Categories
Past Tense

The Old West Like You’ve Never Read It Before

Hi historical fiction fans!

I just got home from some much needed staycation time with my family, most of which was spent reading by the pool. Family members seen: 11. Books finished: 5. All in all, I’d say that’s exactly the kind of vacation I needed this year. I hope all of you are finding time to read and rest amidst all the work, too!

Bookish Goods

Brass Lady Macbeth Bookmark from Literary Emporium on Etsy

Brass Lady Macbeth Bookmark

Literary Emporium is one of my favorite bookish shops on Etsy, and this brass snake bookmark with a quote from Lady Macbeth is a perfect example of why. Just stunning. $11

New Releases

Mademoiselle Revolution Book Cover

Mademoiselle Revolution by Zoe Sivak (August 2, 2022)

As the daughter of a wealthy plantation owner and an enslaved woman, Sylvie de Rosiers enjoys the comforts of a lady. But as the Haitian Revolution begins, Sylvie and her brother leave Saint-Domingue for France, only to find themselves enmeshed in another society on the brink of uprising.

Mercury Pictures Presents Book Cover

Mercury Pictures Presents by Anthony Marra (August 2, 2022)

Maria Lagana grew up watching movies at the cinema with her father. Now, an associate producer at Mercury Pictures in Hollywood, Maria likes to keep her personal and professional lives separate even as both feel the strain of a world at war. Just as American enters WWII, a figure from her past returns, and Maria must finally confront the truth of what happened to her father all those years ago.

For a more comprehensive list, check out our New Books newsletter!

Riot Recommendations

My father is a big fan of classic Western movies, and my sister and I were jokingly taught by our mother to chant “no John Wayne!” as little kids to tease our dad. When it comes to the world of historical fiction, though, books set in the American West are much more nuanced and diverse. Here are several I recommend to refresh your understanding of what a Western really is:

Book of the Little Axe Book Cover

Book of the Little Axe by Lauren Francis-Sharma

Rosa Rendón was once a free Black woman living in Trinidad, but now she lives among the Crow Nation in Bighorn, Montana, where her husband, Edward Rose, is a Crow chief. As her son comes of age and seeks his vision in order to become a man, he begins to question all the secrets Rosa is keeping about her past. In order to help her son move forward, Rosa must retrace her past back to the painful events that forced her out of Trinidad as it changed hands from Spanish to British rule.

How Much of These Hills is Gold Book Cover

How Much of These Hills is Gold by C Pam Zhang

Home and belonging are central themes in this novel about a Chinese-American family living in the American West. Though they’ve lived there longer than most of the white settlers around them, Lucy, Sam, and their Ba and Ma are still viewed as outsiders and forced to the fringes of society. And misfortune after misfortune test the limits of their bonds to one and other in this beautiful story that moves backward and forward in time.

Outlawed Book Cover

Outlawed by Anna North

Ada’s life looks good at seventeen, with a new marriage to a husband she loves and work she enjoys as apprentice to her midwife mother. But after a year of marriage without any pregnancies in a society where barren women are often hanged as witches, she decides to join up with a gang of outlaws run by a preacher-turned-robber in order to survive. The Hole in the Wall Gang is determined to create a safe haven for outcast women like Ada, but an audacious plan to do so might just get them all killed.

A few other diverse historical Westerns to check out: Inland
by Téa Obreht, The Round House by Louise Erdrich, and The Best Bad Things by Katrina Carrasco.

That’s it for now, folx! Stay subscribed for more stories of yesteryear.

If you want to talk books (historical or otherwise), you can find me @rachelsbrittain on Instagram, Goodreads, Litsy, and occasionally Twitter.

Right now I’m reading Briefly, a Delicious Life by Nell Stevens. What about you?

Categories
Past Tense

Hot Summer Days and Heat Waves in Historical Fiction

Hi historical fiction fans!

I hope you’re all surviving the heat for those of you also in the Northern Hemisphere. My part of the southern U.S. has been hitting record heat waves with temperatures over 100°F (38°C) most days. It’s been a constant effort to stay cool and hydrated, but good books have helped me find relief from the heat and the ups and downs of life, as always.

