie-infested wasteland, a group of characters try to stay alive and hope to find a cure. One of the characters is Melanie, a young girl who carries the contagion inside of her and hungers for flesh, but like many children of the apocalypse has kept her humanity. Is she and children like her the answer to the cure we are looking for? Or are they the start of something entirely new? This book has also been adapted as a movie!
Malevolent by Harlan Guthrie*
Lovecraftian horror mystery. Private detective Arthur Lester wakes up in his office, his partner dead, memories fuzzy, vision gone, and the voice of a malevolent entity in his mind. Unable to see, Arthur is forced to rely on guidance from the entity as he attempts to solve the mystery of what it is and where it came from. Is this a book? No. But as someone who reads mostly audiobooks, the difference between a book and a fiction podcast is negligible, and also I love this story and its characters and want all of you to do so too.
Parasyte by Hitoshi Iwaka*
Horror manga, heavy on the bodyhorror. Shinichi Izumi wakes one day after a strange dream: that an alien parasite crawled into his arm. Soon he realizes it was more real than dream, and that an inhuman creature, having failed to eat and take over his brain, now controls his arm. Forced to cooperate, the two do their best to survive as more parasites quietly infiltrate society, meaning to devour our entire species. Also available as a very faithful anime!
Skulduggery Pleasant by Derek Landy*
Young adult. Twelve-year-old Stephanie Edgley's uncle, famed horror writer, just died mysteriously and left her his entire fortune. As it turns out, the stories he wrote weren't entirely made up, and that which killed him wasn't entirely human. In trying to avenge his death, Stephanie joins forces with Skulduggery Pleasant, sorcerer, detective, and living, walking skeleton.
The Cloud Roads by Martha Wells
Moon doesn't know what he is. Having lost his family young he lives on the move, shifting his shape to hide his true form. The only ones similar to himself he's ever encountered are the vicious, bloodthirsty Fell, but he knows he cannot be one of them. When chance leads to a meeting with someone like him, he hopes his days of loneliness are over. But his new people stand against a dangerous enemy, and not all of them welcome Moon's help. A departure from other titles on this list in that it features only creatures, with not a single human on page.
The Girl From the Well by Rin Chupeco
Young adult horror. Okiku died three hundred years ago, her body thrown down a well. Now she spends her days hunting for and punishing murderers like the one who once killed her. When a strange boy bearing odd tattoos appears in her area, he catches Okiku's attention - as does something that follows after him. To save the boy, Okiku will be drawn into a journey taking both of them from American suburbia to a faraway shrine in Japan.
Monstrilio by Gerardo Sámano Córdova
When Magos loses her son Santiago to a longtime illness, she loses herself to grief and cuts out a piece of his lung. After hearing old folktales, she begins feeding it - and is shocked to find it growing and alive. Soon finding herself in charge of a hungry and bloodthirsty creature, Magos and her family must come together to care for what they can only see as a second chance for Santiago.
Semiosis by Sue Burke
A generational story following a group of humans trying to survive on a new planet, where a strange and unkowable intelligence is finding ways to use them to its whims. As the humans come across an abandoned city wrapped in the roots of a strange plant, they slowly come to the realization that mutual communication is the only path to peace and survival. Meanwhile, the alien finds itself tied all the more tightly to the growing human community.
The Stardust Grail by Yume Kitasei
Maya Hoshimoto used to be an art thief, and a damned good one to, until a disastrous heist made her retire into academia, hoping for peace and coping with an alien disease which causes her to see glimpses of the future. When an old friend tracks her down and asks her help to find and steal a legendary artifact that could save his entire species, Maya is convinced to do one last job.
Magical Girl Dandelion by Mizuho Kaeru
Manga. Tanpopo Ohanami's parents were killed by a phantom monster when she was young, but her life was saved by Shade, another phantom. Ever since then, Shade has been her friend, watching over her and keeping her safe. But then Tanpopo is revealed to be a potential magical girl, meant to fight the phantoms and protect humanity. Her and Shade are meant to be enemies, but can they instead work and fight alongside each other?
His Majesty's Dragon by Naomi Novik
It’s the height of the Napoleonic Wars, and soldiers on dragon back fight each other in the air. Will Laurence isn't a dragonrider but a sea captain, but when his ship captures a French frigate and discovers a dragon egg about to hatch in his cargo, his life changes forever when he and the dragon hatchling bond.
The Golden Compass by Philip Pullman
Middle grade. In Lyra's world, every person has a daemon: a talking animal companion who follows them throughout life. When children begin being stolen off the street, among them Lyra's friend, she must embark on a great journey to save him, taking her to the furthest north - and beyond.
A Redtail's Dream by Minna Sundberg*
Graphic novel inspired by Finnish mythology. When an irresponsible fox spirit accidentally traps an entire town in the dreamlands, it’s up to slacker Hannu and his talking, shapeshifting dog Ville to save everyone. Together the unwilling heroes must travel the dreamlands and locate the townsfolk, returning them to the waking world before the fox spirit sends them all on to death to hide his mistake. While the physical copy is all but impossible to get a hold of, the original webcomic can still be read for free here.
Retellings From the Antagonist’s Point-of-View: A Starter Kit
Medea by Christa Wolf | Girls Made of Snow and Glass by Melissa Bashardoust | Grendel by John Gardner | Winter Tide by Ruthanna Emrys | Circe by Madeline Miller | The Winter Prince by Elizabeth Wein | The Queens of Innis Lear by Tessa Gratton | Bright Air Black by David Vann | Banewreaker by Jacqueline Carey
finished reading both winter tide and deep roots by ruthanna emrys within the past week and a half and felt inclined to draw my faves....i really wanted to draw trumbull and her gf but i couldn’t quite figure out how i wanted to draw s’vlk
TLDR: A fantasy setting in which HP, The Magicians, and similar stories are all canon.
