Are There YA Fantasy Books About The Four Horsemen Of The Apocalypse?
Seeking apocalyptic fiction beyond the typical dystopian setup, especially dark fantasy novels for young adults featuring the Horsemen as main characters or antagonists.
2026-07-10 05:11:12
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Yes, there are a few, though the classic Horsemen are often reimagined as characters or a plot device rather than a direct biblical retelling. I've seen some where they're portrayed as teens or given more modern, morally ambiguous roles. It's a fun niche. For a different and very dramatic take on the theme, I was surprised by 'Caught Between Two Men And The Apocalypse'. It uses the impending apocalypse as intense background pressure for a messy love triangle, where the world-ending stakes constantly force the characters into impossible personal choices.
I read 'Riders' and wanted to like it more than I did. The concept was cool, but the romance felt a bit forced to me, like it was checking a YA box. The horsemen lore and action were the highlights. If you're purely in it for the mythology and cool fight scenes, it delivers. Just temper expectations on the character dynamics.
I wonder if the reason we don't see more is a marketing problem. 'YA Fantasy about the Four Horsemen' sounds either too religious or too dark for the perceived market. Publishers might push authors to genericize the concept into 'Elementals' or 'Godlings' to seem more accessible.
2026-07-14 22:07:17
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The Scions rule the world now.
Born of celestial light, they turned on their creators and claimed the earth for themselves. But their victory came at a cost—every daughter of their kind has withered into dust, and extinction looms.
So they hunt human women to survive.
Anwen has always been fragile.
Sickly. Ordinary.
She was meant to be hidden away in a sanctuary, safe from the monsters who would claim her.
Instead, she’s taken by three of the most feared shifters alive.
A Dragon, cold and untouchable.
A Lycan, lethal and always too close.
A Minotaur, silent and watching—like she’s a puzzle he intends to solve.
They expect her to die like the others.
Another delicate human who won’t survive the bond.
But Anwen doesn’t break.
She burns.
And the longer she remains in their fortress, the more their control begins to unravel. Their magic bends toward her. Their instincts sharpen. Their possessiveness turns feral.
Others want her.
Their High King demands her.
But these three won’t give her up.
Because the fragile human they stole?
She might be the most dangerous creature in their world.
And they’re done pretending she isn’t theirs.
They’re not just powerful. They’re possessive, obsessive, and sinfully dangerous.
The dark-eyed leader who speaks in growls.
The scarred fighter with a touch like fire.
The silver-tongued flirt who tastes my fear—and wants more.
The shadow who watches me like prey.
And the broken one who swore he’d never love again… until me.
********
I was never supposed to exist.
Born under a cursed eclipse, I was hidden away, raised as a human, and told to live small. But fate doesn’t forget. And when I turn twenty-one, five powerful alphas show up at my door—each claiming I’m theirs.
They say I’m the key to saving the packs from war.
They say I’m the chosen mate of five.
But they don’t know the full truth.
I’m not here to be their salvation—I might be their destruction.
"This isn't just a school. It's something more."
Zeda Iverson thought high school was done, but her parents insisted on Shadowbrook Academy – a mysterious school she'd never heard of – instead of college.
She soon discovers Shadowbrook hides secrets, and the four powerful princes who rule the academy are all obsessed with her.
But their attention becomes the least of her worries as a dangerous revolution looms, threatening to destroy the academy and the princes Zeda has fallen in love with.
Only Zeda holds the power to stop the coming chaos. Yet, her abilities are locked away.
Can she unlock her potential and save everyone she loves before it's too late?
In a world fractured by the "Gray Death," the end didn't come with a whimper, but with the rise of the Beastkin predatory survivors with the strength of monsters and the hearts of kings.
Rhea, a trauma intern turned scavenger, has learned the hard way that mercy is a luxury the ruins cannot afford. When she is betrayed by those she loved most and left for dead in a crumbling bakery, her only companion is a soot-covered stranger she pulled from the rubble of Sector 4. She thinks she’s saving a nameless survivor. She has no idea she is nursing the Ghost King back to health.
