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917 results found for "six historical"

  • Six Fantastic Stand-Alone Young Adult Books

    I could have listed so many fantastic young adult titles here, but I picked these varied, wonderful six Some other Bossy Bookworm Greedy Reading Lists you might like featuring young adult books: Six Royally Magical Young Adult Series, Six Magical Fairy Tales Grown-Ups Will Love, and Six Dystopian and Post-Apocalyptic stability; and the ambivalent search for a parent who left her children behind without any answers or history

  • Six of the Best Nonfiction Books I've Read This Year

    to the productive understanding of our nation's past and current racial situation, including a basic history Valley Road: Inside the Mind of an American Family is the true story of a family with twelve children, six

  • Six Riveting Time-Travel Escapes

    David Mitchell's The Bone Clocks is a set of six intriguing tracks through time that are full of surprises

  • Six Books with Cold, Wintry Settings to Read by the Fire

    I also listed Disappearing Earth in the Greedy Reading List The Six Best Mysteries I Read Last Year. The book was published in conjunction with the American Museum of Natural History's extensive exhibition Ivey also wrote The Snow Child, a book listed on the Greedy Reading List Six Magical Fairy Tales Grown-Ups above, and Katherine Arden's Winternight trilogy, both of which were listed on the Greedy Reading List Six The books on the Greedy Reading List Six Captivating Nordic Stories would also fit nicely here.

  • Six Fantastic Dystopian and Postapocalyptic Novels

    01 A Boy and His Dog at the End of the World And there may be no law left except what you make of it, but if you steal my dog, you can at least expect me to come after you. If we’re not loyal to the things we love, what’s the point?... That’s a kind of death, even if you keep breathing. The thief came and shattered what was left of young Griz's life. Now Griz and his dog are making their way through the world. Griz is capable of fury and revenge, but also great love and loyalty, bravery, and creativity. He's a fantastic character I loved. This great book by C.A. Fletcher was tough to read at times because of the frequent reckless, life-and-death, sometimes ill-advised decision-making in a postapocalyptic world. Fletcher somewhat frequently hints at later events in the book in the middle of early scenes, which added to my anxiety. But the main protagonist Griz is tough as nails and determined and wonderful, and things do ultimately improve in satisfying ways. I thought this was wonderful. #postapocalyptic, #dystopian, #youngadult, #fourstarbookreview 02 The Grace Year ​ The Grace Year is the type of book I could’ve stayed up all night reading. I was totally hooked by this Lord of the Flies-esque situation of trapped girls devolving into paranoia, mayhem, fury, and destruction, with a wonderfully strong and imperfect heroine trying to upend the situation. I felt as though the later sections glossed over some major issues (consorting with the gruesomely brutal enemy; the prospect of folding back into the world that created the horrific system of oppression, control, torture, and death—even with a promise of potential change; fast emotional movement past the loss of a beloved character), but there’s hope for the slow but significant evolution into a new era. I thought the teen girls’ “magic” and its perception by the girls themselves (and especially by the men and women in the society) was haunting. #postapocalyptic, #dystopian, #youngadult, #fourstarbookreview 03 The Girl With All the Gifts ​ Melanie loves school. She loves learning about spelling and sums and the world outside the classroom and the children's cells. She tells her favorite teacher all the things she'll do when she grows up. Melanie doesn't know why this makes Miss Justineau look sad. I didn't have a clue what this book was about going in, which worked wonderfully for me. This is listed as an adult title but feels to me like a dark young adult post-apocalyptic novel with several twists. I found this engrossing, really interesting, and also character driven, which feels unusual given one of the aforementioned twists. Some of this is odd, other parts are disturbing, and there are some wonderful implausibly amusing standoffs. And M.R. Carey's story is also hopeful, but not in the way I might have expected. If you like this one, you're going to also want to read Carey's The Boy on the Bridge, which is a standalone book in the same series, is fantastic, and is also on this list. #postapocalyptic, #dystopian, #fantasyscifi, #series, #fourstarbookreview 04 The Dog Stars ​ Hig somehow survived the flu pandemic that killed everyone he knows. Now his wife is gone, his friends are dead, and he lives in the hangar of a small abandoned airport with his dog, Jasper, and a mercurial, gun-toting misanthrope named Bangley. Then Hig gets an indication that he is not alone and that there is life out there after all. He must decide if he'll risk a one-way journey to seek out the good, bad, and ugly that may be awaiting him. It's a true life-or-death dilemma for a man with two stark options: safety and loneliness or potential danger and finally making contact with others. And he just might find himself questioning his decisions either way. My initial review of this book was "I loved this book. Nerve-wracking and beautiful, unconventional, real. I love this author. Love." This is one of my all-time favorite books. I'm in for reading anything Peter Heller writes (e.g.,The River and The Painter, both of which I loved, and neither of which is post-apocalyptic). #postapocalyptic, #dystopian, #fivestarbookreview 05 The Power ​ It follows that there are two ways for the nature and use of human power to change. One is that an order might issue from the palace, a command unto the people saying “It is thus.” But the other, the more certain, the more inevitable, is that those thousand thousand points of light should each send a new message. When the people change, the palace cannot hold. Naomi Alderman offers a dark and fascinating look at a world where the traditional male-female and old-young power structures are turned on their heads. The Power explores the destructive nature of the greed for power, especially when coupled with the certainty that your side of the issue is infallible and correct. I found this book fascinating. #dystopian, #fantasyscifi, #fourstarbookreview 06 The Boy on the Bridge ​ Months into their save-the-world mission, the soldiers and scientists on the Rosalind Franklin (a tanklike RV with flamethrowers that's nicknamed Rosie) are close to retrieving all of the samples their predecessors left throughout Scotland during an earlier expedition to try to find a cure for the plague. But it begins to become clear that idealistic Dr. Samrina Khan, the head epidemiologist; single-minded young Stephen the wunderkind; gruff, bighearted Colonel Carlisle; and the others on board may not have been meant to succeed in their grand mission after all. Political machinations meant that some of their party needed to be out of the way for corrupt power plays back home. Against enormous odds, the team may just be finding some of the lifesaving answers they were sent to discover. But bringing back their surprising findings might very well mean the wholesale rounding up and destruction of those affected by the plague. The Boy on the Bridge offers adventure, twists, turns, love, scientific exploration, betrayal, and an odd twist of hope. This is the second M.R. Carey book on this list, but I couldn't help myself. There's a character in common between the two books; this person appears at the end of The Boy on the Bridge but is a main character in The Girl With All the Gifts. #postapocalyptic, #dystopian, #fantasyscifi, #series, #fourstarbookreview What are your favorite post-apocalyptic or dystopian books? This category also includes the Hunger Games series, the Insurgent series, Station Eleven, The 5th Wave, The Chosen Ones, The Road, and The Handmaid's Tale, among other excellent titles. A New Wilderness, published in August 2020, looks like a great dystopian novel too. Which other books along these lines should I be reading?