The EWW is a fantasy world in which almost all schools, locations, and characters from the following stories exist:
All big-budget Harry Potter stories, movies, and Pottermore
All Magicians stories
New World Magischola
When you have a dream about Harry Potter, your dream may well have been set in the EWW. It's the Wizarding World that you see when you squint.
Britain is much like it appears in the Harry Potter books. North America is slightly more magical than it appears in the above stories. Many graduates from Ilvermorny (in Muggle Massachusetts) and Providence Prep (in Muggle New Hampshire) go on to study at Brakebills (in Muggle New York).
What is Magic Like?
In regions with access to wandmakers, magicians use wands. In regions without, wizards use their hands.
The etymology of magical incantations is culturally influenced by the scholarly traditions that pass them down. In Britain, magic is usually studied through a regional lens based on corrupted Latin. Spells from other traditions, such as Waddiwasi, are etymologically distinct.
The origins of magic are not completely certain, but the curriculum of Brakebills more or less represents the mainstream academic perspective. The prevailing stance is that magic comes to this Earth from another world, and has done so for millions of years. Animals and plants are well adapted to take advantage of the secrets of magic. Dragons are the most famous example of this type of adaptation. The human body is less magical than that of many animals, but humans have developed technological and intellectual means to use magic. This often is done via the alchemical properties of magical plants and animals, such as in wand use or in potion making.
The magical animals and spirits of the source canons are mostly all endemic in many regions. Most of these creatures are either rare, remote, naturally equipped for stealth, or intentionally hidden by magicians. Because of the International Statue of Secrecy, magical zoologists like Charlie Weasley monitor magical creatures and, when necessary, enchant them to be invisible to Muggles.
Historically, the use of magic was discovered independently in many parts of the ancient world. Always difficult, it was usually the domain of experts and shamans. Magic has been forgotten and rediscovered many times in Earth's history. Magic is similar to mathematics in this way.
There are many pseudomagical traditions that are largely ignored by the magical community, such as Scientology. These are Muggle traditions that do not make use of magic as magicians understand it. In fact, most magicians are very disconnected from Muggle culture and would consider Scientology and computing to be similar and equally useless.
However, the presence of pseudomagical traditions is sometimes invoked as a argument in favor of the International Statute of Secrecy. Some writers say that the ease with which the ignorant stumble into falsehood when pursuing magic shows how important it is for magic to be maintained exclusively by well-educated initiates.
Culture
Magical communities in some regions are secular, and in some regions they are also religious communities.
The scholars of past centuries assumed that magical ability was only possible among people from magical bloodlines. (Indeed, they thought all positive traits required noble blood.) In the last 100 years, academics have called this into question. The topic of bloodlines is very controversial in most academic circles.
Racism, homophobia, misogyny, and other forms of intolerance are common in the magical community in some regions, and rare in other regions. The magical community is not necessarily familiar with Muggle perspectives on bigotry, however.
Outside of higher academia and politics, the magical world is less globalized than the Muggle world is. Magicians on one continent often have minimal interactions with or knowledge about magicians on other continents.
The magical world is also disconnected from Muggle culture. The International Statute of Secrecy is controversial but is nevertheless globally enforced, and this creates a divide between the two cultures. In general, magicians are only aware of Muggle affairs that happened several decades ago. Many magicians don't realize that skyscrapers exist, because they spend all their time Apparating between remote or Unplottable locations. For the same reason, most magicians rarely think about maps or geography, caring little about the distance between one building and another.
In the last few centuries, anti-superstition movements have erroneously led most humans to consider magic fictional. The governments enforcing the International Statute of Secrecy have considered this a welcome boon to their task.
One more clarification: the Dark Lord who took power in London in 1997 presented a regional, not global, crisis. (However, some historians claim that his influence would have widened over time were he not deposed.)
Multiple Worlds
The otherworlds seen in The Magicians do exist, but little is known of them even in the magical community. The Neitherlands is the most-visited of these worlds.
Many otherworlds are parallel universes that are fairly similar to the Earth of the EWW. One such world is the Earth seen in the Simon Snow books (a la Rainbow Rowell). On Snow's Earth, magic has a different relationship with linguistics, and magical Britain is led by different institutions.
All of these parallel worlds are accessible in theory but have never been visited outside of a few rare instances. These parallel worlds are relevant to the internal workings of the Mirror of Erised and the prophecies of Seers.
Futhermore, there exist thousands (at least) of parallel worlds populated by parallel instances of the same people. There is a world in which the Weasley's house burns down and there is no poltergeist at Hogwarts (the world of the HP films). There is a world in which Draco Malfoy wears leather pants (fanfiction). There is a world in which Alice Quinn dies ignobly by bad luck (Magicians backstory).
The fact that Quentin makes a remark at Brakebills about reading about Hermione in a book is not a contradiction. This should be interpreted as evidence that some powerful mage created a screwed up multiversal time loop involving Quentin.
Murkier details:
It seems likely that one of the otherworlds that should theoretically exist contains a land called Narnia (not Fillory). However, no one has ever seen this place.
Which fantasy novels have been published in the EWW? Plover's books or Lewis's books? Did a magician publish a biography under the guise of fiction, under the pen name Rowling? When one wakes up in a universe, how might one distinguish which universe one is in?
I think these text-within-text details should be left up to the writer telling stories in the EWW.
Other stories that i have not integrated into the EWW, but which you could if you are clever: