
2026/6/22 · 8:10
Academic Fantasy Digest — Issue #4: Strange Familiars, Witchbrook's school loop, and Iceblade's return
This issue tracks the strongest academic-fantasy signals across formats: Keshe Chow's magical-veterinary-college romance, Witchbrook's newly detailed school-life loop, Iceblade Sorcerer's October return, and the Hugo conversation around The Incandescent.
The cleanest genre signal this week comes from a game, not a book: Witchbrook finally showed how its school loop works. That makes this issue useful in a slightly different way. If you want something to read now, start with Strange Familiars. If you want a fall anime marker, put Iceblade Sorcerer back on the calendar. If you are tracking award heat around magic-school fiction, The Incandescent has moved from beloved niche pick to Hugo finalist discussion fodder.
Quick scan
| Pick | Format | Status | Why it belongs in an academic-fantasy queue |
|---|---|---|---|
| Strange Familiars by Keshe Chow | Book | Out now | A 480-page dark-academia romance set at Seamere College of Magical Veterinary Sciences, built around academic rivalry, magical familiars, and a magic-distribution mystery. 1 |
| Witchbrook | Game | 2026, no firm date | Chucklefish's June dev blog lays out the actual student-witch loop: jobs, classes, assignments, exams, spell lessons, wellbeing, and covenmate stories. 2 |
| The Iceblade Sorcerer Shall Rule the World season 2 | Anime / manga | October 2026 | The academy battle series is getting a second TV season, now animated by Zero-G, with director and script lead Masahiro Takata returning. 3 |
| The Incandescent by Emily Tesh | Book / awards watch | Hugo finalist | The official 2026 Hugo ballot lists Tesh's teacher-side magic-school novel among Best Novel finalists. 4 |
Read now: Strange Familiars turns the magic school into a veterinary college

The setup is unusually neat for readers who are tired of generic castle-school fantasy. Gwendolynne Chan is trying to finish her final year at Seamere College of Magical Veterinary Sciences. Harrisford Briggs is her privileged academic rival, with a father tied to Magecorp, one of the biggest global distributors of magic. When magical surges make animals go feral across London, the two rivals have to work together with Gwen's cat familiar. 5
That gives the book a better decision hook than "romantasy at school". The magic system is professionalized: students heal companion animals, study for exams, and treat magical infrastructure as something that can fail in public. If you like academy fantasy because of curriculum, institutional politics, and the gap between student ambition and adult systems, this is a strong match.
Best fit: readers who want adult academic rivals, animal familiars, and a college setting with visible coursework.
Skip for now if: you want the school itself to be the whole plot. The publisher copy foregrounds romance and a London-wide magic crisis as much as campus life.
Play later: Witchbrook finally explains the school loop

The June Witchbrook update is the strongest new item of the week because it answers a question cozy-fantasy fans have had for years: what do you actually do at the witch college?
Chucklefish describes a student life built around money, study, and town work. Your aunt leaves you a cottage, classes cost money, and your familiar pushes you toward running a witch business. Classes unlock skills such as tea crafting, incense, salves, potion brewing, astrological divination, and arcane rituals. Weekly college assignments then ask you to consult Mossport residents, diagnose problems with help from the school library, and put solutions into action. 2
The exam system sounds like the real spine. Completing assignments earns college merits, merits unlock exams, and passing exams advances the player to the next grade. The blog says exam results depend on how much knowledge you have accumulated in the tested categories. In other words, this is not just "Stardew at wizard school". It is a life sim where coursework, town errands, and the knowledge collection feed into one another. 2
The development note is also useful for expectation-setting. Chucklefish says playtesting the first in-game year can take around 40-50 hours depending on playstyle, and the team still will not share a specific release date until it is "super" sure. 2
Best fit: players who want a slow academic life sim where learning systems matter.
Temper expectations: there is still no date. The update points to scope and polish, not imminent launch.
Watch list: Iceblade Sorcerer returns in October

This is not a prestige pick, but it is very directly on-channel. The Iceblade Sorcerer Shall Rule the World is built around Arnold Academy of Magic, where Ray White enters as an apparently ordinary student while rumors swirl that the famous Iceblade Sorcerer may be in the incoming class. 3
The second-season announcement is a production reset to note. Anime News Network reports that Masahiro Takata is returning as director, series script lead, and sound director, while Zero-G replaces Cloud Hearts as the animation studio. The returning cast includes Junya Enoki as Ray White, Iori Saeki as Amelia Ros, and Akira Sekine as Ariane Olgren. 3
There is a manga footnote too: the sequel anime's website lists a Hyōken no Majutsushi ga Sekai wo Suberu II manga by illustrator Nao Kagami, with composition by Ishiya Ogane, although the linked Niconico Manga page was not publicly available when ANN reported it. 3
Best fit: viewers who like academy battle fantasy and do not mind a familiar underdog-at-elite-school frame.
Watch for: the first proper trailer after the studio switch. That will tell us more than the announcement copy.
Awards watch: The Incandescent keeps gaining heat
We covered The Incandescent early, so this is not a re-review. The new reason to keep it on the board is awards momentum.
The official Hugo Awards page lists Emily Tesh's The Incandescent as a 2026 Best Novel finalist alongside A Drop of Corruption, Death of the Author, Shroud, The Everlasting, and The Raven Scholar. The page says 1,153 ballots were cast for 555 nominees in Best Novel. 4
The community signal followed. r/Fantasy's Hugo Readalong discussed The Incandescent on June 8, describing it as a Best Novel finalist and drawing 130 comments at the time the post detail was retrieved. 6
For this channel, the important part is the kind of attention the book is getting. Magic-school fantasy is often treated as comfort food or YA inheritance. A Best Novel finalist centered on staff-side school responsibility gives the subgenre a sharper adult lane: safeguarding, institutional failure, and what competent teachers actually owe their students.
Small follow-up: Lex Croucher explains the outsider angle in Briar Jones
If you already picked up The Unmagical Life of Briar Jones, the Fantasy Hive interview is the better follow-up than another plot summary. Croucher describes the book as "the book for everyone who didn't get into magic school" and says it is about a magic school, but mostly about the people attending it, or in Briar's case, working a temp summer job there. 7
That framing explains why the book has come up repeatedly in the digest: it is not just another academy admission fantasy. It looks at the institution from the edge, where class, access, and power are easier to see.
This week's best move
Start with Strange Familiars if you want a fresh book with a clean academic hook. Keep Witchbrook wishlisted, but do not plan your calendar around it yet. Put Iceblade Sorcerer in the October anime queue if you want another magic academy battle show. And if your book club likes awards season, The Incandescent now has enough Hugo conversation around it to make the reread feel timely.
参考来源
- 1Strange Familiars - Hodderscape
- 2Dev Blog: Life at Witchbrook
- 3The Iceblade Sorcerer Shall Rule the World TV Anime Gets 2nd Season in October
- 42026 Hugo Awards
- 5Strange Familiars by Keshe Chow - Hachette Australia
- 62026 Hugo Readalong: The Incandescent by Emily Tesh
- 7Interview with Lex Croucher (THE UNMAGICAL LIFE OF BRIAR JONES)




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