  • Review of Fallen Land by Taylor Brown

    I included this book in the Greedy Reading List Six Historical Fiction Stories about the Civil War .

  • Six Lighter Fiction Stories for Great Escapism

    about writing and books, there are wonderfully faulted love-crossed main protagonists with a shared history

  • My Six Favorite Summer 2020 Reads

    01 The Vanishing Half In The Vanishing Half, Bennett follows the history of the fictional Vignes twins #race, #historicalfiction, #siblings, #fourstarbookreview 02 Florence Adler Swims Forever ​ This lovely #historicalfiction, #oldnewyork, #WWII, #fourstarbookreview 03 Blacktop Wasteland ​ Bug is a respectable #historicalfiction, #london, #fourstarbookreview 05 When These Mountains Burn Ray has outlived his beloved

  • Review of The Book Woman's Daughter by Kim Michele Richardson

    Richardson focuses her historical fiction on Kentucky again, picking up the story of the rural book delivery You might also like the books on the Greedy Reading Lists Six Historical Fiction Favorites, Six Historical Fiction Backlist Favorites, and Six Historical Fiction Books I Loved.

  • ICYMI: Six Compelling Nonfiction Books that Read Like Fiction

    October of 2020 (I've made a few changes to the text but the list of books is the same) under the title "Six to the productive understanding of our nation's past and current racial situation, including a basic history Valley Road: Inside the Mind of an American Family is the true story of a family with twelve children, six

  • Review of The Clockmaker's Daughter by Kate Morton

    ICYMI: Morton offers a strong historical fiction mystery, with assumed identities, dual timelines, twists I mentioned this book in the Greedy Reading List Six Historical Fiction Mysteries Sure to Intrigue You