Bookish Goods

Old Books Candle from Smells Like Books on Etsy

Old Books Candle

I know I’m not the only one around here who loves the smell of old books. I mean, used book stores? Old libraries? It’s the best smell, and now you can smell it anytime. $24

New Releases

The Half Life of Valery K Book Cover

The Half Life of Valery K by Natasha Pulley

A former nuclear specialist is taken from a Siberian prison in the 1960s by an old professor, only to find that his new work in a mysterious, unnamed city, detecting radiation levels in local animals, might be even worse than imprisonment.

The Librarian Spy Book Cover

The Librarian Spy by Madeline Martin

Ava is a librarian turned spy during the Second World War, having moved on from her quiet job at the Library of Congress to work undercover in Lisbon. Through a series of coded messages, she becomes connected to an apprentice at a printing press in France, passing secrets back and forth even as the war ravages Europe.

For a more comprehensive list, check out our New Books newsletter!

Riot Recommendations

Sometimes it’s nice to envision colder climates when it’s as hot as it’s been lately in so much of North America and Europe. But sometimes solidarity is good, too. These books take place during boiling hot summers and in hot climates.

When Two Feathers Fell from the Sky Book Cover

When Two Feathers Fell from the Sky by Margaret Verble

A young Cherokee horse-diver preforming in the Glendale Park Zoo one Nashville summer (which I can attest from experience get ungodly hot) is drawn into a mystery when disaster strikes the show, only for strange occurrences–unexplained illnesses, apparitions–to begin haunting the park.

The Dance Tree Book Cover

The Dance Tree by Kiran Millwood Hargrave

During the boiling hot summer of 1518 in Strasbourg, a pregnant beekeeper, her best friend, and her mother in law are rocked by the return of someone long lost to them during six years of penance for a sin no one will speak of. In the midst of the heat, a dancing plague begins to take over the town square, and the religious fervor of the men in charge of the city threaten everyone and everything Lisbet holds dear, from her bees to her best friend.

Last Summer on State Street Book Cover

Last Summer on State Street by Toya Wolfe

During one life-changing summer, four girls in the housing projects of Chicago watch their friendships, families, and homes built up and torn down. As Fe Fe looks back on that summer in 1999, just before her home was demolished, she considers the power of childhood bonds built in the blink of an eye and the racism that brought grief into her childhood years too early.

That’s it for now, folx! Stay subscribed for more stories of yesteryear.

If you want to talk books (historical or otherwise), you can find me @rachelsbrittain on Instagram, Goodreads, Litsy, and occasionally Twitter.

Right now I’m reading Our Wives Under the Sea by Julia Armfield and The Plotters by Un-su Kim. What about you?

Categories
Past Tense

Real Life Mysteries Answered in Historical Fiction

Hi historical fiction fans!

We’re moving to a new format with our newsletter. I think you’re going to like the variety of bookish content it’s going to bring you every week. And bonus: it gives me an excuse to put my Etsy obsession to good use by sending you all some great bookish finds from artisans ever week as well! A win-win all around.

Bookish Goods

Personalized Library Stamp from Paper Lux Stationary on Etsy

Custom Library Stamp

I’m obsessed with all the custom book stamps you can find on Etsy, and this one is just *chef’s kiss* so good. 10/10 would label all the books in my home library with this. $24

New Releases

Dark Earth Book Cover

Dark Earth by Rebecca Stott (July 19, 2022)

Two sisters fight for survival in Dark Ages Britain when their blacksmith father dies, leaving their fate at the hands of local warlord dangerously uncertain. Fleeing to the remains of Roman Londinium is their best hope of survival, and there, they discover a whole world of rebel women living secretly among the ruins.

The Daughter of Doctor Moreau Book Cover

The Daughter of Doctor Moreau by Silvia Moreno-Garcia (July 19, 2022)

In this reimagining of The Island of Doctor Moreau, the tenuous balance between Moreau’s human / animal hybrids and the humans, including his daughter, who live alongside them is upended by a careless guest who sets off a dangerous chain reaction.

