What Are Similar Books To The School For Good And Evil?

2026-03-20 13:04:35 276

2 Answers

Cole
Cole
2026-03-24 03:46:14
If you loved the twisted fairy-tale vibes and moral ambiguity of 'The School for Good and Evil,' you're in for a treat with some other gems! One series that immediately comes to mind is 'A Tale of Magic...' by Chris Colfer. It's got that same blend of whimsy and darkness, where characters wrestle with the blurred lines between good and evil. The world-building is lush, and the protagonist's journey feels just as unpredictable as Sophie and Agatha's. Another fantastic pick is 'The Land of Stories' by the same author—it dives deep into classic fairy tales but gives them a fresh, subversive spin. The way it plays with tropes reminds me so much of Soman Chainani's work.

For something a bit more gothic, 'Coraline' by Neil Gaiman might hit the spot. It's shorter but packs a punch with its eerie, otherworldly school-like setting and a protagonist who has to outsmart a sinister 'other mother.' And if you're craving more morally complex YA, 'The Hazel Wood' by Melissa Albert is a must. It's dripping with dark fairy-tale energy, where the boundaries between stories and reality blur in the creepiest, most fascinating ways. Honestly, I could gush about these books forever—they all have that same addictive mix of fantasy and philosophical depth.
Skylar
Skylar
2026-03-26 00:34:09
Ever since I devoured 'The School for Good and Evil,' I've been hunting for books with that same mix of rivalry, magic, and biting humor. 'Evernight' by Claudia Gray scratches a similar itch—imagine a school where vampires and hunters train side by side, with all the tension and twisted alliances you'd expect. Then there's 'Caraval' by Stephanie Garber, which feels like a darker, more carnival-esque version of Chainani's world, where the stakes are high and nothing is what it seems. Both have that same 'unreliable reality' vibe that makes you question every character's motives.
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