  • Six Illuminating Memoirs I've Read This Year

    01 Leaving the Witness In Leaving the Witness: Exiting a Religion and Finding a Life, Amber Scorah takes the reader into her confidences and lays bare her sheltered experiences, religious indoctrination, societal and gender pressures, hearty evangelism, and her eventual questioning and subsequent freezing out from the Jehovah’s Witnesses—which meant she was cut off permanently from almost everyone she knew. Scorah retraces her steps from being a covert, illegal proselytizer in Shanghai through the implosion of her marriage and her realization that she is stranded--without her husband, without formal education, and without her faith any longer--and therefore really without any framework at all. She’s thoughtful and helps readers track her mindset as she moves from control to freedom and how jarring and cruel and wonderful and odd a “worldly” life can be. I'm intrigued by stories of those who have left constricting faith systems. Scorah tells a fascinating personal story of growth and fear and change. #memoir, #faith, #dysfunctionalfamily, #fourstarbookreview, #leavingthewitness 02 The Unexpected Spy ​ I love a peek at a secret world, and in The Unexpected Spy: From the CIA to the FBI, My Secret Life Taking Down Some of the World's Most Notorious Terrorists, Tracy Walder offers fascinating glimpses of her life as a CIA and an FBI agent, including training details, political machinations, and significant and rankling discrimination. Walder explores her own glowing pride in doing her job well and protecting others from danger—even when anyone without security clearance remains necessarily ignorant of the invaluable nature of the work and the imminent dangers she and her fellow agents manage to help our country avoid. Her evolution as a person and transition into her current profession was satisfying to witness as well. St. Martin’s Press and NetGalley provided me with an advance reader copy of this book in exchange for an honest review. For my full review of this book, see The Unexpected Spy. #nonfiction, #memoir, #spy, #politicssocialjustice, #fourstarbookreview, #theunexpectedspy 03 The Unwinding of the Miracle ​ Wow. Julie Yip-Williams is a beautiful writer who is so smart, reflects deeply, and candidly shares the many heartbreaking aspects of facing her own imminent death from metastatic colorectal cancer. This book serves as her powerful farewell to her family but also holds meaning for anyone considering the way they live and how they might choose to face their own mortality. I feel like a meditation on dying is a heartbreakingly beautiful way to consider how we live our lives and a poignant reminder of what makes our one life so special. That said, I have a tough time reading memoirs in which someone is fighting cancer, and this one may not be everyone's cup of tea. For my full review of The Unwinding of the Miracle: A Memoir of Life, Death, and Everything that Comes After, click here. #memoir, #nonfiction, #heartwarming, #fourstarbookreview, #theunwindingofthemiracle 04 Maybe You Should Talk to Someone ​ This book really hit the spot for me. I was going to be happy with a light, surface-level look at therapy and the ins and outs of a therapist's providing and receiving therapy. But the book quickly grows into a network of sometimes interconnected and consistently meaningful searches for purpose and peace. This book was so much more meaningful than I had counted on. Gottlieb was honest about her own situation and showed herself to be wonderfully faulted, and she also delved into the details of others' struggles and journeys and joys. Maybe You Should Talk to Someone: A Therapist, Her Therapist, and Our Lives Revealed offers a beautiful exploration of dying, death, appreciating the beauty of the impermanence of our lives, planning for loved ones after our death, and living life fully. For my full review, please see Maybe You Should Talk to Someone. #memoir, #fivestarbookreview, #maybeyoushouldtalktosomeone 05 Know My Name Chanel Miller is a beautiful, powerful writer with clear and sophisticated arguments and with a compelling identity that is separate from the pivotal attack that led to her being in the spotlight. She also has a strong, passionate grasp of widely experienced inequalities—and ideas of how to chip away at some of the injustices and faulty norms that should be excised from society. I began reading Know My Name because I thought I should, not because I wanted to. Miller surprised me with the delicately balanced tone she was able to strike, her passionate belief in right and wrong, her emotional reactions to her situation, and her measured arguments and calm determination. I was fascinated by her. Now I'd like Miller to write more books about varied topics, because I like spending time in her head. #politicssocialjustice, #memoir, #fourstarbookreview, #knowmyname 06 Open Book ​ In Open Book, Jessica Simpson explores her life, her ups and downs, her drinking-related missteps, and her failed loves. She tracks her scrappy and determined rise to stardom, her religious faith, her reliance on and love for her friends, her deep familial attachments and conflicts, and her path to therapy, sobriety, and a happy marriage and parenthood. I've liked JS since Newlyweds, and she takes us back to the show here too. At times there is some silliness and some superficial focus, but I felt as though Simpson was laying it all on the table and going through some real self-examination. Interestingly, she spends a lot more page time on John Mayer than Nick Lachey—and provides what ultimately amounts to a takedown of Mayer that explores his extensive emotional manipulation, his elaborate interview accounts of his sexual escapades with her and others, and, incredibly and most damningly, his use of the N-word during an interview. #memoir, #fourstarbookreview, #openbook What are the most interesting memoirs you've read recently? I do enjoy a celebrity memoir if it feels like an honest examination and doesn't have too much ego coloring the author's version of events. But I'm also drawn to the life stories of everyday people--especially when they find their lives shaped by extraordinary circumstances.