For a more comprehensive list, check out our New Books newsletter

Riot Recommendations

Who doesn’t love a good historical mystery? Unsolved cases, theories on top of theories, and unreliable narrators abound in the genre–especially when it comes to historical fiction based on actual mysteries from the past. It’s exactly the sort of high-stakes, unputdownable reading perfect for summer.

The Lamplighters Book Cover

The Lamplighters by Emma Stonex

This novel is inspired by a mystery from 1900 in which three lighthouse keepers at Eilean Mor disappeared, leaving behind only a series of mysterious clues: the door locked from the inside, a stopped clock, and a strange series of final entries about a terrifying storm. In The Lamplighters, Emma Stonex shifts the events forward in time from 1900 to the 1970s, alternating between the experiences of the men in the lighthouse and an interview with their wives and girlfriends several decades later that brings new information to light. It’s a tense, atmospheric read.

The Red Palace Book Cover

The Red Palace by June Hur

Not so much based on a mystery as a mysterious figure from Korean history, this book follows a young nurse working in the royal palace when a string of murders seem to implicate the dangerous Crown Prince. Hyeon is drawn into a web of secrets and lies within court as she searches for answers. But coming this close to the truth will also put her directly in the path of danger, from both the prince and others.

Hur wrote an incredibly interesting newsletter going into the background of Crown Prince Jangheon that I highly recommend checking out whether you’re interested in reading this historical crime novel or not.

Alias Grace Book Cover

Alias Grace by Margaret Atwood

Grace Marks was convicted for her involvement in the murder of her employer and his housekeeper in the nineteenth century. But did she really do it? Some believe she’s guilty and rightfully imprisoned. Other’s say she’s an innocent victim. Whatever might be true, a group of reformers looking to see Grace pardoned call in an expert in the burgeoning field of mental illness in Alias Grace to examine her and plead her case. You may not know the truth of whether Grace was or wasn’t complicit by the end of this novel, but you’ll realize that might not even be the most interesting question this book is trying to answer.

That’s it for now, folx! Stay subscribed for more stories of yesteryear.

If you want to talk books (historical or otherwise), you can find me @rachelsbrittain on Instagram, Goodreads, Litsy, and occasionally Twitter.

Right now I’m reading The Hacienda by Isabel Cañas and Life Ceremony by Sayaka Murata. What about you?

Categories
Past Tense

Paste Tense QA Testing

Hello! I am me. I like books! I will tell you about them. I also like cheese.

Bookish Goods

A photo of a blue shirt with the words "bookmarks are for quitters"

Very Cool Item by SirBooksALot

This item is awesome! Don’t you want it? I bought four! $20

New Releases

sample book cover image: generic text against a beach background

A Throne of Socks and Feelings by That One Girl

The 36th installment of this very cool series about socks, feelings, and other stuff.

sample book cover image: generic text against a beach background

Grate Expectations: A Compendium of Cheeses by Oaxaca Muenster

Sweet baby cheeses, this book brie-longs on my shelf.

For a more comprehensive list of new releases, check out our New Books newsletter!

Riot Recommendations

These books are related somehow, I swear. Read them or whatever!

sample book cover image: generic text against a beach background

Read This Book, Yo by Peppermint Petty

Because I said so.

sample book cover image: generic text against a beach background

Gods of Rage and Shallows by Vanessa Diaz

There will be rage, and there will be shallows.

A link I think you’ll like.

And another.

And another.

I hope you’ve enjoyed this newsletter. I am a very cool person.

Find me on the gram, Goodreads, or my personal website, Amor y Queso.

-Vanessa

Categories
Past Tense

Need Even More WWII Fiction? New 2022 Releases

Hi there, historical fiction fans. Let’s talk WWII fiction, shall we? I bet you have thoughts. Most historical fiction readers do. Love it or hate it, you probably have strong feelings one way or the other when it comes to World War II era historical fiction. I know I do.

