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Synthers & Beasts

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Born into a powerful magical family that focuses on medicinal synthing, an ability to diagnose ailments by seeing colors, Halla struggles balancing her family's legacy and expectations with her own career running her apothecary in a quickly modernizing world.

As she navigates through her own struggles, she gets entangled with a powerful family and framed for a poisoning, putting everything she's ever worked for at risk, which sets her on a journey with her ranyi, a reclusive and mythical six-taloned fish-snake, to rediscover her family history, reclaim synthing powers she's long suppressed, and figure out just who exactly is plotting against her.

319 pages, Kindle Edition

Published February 27, 2026

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About the author

Judy Liu

5 books26 followers
Inspired by her love of Marvel, sci-fi, old Taiwanese dramas, and ridiculous anime, Judy scribbles mini-stories wherever she can (and subsequently forgets them!). She graduated from Rice University in Houston, Texas, studying history, Asian studies, and education. Judy is not unfamiliar with extensive writing, having published multiple pieces. She spent some time living in rural Japan before working in the legal and compliance sphere. With her debut novel The Vending Portal, Liu hopes to meaningfully add to Asian American literature to further enrich the YA genre.

Outside of work and writing, Judy enjoys dancing with her teammates and friends, exploring unknown spots or cities, caring for her plants, and making nonsense sounds to her sister.

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Displaying 1 - 4 of 4 reviews
Profile Image for M.H. Elrich.
Author 9 books140 followers
May 16, 2026
An Asian Fantasy-Mystery with Intrigue!
I purchased this book as part of a Kickstarter based on the premise that it was like Apothecary Diaries. There are definitely some Apothecary vibes in her, with natural medicines, herbs, political machinations, and a grand mystery to solve. However, the romance is light/almost nonexistent and the main character, Halla, is more of an egotistical woman than the slightly on the spectrum Maomao. That being said, I really enjoyed it. At the beginning, Herb (the inspector) really carried the story as Halla was very prideful and bratty. As the story developed, Halla grew on me, and Rex especially was lovely. Herb reminded me of famous inspectors in typical mysteries, which made it kind of fun in a world with mythological creatures and political families. The Asian bent isn't just in the medicine, tea, food, or families. It is in the characters themselves, as Halla rebels against her family's expectations. As for the mystery, I feel like it is a big spoiler, but I will say that it wasn't until nearly the end that I figured it out. So that was good! It is a very intriguing and satisfying Asian Fantasy-Mystery.

Content Warnings:
Cussing: none/use of Spittlebrok
Sex/Romance: mention of how Halla found a man muscular/attractive, mention of how a couple flirted.
Violence: someone is poisoned, a child deals with a lifelong illness (so possible trigger for parents who have dealt with that). A creature impaled a bad guy. Running. Hitting someone with a stun gun.
Alcohol/Drugs: Only traditional medicine (like ginger helps with headaches, but with fake medicine)
Profile Image for Effie Stock.
Author 22 books91 followers
March 11, 2026
Synthers and Beasts, a Chinese-inspired fantasy like no other, combines beautiful mythical creatures, medicinal traditions, and futuristic concepts to create a story of mystery, political intrigue, and a longing to live life fully and freely. Judy Liu is no stranger to fashioning vibrant and unique worlds, and Synthers and Beasts does nothing but solidify her place in the speculative and mythically inspired fantasy world.
Profile Image for Nathaniel.
Author 33 books301 followers
April 22, 2026
Through her lush language, complex characters, and intriguing worldbuilding, Judy Liu creates a book unlike any other. This is not to be missed.
Profile Image for Michael Vadney.
Author 1 book13 followers
May 18, 2026
This review was originally posted on FanFiAddict: https://fanfiaddict.com/synthers-beas...

This is a heartwarming, feel-good fantasy that does one of my favorite things the genre is capable of: it wraps real, relatable human problems inside a world full of magic and wonder.

Halla is a synther, someone who can diagnose ailments by seeing colors, running her own apothecary while trying to balance her family’s powerful legacy with her own ambitions in a rapidly modernizing world. What makes it sing is the emotional honesty underneath. Halla’s need for the approval of her family’s matriarch is something so many talented young people carry, and Liu presents it with all the pride, fear, and frustration that makes it feel painfully real. I found myself genuinely moved by those moments in ways I didn’t expect.

Halla herself is complex, multifaceted, and easy to root for. Rexford serves as a strong foil that gives Halla room to reflect and grow. But my favorite characters might be Mrs. Nuan and Grandma Wen, whose banter with Halla had me grinning constantly. The family dynamics in this book are a real highlight, full of warmth and humor that feel lived in rather than performed.

The worldbuilding is deeply inspired by Chinese folklore and traditional Chinese medicine, which gives the entire setting a freshness and specificity that stands out in the current fantasy landscape. The synthing magic system and the magical beasts (including Halla’s ranyi, a six-taloned fish-snake) are fascinating, and I found myself wanting even more of both because what’s there is so good. There are a handful of moments where the world is explained a little directly, but they’re few and far between.

The prose is clear and simple in a way that keeps things moving, and there are standout moments that show real range. Halla’s nightmare scene in particular was exceptional, dripping with dread and dream-logic that I could feel. The plot wanders a bit in the middle and things come together quickly at the end, but this is ultimately a character story, and on that front it delivers beautifully.

Synthers & Beasts is the kind of book that leaves you feeling good. It’s warm, it’s charming, it’s culturally rich, and at its core it’s about a young woman figuring out who she is apart from who her family expects her to be. That’s a story worth telling, and Judy Liu tells it with heart.
Displaying 1 - 4 of 4 reviews