  • Six Fascinating Second-Chance, Do-Over, Reliving-Life Stories

    Two of these books also made it onto my Six Riveting Time-Travel Escapes Greedy Reading List--along with

  • Six Great Stories about Robots, Humans and Alien Life, and AI

    The Robot Books I love a good artificial intelligence- or robot-focused story, and these six (plus, in gloriously nerdy that sounded.) 01 The Murderbot Diaries series by Martha Wells I've read five of the six

  • Six of My Pandemic-Era Book Buys

    all about. 02 Rodham ​ Curtis Sittenfeld offered a fictionalized version of a first lady's personal history In A Witch in Time, Constance Sayers is offering us historical fiction, witches, and repeated reincarnation

  • One More List of My Favorite Historical Fiction Reads of the Year

    Favorite Bossy Historical Fiction Reads of the Year I loved reading so many historical fiction books You can find the first list of my historical fiction favorites here , and you'll find Six More of My Favorite Historical Fiction Reads of the past year here . What are some of your favorite historical fiction reads? Great Stories about Brave Women During World War II  and Six Books about Brave Female Spies .

  • The Six Best Mysteries I Read Last Year

    In case her books aren't already on your radar, French is the author of six Dublin Murder Squad books builds the pool of potential culprits for Nathan to examine in this story of uncovering truths, family history

  • Review of The Rose Code by Kate Quinn

    The Rose Code is a wonderfully spun historical fiction story of three very different women who answer For more about Kate Quinn’s The Huntress (and five other historical fiction books I loved), check out the Greedy Reading List Six Historical Fiction Books I Loved in the Past Year. Or check out the books I listed on the Greedy Reading Lists Six Books about Brave Female Spies, Six Great Stories about Brave Women During World War II, and Six Historical Fiction Mysteries to Intrigue You.

  • Six More Great Fiction Titles I Loved This Year

    No Man explores the incredible drive and bravery required by Rum's female characters to write a new history If you like books that play with timelines and realities, check out the Greedy Reading List Six Riveting you're looking for more great fiction, you might also want to check out the Greedy Reading List My Six