World War II fiction was probably among my very first introductions to historical fiction. Aside from the Scholastic series Dear America and The Royal Diaries, one of the first historical fiction novels I remember reading is The Devil’s Arithmetic. It was assigned reading in my fifth grade class, and I remember being so shocked and horrified at what I read that I immediately wanted to find more books to help me learn about people’s experiences during World War II. That is, until I’d read so many books set during that time period that I started searching out historical fiction about anything else. But while I’ve sometimes gotten fatigued with WWII fiction since, there’s a reason it keeps being published: because there are always new stories to be told and new atrocities and heroics to be brought to light.

And 2022 is full of new WWII stories ready to be told. From spies and codebreakers to nuclear research and the war in Asia, these books illuminate new aspects of WWII and tell exciting–and devastating–new stories.

Peach Blossom Spring Book Cover

Peach Blossom Spring by Melissa Fu

This multigenerational drama follows a Chinese family forced to flee their home in 1938 as the Japanese army approaches. Years later in America, a girl desperate to understand her heritage comes up against her father’s refusal to talk about his childhood in China. Peach Blossom Spring depicts a part of WWII not often written about in Western literature: the eight year Second Sino-Japanese War.

Sisters of Night and Fog Book Cover

Sisters of Night and Fog by Erika Robuck

Two young women involved in clandestine work in the European theater of World War II are brought together–and their work brought to an abrupt halt–in Ravensbrück concentration camp. One is an American married to a Frenchman who couldn’t let the atrocities she was witnessing stand. The other, a 19-year-old crack shot recruited by Britain’s Special Operations Executive. And though they’ll both be captured, they’ll make a difference before their work is done.

The Silent Unseen Book Cover

The Silent Unseen by Amanda McCrina

After years of forced labor in a Nazi concentration camp, 16-year-old Maria is finally making her way home. But instead of her family and her home, she finds her village destroyed in a war between Polish Resistance and Ukrainian nationalists. Maria isn’t sure what to think, but when her brother, the leader of the local resistance, goes missing, a young Ukrainian prisoner may be the only person who can help her find him.

The Half-Life of Ruby Fielding Book Cover

The Half-Life of Ruby Fielding by Lydia Kang

Two siblings contributing to the state-side war effort in the United States are rocked when they find a woman hiding under their back stairs. Could this dangerous woman with an affinity for poisons and a mysterious past be a spy? Even as they question her motives, they find themselves falling under her spell. And with Maggie working in the naval yard and Will working on the secretive Manhattan Project, that’s really not something they can afford.

The Codebreaker's Secret Book Cover

The Codebreaker’s Secret by Sara Ackerman (August 2, 2022)

War in the Pacific rages on as Isabel Cooper and her fellow codebreakers work nonstop trying to decipher the messages they intercept from the airwaves. It’s the best way she can think of to avenge her brother’s death. But when she meets his best friend, a hotshot pilot, she realizes she wants more than just revenge. And 20 years in the future, two photographers discover a secret dating all the way back to WWII that would shock even a codebreaker.

Don’t forget you can get three free audiobooks at Audiobooks.com with a free trial!

MORE FROM AROUND THE WEB:

The twelve best new WWII books of 2022 according to Book Authority.

Kate Quinn, author of The Rose Code and The Alice Network, has a new WWII short story available on Amazon.

Six works of historical fiction highlighting resiliency amidst war from The Washington Post.

BOOK RIOT RECS:

8 New Historical Fiction Reads Set During and After WWII

8 Stories of Unsung Heroes of WWII

11 Books About the Incarceration of Japanese Americans During WWII

New Books About WWII


That’s it for now, folx! Stay subscribed for more stories of yesteryear.

If you want to talk books (historical or otherwise), you can find me @rachelsbrittain on Instagram, Goodreads, Litsy, and occasionally Twitter.

Right now I’m reading A Restless Truth by Freya Marske. What about you?

Categories
Past Tense

TEST: July’s New Historical Fiction For Your TBR

Happy July, historical fiction fans! I’ve got some great new historical releases for you coming out this month. I don’t know about you, but I can never have too many new books to read in the summer, so these six titles are arriving just in the nick of time. From stories taking place in the Dark Ages and ghosts silently pining for what they can’t have to retellings and Soviet-era nuclear cities, these historical fiction novels are just as far-flung as they are riveting. Let’s dive into them together.

