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Apprentice fantasy books

First day on the job. The job is terrifying.

Apprentice fantasy follows a young (or young-ish) character learning a craft from someone who has been doing it far longer. Sorcery, smithing, scholarship, assassination, dragon-handling — the discipline matters less than the structure. The protagonist starts knowing nothing, and the reader gets to learn the world's rules alongside them. Readers love apprenticeship stories because they're satisfying in the same way training arcs are: competence is built on the page, and the relationship between master and student usually carries real emotional weight.

This trope spans every age band. Middle-grade apprenticeships tend to be warm; YA versions often involve hidden dangers; adult versions sometimes get very dark indeed, particularly in assassin and necromantic settings. Below you'll find apprentices learning crafts from gentle to brutal, paired with mentors who range from patient and warm to genuinely terrifying.

What to expect
  • Competence built on page
  • Master-student dynamics
  • Worldbuilding via instruction
  • Spans every age band
51 books
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