  • Six Book Club Books I Loved Last Year

    01 Olive, Again by Elizabeth Strout Oh, Olive! In Olive, Again, she ambles through town and reflects on aging, on her life, and especially on memories of moments that shaped her life’s direction, her attitude, her viewpoint—and those of the people close to her. Because this is the character of Olive from Olive Kitteridge, these are not saccharine snippets of wisdom from a warm, cozy grandmother. The moments are sometimes sour, sometimes regretful, sometimes heartbreaking, but often lovely in their rough honesty. I could spend days reading about her introspection and her gruff and straightforward ways. I received an advance copy of this book from Random House through NetGalley. Strout also wrote the wonderful interconnected short story collection Anything Is Possible. For my full review of this book, please see Olive, Again. 02 The River by Peter Heller Low-key best friends Jack and Wynn have taken many challenging outdoor expeditions together. They're skilled and joyful adventurers. But when a wildfire rages near where they're canoeing the Maskwa River in northern Canada, everything turns upside down. Oh, Peter Heller! The details of running the Canadian river, traveling and camping, and Jack and Wynn's friendship itself all hooked me completely. The final scenes were exquisitely painful and beautiful and really hit me hard. Heller also wrote the wonderful dystopian story The Dog Stars, as well as The Painter. For my full review of this book, please see The River. 03 Call Your Daughter Home by Deb Spera ​ I worried during the first chapter that Gertrude was going to feel like a caricature of a backwoods Southern woman. But she and the other characters were developed fully. And although the three interconnected women faced sometimes staggeringly tragic challenges, Spera injects some moments of joy—often related to their relationships to each other. You can see where one of the storylines is going before the character involved understands it, and it might make your blood boil to see the evil situation go on unchecked. And I wasn’t sure I bought into the reasoning for a character’s drastic and sudden turnaround in thinking—it seemed that she’d had reminders of this reasoning without being inspired to shift course. But the details of cooking, surviving, race relations, and life in 1924 South Carolina were wonderful, and I still think about this book although I read it some time ago. For my full review of this book, please see Call Your Daughter Home. 04 The World That We Knew by Alice Hoffman The world is unraveling on the cusp of World War II, and three strong women will be tested beyond anything they imagined before the end of the war and the end of the book. The strong, gruff Hanni has a heart of gold; young Ettie is idealistic and grows to be tough as nails yet capable of deep love; and the heartbreakingly loyal golem Ava becomes satisfyingly powerful. This was a beautiful book. The golem and heron and other ethereal elements could have been distracting, but they worked. I was most struck by the character-driven WWII stories, which were haunting and lovely. Hoffman made me feel anchored to the characters so that the emotions, concerns, and life-and-death decisions the women grappled with in 1941 felt immediate and relevant. For my full review, please see The World That We Knew. 05 Sorry I'm Late, I Didn't Want to Come by Jessica Pan ​ Jessica Pan was an introvert out of a job. Her closest friends had moved away, and she found herself lonely, living in another country, and feeling too reliant on her husband for her entire social life. Pan decided to deliberately put herself into extremely uncomfortable social situations for a year, and she fully commits. She does improv, approaches strangers on the Tube, goes on friend dates, attends networking events, takes a vacation alone (to a destination she doesn't learn until she's at the airport), and more. She regrets her one-year plan almost instantly but feels compelled to continue her terrifying exercises. Pan is wonderfully honest, appealingly thoughtful, and often so so funny. I was so happy spending time in her point of view throughout this book. I loved it and I'd read another book by her in a second. For my full review of this book, please see Sorry I'm Late, I Didn't Want to Come. ​6 Dear Edward by Ann Napolitano ​ I loved this book. I kept thinking about it while I was doing other things, and I just wanted to get back to Edward to find out how things were going. This story was so much more than I expected, but thankfully Napolitano didn’t rely solely on her book’s promising premise. She wrote the hell out of this and created an irresistible and true-feeling character in Edward. Nothing is too easy here, nor is it ever melodramatic in Napolitano’a hands. Edward tries on the mantle of taking responsibility for every life lost; he wallows in the despair of others and their hopes that he will pursue their loved ones’ lost dreams and right their wrongs; then he messily works out how to create his own lucky, unshackled, truest life. I was given an advance reader’s copy of this book by Random House Publishing Group and NetGalley in exchange for an honest review. For my full review, please see Dear Edward. What are some of your favorite book club books? I was going to say that I try not to be overly Bossy in my book club, but that is a big lie that's making me laugh as I type it. We used to brainstorm book ideas for the following year and then, honestly, I would push through my own choices. But you should see the extensive spreadsheets of potential titles that my book club friends now patiently and kindly wade through to cast their votes for the coming year. We've been happily meeting monthly for about fourteen years now, so let's just say we're all clear on who and what we're dealing with at this point. Oddly, there is only one World War II book and there are zero Alaska books on this list--I am constantly trying to work these into our reading list--which is currently making me question everything about myself and my own reading habits.

  • Six Newish Young Adult Mysteries I Want to Read

    As Khayyam eagerly discovers more of Leila's mysterious history, she begins to grow and change in this #youngadult, #mystery, #historicalfiction, #dualstoryline 05 All Eyes on Her Tabby and Mark were dating

  • Review of Shrines of Gaiety by Kate Atkinson

    But not everyone she's paying off can be trusted, some of her six children are undermining her, and goings-on Atkinson is also the author of Case Histories, Behind the Scenes at the Museum, Life After Life, Human If you like historical fiction mysteries, you might like the books on the Greedy Reading List Six Historical

  • Review of The Night Ship by Jess Kidd

    Kidd's dual-timeline historical fiction, based on actual events, shines in its vivid settings, richly The Night Ship is historical fiction with a magical realism undercurrent that's told in two timelines author of Things in Jars, a mystery I gave four Bossy stars--and listed in two Greedy Reading Lists, Six Spooky, Gothic Tales and Six Historical Fiction Mysteries Sure to Intrigue You.