Dominic is the Alpha of the Northern Citadel, an untouchable god of war hunted by his own kind. Broken and hiding behind a mask of amnesia, he watches the woman who saved him with a growing, predatory hunger. She is the "Diamond in the Ash," the same girl who held his hand in a dark pharmacy three years ago when the world first burned.
As the heat between them ignites into a passion that threatens to consume the ruins, the shadows are closing in. While Rhea drowns her sorrows in vintage wine and dreams of a touch she thinks she’ll never have, Dominic’s "Men in Black" are quietly securing her borders.
He came to find a traitor, but he found a Queen. Now, the Alpha will stop at nothing to reclaim his throne and build a new kingdom, one where the woman who showed him mercy finally gets the crown she deserves.
He’s a King in hiding. She’s a healer with a broken heart. Together, they are the apocalypse’s last hope.
Bai Yanlong reset her life to three days before apocalypse. She would have liked to rip a new one to novel gods for giving her such a short time, but she hasn't got the time.
Not that she can do much if there was more time. After all, she's but a poor college student from a middle class family. Now if only she could catch all the super powers in the world...
What is this? she got the super powers? ... This doesn't sound right.. she has never been this lucky.. oh.. Wait a minute why did that door handle vanish? she was sure it was there in middle of that door. It was only when she looked up that she understood. No good things ever comes with out a price...
The end of the world was upon us, but there weren't enough spots for evacuation.
The roars of the zombies echoed in my ears as my fiancé, Oliver, gritted his teeth and pulled me onto the rescue vehicle—securing the last available seat.
I arrived safely at the survivor base. Lina, his first love, did not. The zombies tore her apart.
Oliver still went through with our marriage, but I never expected that he had only done so to make me suffer.
In his eyes, I was the one who had killed Lina. If she had to endure such agony, then I should, too.
For five years, he hated me. My life was worse than that of a stray dog scavenging for food on the street.
On the day my divorce was finalized, he kidnapped me, dragged me into the wilderness, and wrapped his fingers around my throat. Then, he threw us both into the swarm of the undead.
When I opened my eyes again, I was somehow reborn on the day the apocalypse began.
The rescue team was shouting impatiently, "One more! We have room for one more—hurry!"
I turned to Oliver, watching his hesitation. Then, with a quiet smile, I took a step back and let someone else have the last seat.
Honestly, I just come to these threads to see if anyone else thinks Conquest should be replaced by 'Procrastination' for a modern update. The other three are out there doing their thing, and Procrastination is just like 'I'll get to the whole end-of-the-world thing tomorrow, maybe next week...'
The web serial 'The Wandering Inn' has a character known as the 'Goblin Lord' who amasses an army, and later volumes introduce beings like the 'Putrid One,' a necromancer who spreads plague. These are antagonist figures, but the story is so vast, with so many perspectives, that you sometimes see the world from their angle. It's not the Four Horsemen, but the epic fantasy scale allows for multiple, world-ending threats that feel both personal and grand.
I always felt 'V for Vendetta' was a Horseman story in spirit. V himself is an avatar of anarchy, which bundles war, famine (through the system's collapse), pestilence, and death into one masked package. He's the catalyst for the fall of a fascist state. The graphic novel is about the necessary, ugly birth of something new through absolute destruction, which is the core narrative function of the Four Horsemen in myth.
Honestly, half the fun is seeing how different authors solve the 'Conquest vs. War' problem. The original text is ambiguous; some interpretations have Conquest, others have Pestilence first. So fantasy authors get to pick their lineup! Some drop one, some combine them, some invent a new Horseman altogether. It's a small detail, but it immediately shows you how loosely or faithfully they're playing with the theology.
A lesser-known one is 'The Apocalypse Script' by M.D. Massey. It's more urban fantasy, following a teen who discovers he's destined to become a harbinger of the apocalypse. It's indie-published, so the editing can be rough, but the author really runs with the idea of a kid trying to reject this monstrous destiny while the world literally falls apart around him. Gritty and fast-paced.