Bookish Goods

sticker of a blue dragon reading books with the text "in a world of bookworms be a book dragon"

Book Dragon Sticker by Etsy Shop

This is fake (the link doesn’t match) just for test purposes.

New Releases

Happy July, historical fiction fans! I’ve got some great new historical releases for you coming out this month. I don’t know about you, but I can never have too many new books to read in the summer, so these six titles are arriving just in the nick of time. From stories taking place in the Dark Ages and ghosts silently pining for what they can’t have to retellings and Soviet-era nuclear cities, these historical fiction novels are just as far-flung as they are riveting. Let’s dive into them together.

The Light Always Breaks Book Cover

The Light Always Breaks by Angela Jackson-Brown (July 5, 2022)

In 1947, Eva Cardon is the owner of DC’s most famous Black-owned restaurant, with plans to open another diner soon to serve Southern comfort food to the working class. The last thing she needs is to fall in love with a white politician. Her mother and grandmother fell for white men, and their family paid the price. But when her equal rights activism puts junior senator Courtland Hardiman Kingsley IV in her path, neither of them are able to resist their feelings for each other despite the potential consequences.

Sister Mother Warrior Book Cover

Sister Mother Warrior by Vanessa Riley (July 12, 2022)

The acclaimed author of Island Queen is back with another historical fiction novel, this time about the extraordinary true-life stories of two women during the Haitian Revolution. One, a warrior kidnapped and sold into slavery from West Africa, is at the forefront of the rebellion on the French colony of Saint Domingue. The other, a free woman of color raised in privilege and security because of her white grandfather, falls in love with a revolutionary despite her marriage to a Frenchman. The paths of these two very different women cross when war breaks out, pitting the French, Spanish, and enslaved people against each other. And both of them has a pivotal role to play.

Briefly, A Delicious Life Book Cover

Briefly, A Delicious Life by Nell Stevens (July 19, 2022)

Blanca has been hanging around the fifteenth-century monastery she died in since her untimely demise at only fourteen. Now, four hundred years later, a woman arrives in the village with her two children and lover. Blanca is immediately enchanted with George, but even as the woman and her lover find themselves in growing trouble with the village for their unconventionality, the ghost of a girl longs for a woman who doesn’t even know she exists.

Dark Earth Book Cover

Dark Earth by Rebecca Stott (July 19, 2022)

In medieval Britain, two sisters live in the shadow of the abandoned ruins of Londinium, the once-glorious Roman settlement on the banks of the Thames. For years, the sisters have run wild, one secretly learning her father’s blacksmithing trade, forbidden to women, and the other communing with animals and plants. But when their father dies, the two face enslavement at the hands of the warlord who imprisoned their father. Forced to flee into Londinium, they discover a community of rebel women living secretly amid the ruins. But with men still hunting them, the sisters will have to rely on their ingenuity and all the magic of their foremothers to protect themselves and fight back.

The Daughter of Doctor Moreau Book Cover

The Daughter of Doctor Moreau by Silvia Moreno-Garcia (July 19, 2022)

Who else is as excited for this new Silvia Moreno-Garcia book as I am? In The Daughter of Doctor Moreau, nineteenth-century Mexico comes to life as the backdrop for this retelling of The Island of Dr. Moreau. Carlota Moreau is the only daughter of either a genius or a madman, isolated in a manor from the strife on the Yucatán peninsula. Carlota lives in relative peace alongside her father, his assistants, and their hybrid human-animal experiments. But when a stranger arrives, he threatens to overturn the delicate balance that’s been created.

The Half Life of Valery K Book Cover

The Half Life of Valery K by Natasha Pulley (July 26, 2022)

A former nuclear scientist in a Siberian gulag in the 1960s knows that the right connections with guards will get him access to food and cigarettes and the right pair of boots will keep him from losing toes to frostbite. But when Valery’s university mentor steps in to take them from the prison camp to a mysterious unnamed town, he’s told he will serve the rest of his sentence studying the effects of radiation on animals. But why exactly is there so much radiation in this town? And what is being hidden from its thousands of inhabitants?