  • Review of Maisie Dobbs (Maisie Dobbs #1) by Jacqueline Winspear

    truth in the aftermath of World War I in this irresistible first installment of Winspear's 18-book historical Check out this Greedy Reading List for Six Historical Fiction Mysteries to Intrigue You.

  • Three Books I'm Reading Now, 2/12/24 Edition

    agent, has returned to his hometown in Charon County, Virginia, to serve as the first Black sheriff in history Cosby is also the author of Razorblade Tears, a book I listed on my Greedy Reading List Six Satisfying Choo is also the author of The Night Tiger, a title I listed in my Greedy Reading List Six Historical

  • Review of Everything Is Tuberculosis: The History and Persistence of our Deadliest Infection by John Green

    For me at least, the history and present of tubercuosis reveal the folly an brilliance and cruelty and To me, it was a disease of history--something that killed depressive nineteenth-century poets, not present-tense But as a friend once told me, "Nothing is so privileged as thinking history belongs to the past." also the author of the nonfiction collection of essays The Anthropocene Reviewed  (which was one of my six

  • Review of Go As a River by Shelley Read

    I loved, Elizabeth Hardinger's All the Forgivenesses, which I mentioned in the Greedy Reading List Six Historical Backlist Favorites.

  • Three Books I'm Reading Now, 1/16/23 Edition

    Life of an Ordinary Man: A Memoir by Paul Newman I recently started watching "The Last Movie Stars," a six-part author of Things in Jars, a mystery I gave four Bossy stars--and listed in two Greedy Reading Lists, Six Spooky, Gothic Tales and Six Historical Fiction Mysteries Sure to Intrigue You.

  • Three Books I'm Reading Now, 10/10/22 Edition

    The Books I'm Reading Now I'm reading The Fire and the Ore, the newest historical fiction novel (to be Hawker is also the author of The Ragged Edge of Night, which I mentioned in Six Historical Fiction Books Hawker also wrote One for the Blackbird, One for the Crow, which I listed in the Greedy Reading List Six Great Historical Fiction Stories Set in the American West. 02 I'm Glad My Mom Died by Jennette McCurdy

  • Review of The Fire and the Ore by Olivia Hawker

    Hawker offers irresistible details of daily life and historical elements that add vivid layers to this (The author's note at the end of the book spells out more of the historical background regarding the The author's note explains the historical events at play and illuminates the ways in which Hawker's historical Hawker is also the author of The Ragged Edge of Night, which I mentioned in Six Historical Fiction Books Great Historical Fiction Stories Set in the American West.

  • Review of The Book of Longings by Sue Monk Kidd

    of Bees as well as 2014's The Invention of Wings, which is on my to-read list (and was inspired by a historical This book made it onto my Greedy Reading Lists Six Historical Fiction Books I Loved This Year and My

  • Review of The Huntress by Kate Quinn

    I sometimes think that I'm about to max out on World War II historical fiction. This book was mentioned in the Greedy Reading List Six Historical Fiction Books I Loved Over the Past

  • Review of Call Your Daughter Home by Deb Spera

    I mentioned this book in the Greedy Reading List Six Historical Fiction Books I Loved This Year.

  • Review of The Course of All Treasons: An Elizabethan Spy Mystery by Suzanne M. Wolfe

    If you like mysteries and historical fiction like I do, you might also like some of the titles on the Greedy Reading List Six Historical Fiction Mysteries to Intrigue You.

  • Three Books I'm Reading Now, 4/4/22 Edition

    funny, silly memoir Yearbook; and I'm listening to the always-excellent Kate Quinn’s The Rose Code, historical For more about Kate Quinn’s The Huntress (and five other historical fiction books I loved), check out the Greedy Reading List Six Historical Fiction Books I Loved in the Past Year.

  • Three Books I'm Reading Now, 8/11/21 Edition

    second and final book in his quirky Ink & Sigil fantasy duology; The Invention of Wings, Sue Monk Kidd's historical Sue Monk Kidd spins this historical fiction story, inspired by the real-life Sarah Grimke, and includes Sue Monk Kidd also wrote The Book of Longings, which made it onto my Greedy Reading Lists Six Historical

  • Review of The Invention of Wings by Sue Monk Kidd

    The Invention of Wings is historical fiction that tracks the characters of (the real-life) Sarah Grimke Sue Monk Kidd spins this historical fiction story, inspired by the real-life Sarah Grimke, and includes It's uncomfortable, disturbing, and infuriating to read historical fiction about the actual horrors that of Bees, The Mermaid Chair, and The Book of Longings, which made it onto two Greedy Reading Lists: Six Historical Fiction Books I Loved This Year and My Twelve Favorite 2020 Books.

