Non-Western Setting Fantasy Books
Step out of the standard pseudo-medieval mold — the genre is bigger than that.
Fantasy spent decades stuck in one corner of the map. The current wave of non-Western-set fantasy is one of the genre's most exciting expansions, drawing on histories, mythologies, and cultural textures from across the world. Readers come to these books for unfamiliar political structures, magic systems rooted in different cosmologies, and worldbuilding that doesn't have to keep apologizing for the castle-and-tavern template. The reward is the same thrill that drew anyone to fantasy in the first place — discovery — but tuned to richer frequencies.
This trope spans every age band and every content level. Some books root themselves in specific real-world cultural traditions; others build new worlds informed by traditions historically underused in the genre. Below you'll find epic fantasies set in imagined empires inspired by East Asia, South Asia, Africa, the Middle East, Mesoamerica, and elsewhere, alongside cozier and YA-skewing reads in the same space.
- Worldbuilding beyond the medieval mold
- Mythologies underused in genre
- Fresh political and magical systems
- Discovery as the main pleasure











