| 4 novels, 1 novella | |
| Author | Adrian Tchaikovsky |
|---|---|
| Country | United Kingdom |
| Language | English |
| Genre | Fantasy, Grimdark, Steampunk |
| Publisher | Head of Zeus (Ad Astra) |
| Published | 2022–present |
The Tyrant Philosophers is a grimdark fantasy series by British author Adrian Tchaikovsky. Launching in 2022 with City of Last Chances , which won the British Science Fiction Association Award for Best Novel, [1] the series utilizes a mosaic narrative structure to explore themes of industrialization, colonialism, and the friction between rigid bureaucracy and chaotic magic. [2]
The series takes place in a world undergoing a forced industrial revolution driven by the Palleseen Sway. The Sway is a rationalist empire governed by the "Tyrant Philosophers," who seek to sanitize the world of "Incorrectness"—a state of dangerous potential associated with traditional magic and religion. Unlike typical fantasy empires driven by greed, the Palleseen are motivated by a bureaucratic form of social engineering, viewing the world as a chaotic system that must be measured, categorized, and optimized. [3]
The empire's expansion is fueled by "Kindling," a process of theological extractivism. In this setting, gods are tangible entities tied to specific locations or social contracts. The Palleseen military captures these deities and processes their essence into fuel for their war machines, creating a conflict between the "Old Magic" of local sacrifice and the "Palleseen Science" of industrialized deicide. [4]
The inaugural novel introduces Ilmar, a city built around the Anchorwood, a supernatural forest where the laws of physics and time are unstable. Under Palleseen occupation, disparate factions—student revolutionaries, criminal fixers, and displaced gods—struggle against the shifting political reality. [5] The plot is ignited by the theft of a mystical Palleseen "anchor," leading to a city-wide crackdown and a mosaic narrative of resistance. [4]
This volume follows Yasnic, priest to a "pauper god," as he is drafted into an experimental Palleseen medical corps during a brutal siege. The unit is composed of "Incorrect" practitioners: healers whose forbidden magic is tolerated only because it remains effective where imperial science fails. [2] The narrative introduces Graue, who heals by absorbing the pain of others, and explores the hypocrisy of a rationalist empire that exploits the forces it claims to have debunked. [3]
Set as a prequel novella, this story follows Angilly, an agent of the Palleseen "Outreach" intelligence wing. Tasked with investigating a potential rebellion in a remote province, Angilly navigates the Sway's rigid bureaucracy while witnessing the "slow-motion horror" of cultural assimilation. [6]
The third novel moves the conflict to the kingdom of Usmai, where local divinity is dismantled to fuel the Palleseen war machine. Yasnic and the survivors of the medical unit are caught in a land where the literal erasure of the supernatural leads to a metaphysical collapse and theological horror. [7]
Scheduled for release in February 2026, the fourth novel follows series survivors as the Palleseen attempt to strike at the "First Cause," the supposed source of all magic. [8] The narrative centers on a final siege where the empire's rationalism faces its ultimate contradiction. [9]
Russell Letson of Locus described the series as "extraordinarily fertile," noting a level of humanism that distinguishes it from other grimdark works. [7] In 2025, the series was a finalist for the Hugo Award for Best Series.
| Year | Work | Award | Category | Result |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2022 | City of Last Chances | British Science Fiction Association Award | Best Novel | Won |
| 2024 | City of Last Chances | Locus Award | Best Fantasy Novel | Nominated (7th) |
| 2024 | House of Open Wounds | Dragon Awards | Best Fantasy Novel | Nominated |
| 2025 | The Tyrant Philosophers | Hugo Award | Best Series | Nominated |
| 2025 | City of Last Chances | Galaxy Award (China) | Best Translated Novel | Won |