  • Review of Murder in Old Bombay by Nev March

    You might also like some of the books on the Greedy Reading List Six Historical Fiction Mysteries to

  • Review of The Office of Historical Corrections by Danielle Evans

    In The Office of Historical Corrections, Evans offers short stories centering around themes of race, relationships, identity, the fallibility of those shaping historical "fact," grief, and loss. In "Alcatraz," characters count on officially changing the erroneous facts of their family's history In the longest story in the book, at approximately 100 pages, "The Office of Historical Corrections, " a black student from Washington, DC, finds herself involved in unraveling a complicated historical

  • Review of Empire of Pain: The Secret History of the Sackler Dynasty by Patrick Radden Keefe

    I listened to Empire of Pain, Patrick Radden Keefe's exhaustive, revolting, fascinating history of the His book Say Nothing: A True Story of Murder and Memory in Northern Ireland was one of my Six of the

  • My Twelve Favorite 2020 Books

    You might also like some of the books on the other Greedy Reading Lists I posted in 2020: Six Historical Stories for Great Escapism Six Historical Fiction Mysteries to Intrigue You Six Illuminating Memoirs I've Read This Year The Six Best Mysteries I Read Last Year My Six Favorite Summer 2020 Reads Six More The majority of page time in the historical fiction title is spent showing the tasks of daily life (and This title was listed in Six Historical Fiction Books I Loved This Year.

  • February Wrap-Up: My Favorite Reads of the Month

    Here are the six books I most loved reading this past month. For more cold-setting stories, check out my Greedy Reading List Six Books with Cold, Wintry Settings truth in the aftermath of World War I in this irresistible first installment of Winspear's 18-book historical Check out this Greedy Reading List for Six Historical Fiction Mysteries to Intrigue You. Walsh I loved each of the historical fiction story's two timelines--following a stewardess on board The

  • March Wrap-Up: My Favorite Reads of the Month

    Read on for what I loved reading in March: The Night Ship, historical fiction set in two timelines featuring 01 The Night Ship by Jess Kidd Kidd's dual-timeline historical fiction, based on actual events, shines The Night Ship is historical fiction with a magical realism undercurrent that's told in two timelines Spooky, Gothic Tales and Six Historical Fiction Mysteries Sure to Intrigue You. natural world, she explores three timelines of women connected through the ages by power and by society's historical

  • Review of All the Forgivenesses by Elizabeth Hardinger

    This book was mentioned in Six Historical Fiction Books I Loved Over the Past Year.

  • Review of A Murder by Any Name by Suzanne M. Wolfe

    I looove a historical fiction mystery. If you do too, you might want to check out Six Historical Fiction Mysteries to Intrigue You.

  • My Twelve Favorite 2020 Books

    The majority of page time in the historical fiction title is spent showing the tasks of daily life (and This title was listed in Six Historical Fiction Books I Loved This Year. You might also like some of the books on the other Greedy Reading Lists I posted this year: Six Historical Stories for Great Escapism Six Historical Fiction Mysteries to Intrigue You Six Illuminating Memoirs I've Read This Year The Six Best Mysteries I Read Last Year My Six Favorite Summer 2020 Reads Six More

  • Review of Great Big Beautiful Life by Emily Henry

    Henry's story-within-a-story adds a historical fiction element to her signature big-hearted, banter-driven I loved the historical fiction aspect of Margaret's recounting of her history.  was one of my favorite books the year I read it, and it also made it onto the Greedy Reading List Six story; you can check out my review here , and you might like to check it out on the Greedy Reading List Six

  • Review of The Ragged Edge of Night by Olivia Hawker

    This book was mentioned in Six Historical Fiction Books I Loved Over the Past Year. also wrote One for the Blackbird, One for the Crow, which was mentioned in the Greedy Reading List Six Great Historical Fiction Stories Set in the American West.

  • Review of The Parting Glass by Gina Marie Guadagnino

    This book was mentioned in the Greedy Reading List Six Historical Fiction Books I Loved Over the Past

  • Review of Daughter of a Daughter of a Queen by Sarah Bird

    Daughter of a Daughter of a Queen was mentioned in the Greedy Reading List Six Historical Fiction Books

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