So, I should preface: I'm a high school English teacher and I get a lot of recommendations from students. I try to read them all.
The Phoenix Empress by K Arsenault Rivera
It's a little racist, a little queer, and ... generally okay. Appropriation aside, I kind of like the world building, and the characters... but I feel like the plot just moves. so. slowly. If you want queer fantasy Chinese/Mongolian knockoffs and you don't mind a slow plot, you may love this. Me? I didn't hate it, but wasn't entranced. Also, it's the sequel to a book whose entire chronology was a woman reading a journal for a few days. I mean, chronologically, two books in, about three weeks of time have passed, with a whole bunch of flashbacks and journal entries.
Palo Alto by James Franco
This wasn't good. It's terrible people doing terrible things and not learning anything from it. Reading it during the Kavanaugh hearing made it worse.
Stiletto by Daniel O'Malley
Good sequel to an absolutely amazing book, Rook. Basically MI-6 plus Warehouse 13. Can't recommend Rook enough. You should also read Stiletto if you have some spare time and liked Rook. Stiletto does that thing where the protagonist of one book becomes a secondary character in the second book. And it suffers from it because the protagonist from the first book was so much better. Also, the new protagonist has knowledge that is not shared with the reader until later in the book that would have been really useful to know earlier. Which is total BS. It's like having Sherlock Holmes start the final scene by saying, "I also suspected you because when we were in college together, you always used to get drunk and threaten to kill the murder victim."
The Red Fox Clan by John Flanagan
Did you like the earlier Ranger's Apprentice books, but want a new generation of cast? Here's your series, starting with The Royal Ranger. And they really didn't need to fridge that one character in that book. The whole series is still pretty fun though.
Alice in Zombieland by Gena Showalter
Want your zombie story to have an elite force of spiritual zombie fighters that includes a weird mix of sexy bad guys and strong Christian influence? I didn't want that. But you might, so here you go.
The Phoenix Empress by K Arsenault Rivera
It's a little racist, a little queer, and ... generally okay. Appropriation aside, I kind of like the world building, and the characters... but I feel like the plot just moves. so. slowly. If you want queer fantasy Chinese/Mongolian knockoffs and you don't mind a slow plot, you may love this. Me? I didn't hate it, but wasn't entranced. Also, it's the sequel to a book whose entire chronology was a woman reading a journal for a few days. I mean, chronologically, two books in, about three weeks of time have passed, with a whole bunch of flashbacks and journal entries.
Palo Alto by James Franco
This wasn't good. It's terrible people doing terrible things and not learning anything from it. Reading it during the Kavanaugh hearing made it worse.
Stiletto by Daniel O'Malley
Good sequel to an absolutely amazing book, Rook. Basically MI-6 plus Warehouse 13. Can't recommend Rook enough. You should also read Stiletto if you have some spare time and liked Rook. Stiletto does that thing where the protagonist of one book becomes a secondary character in the second book. And it suffers from it because the protagonist from the first book was so much better. Also, the new protagonist has knowledge that is not shared with the reader until later in the book that would have been really useful to know earlier. Which is total BS. It's like having Sherlock Holmes start the final scene by saying, "I also suspected you because when we were in college together, you always used to get drunk and threaten to kill the murder victim."
The Red Fox Clan by John Flanagan
Did you like the earlier Ranger's Apprentice books, but want a new generation of cast? Here's your series, starting with The Royal Ranger. And they really didn't need to fridge that one character in that book. The whole series is still pretty fun though.
Alice in Zombieland by Gena Showalter
Want your zombie story to have an elite force of spiritual zombie fighters that includes a weird mix of sexy bad guys and strong Christian influence? I didn't want that. But you might, so here you go.