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The Thousand Names by Django Wexler

On the edge of an empire, mutiny brews and magic stirs beneath the gun smoke. Two officers—one brilliant, one enigmatic—march into a desert war where tactics matter as much as trust. The Thousand Names blends flintlock battles, razor-sharp strategy, and a slow-burn mystery of power.

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In The Thousand Names, did you enjoy ...

... the rank-by-rank rise of an unlikely soldier proving herself under musket fire?

Guns of the Dawn by Adrian Tchaikovsky

If Winter Ihernglass winning command of the 5th Company and earning Janus bet Vhalnich’s trust hooked you, you’ll love how Emily Marshwic is pushed from civilian life into the line and claws her way up by grit and battlefield savvy. Like those tense moments forming squares in the Khandarai desert, this throws you into volleys, bayonet charges, and the brutal calculus of orders—while watching a capable underdog become a leader.

... a single, clear military objective that drives every chapter toward a decisive clash?

The Heroes by Joe Abercrombie

If Janus’s relentless push to break the Redeemers and seize Ashe-Katarion kept you turning pages, this three‑day battle for one damned hill will feel electric. Like the set‑piece assaults and tactical feints in the Khandar campaign, every move here is about ground taken, ground held, and the human cost of a straightforward mission that gets messier by the hour.

... flintlock warfare where formations, supply lines, and powder-fueled sorcery all matter?

Promise of Blood by Brian McClellan

If you enjoyed the nuts‑and‑bolts detail—Marcus juggling logistics, Winter drilling volleys, and the Colonials forming squares under cavalry pressure—you’ll relish this. It weds regiment life and artillery to explosive powder magic with the same tactile feel for muskets, rations, and command decisions that made the march across Khandar so vivid.

... intercut perspectives that balance a brilliant commander, a resourceful soldier, and a cunning agent?

The Waking Fire by Anthony Ryan

If the way Janus, Marcus d’Ivoire, and Winter’s alternating chapters braided tactics, espionage, and heart kept you locked in, this will hit the same sweet spot. You’ll jump between front‑line chaos, daring missions, and high‑level strategy—mirroring how the 5th Company’s skirmishes, Janus’s gambits, and back‑channel maneuvering all fed the Khandar campaign’s momentum.

... the collision of imperial rule and local identity driving every choice on and off the battlefield?

The Traitor Baru Cormorant by Seth Dickinson

If the Vordanai occupation of Khandar—the Redeemers’ zeal, Desoltai resistance, and uneasy alliances—stuck with you, this dives even deeper. Where Janus and the Colonials navigate culture and control while marching on Ashe‑Katarion, Baru wages a quieter, colder war inside a conquering empire, pulling levers of finance and policy to challenge colonial power from within.

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