That’s it for now, folx! Stay subscribed for more stories of yesteryear.

If you want to talk books (historical or otherwise), you can find me @rachelsbrittain on Instagram, Goodreads, Litsy, and occasionally Twitter.

Right now I’m reading Reprieve by James Han Mattson and Scattered All Over the Earth by Yōko Tawada. What about you?

Categories
Past Tense

July’s New Historical Fiction For Your TBR

Happy July, historical fiction fans! I’ve got some great new historical releases for you coming out this month. I don’t know about you, but I can never have too many new books to read in the summer, so these six titles are arriving just in the nick of time. From stories taking place in the Dark Ages and ghosts silently pining for what they can’t have to retellings and Soviet-era nuclear cities, these historical fiction novels are just as far-flung as they are riveting. Let’s dive into them together.

The Light Always Breaks Book Cover

The Light Always Breaks by Angela Jackson-Brown (July 5, 2022)

In 1947, Eva Cardon is the owner of DC’s most famous Black-owned restaurant, with plans to open another diner soon to serve Southern comfort food to the working class. The last thing she needs is to fall in love with a white politician. Her mother and grandmother fell for white men, and their family paid the price. But when her equal rights activism puts junior senator Courtland Hardiman Kingsley IV in her path, neither of them are able to resist their feelings for each other despite the potential consequences.

Sister Mother Warrior Book Cover

Sister Mother Warrior by Vanessa Riley (July 12, 2022)

The acclaimed author of Island Queen is back with another historical fiction novel, this time about the extraordinary true-life stories of two women during the Haitian Revolution. One, a warrior kidnapped and sold into slavery from West Africa, is at the forefront of the rebellion on the French colony of Saint Domingue. The other, a free woman of color raised in privilege and security because of her white grandfather, falls in love with a revolutionary despite her marriage to a Frenchman. The paths of these two very different women cross when war breaks out, pitting the French, Spanish, and enslaved people against each other. And both of them has a pivotal role to play.

Briefly, A Delicious Life Book Cover

Briefly, A Delicious Life by Nell Stevens (July 19, 2022)

Blanca has been hanging around the fifteenth-century monastery she died in since her untimely demise at only fourteen. Now, four hundred years later, a woman arrives in the village with her two children and lover. Blanca is immediately enchanted with George, but even as the woman and her lover find themselves in growing trouble with the village for their unconventionality, the ghost of a girl longs for a woman who doesn’t even know she exists.

Dark Earth Book Cover

Dark Earth by Rebecca Stott (July 19, 2022)

In medieval Britain, two sisters live in the shadow of the abandoned ruins of Londinium, the once-glorious Roman settlement on the banks of the Thames. For years, the sisters have run wild, one secretly learning her father’s blacksmithing trade, forbidden to women, and the other communing with animals and plants. But when their father dies, the two face enslavement at the hands of the warlord who imprisoned their father. Forced to flee into Londinium, they discover a community of rebel women living secretly amid the ruins. But with men still hunting them, the sisters will have to rely on their ingenuity and all the magic of their foremothers to protect themselves and fight back.

The Daughter of Doctor Moreau Book Cover

The Daughter of Doctor Moreau by Silvia Moreno-Garcia (July 19, 2022)

Who else is as excited for this new Silvia Moreno-Garcia book as I am? In The Daughter of Doctor Moreau, nineteenth-century Mexico comes to life as the backdrop for this retelling of The Island of Dr. Moreau. Carlota Moreau is the only daughter of either a genius or a madman, isolated in a manor from the strife on the Yucatán peninsula. Carlota lives in relative peace alongside her father, his assistants, and their hybrid human-animal experiments. But when a stranger arrives, he threatens to overturn the delicate balance that’s been created.

The Half Life of Valery K Book Cover

The Half Life of Valery K by Natasha Pulley (July 26, 2022)

A former nuclear scientist in a Siberian gulag in the 1960s knows that the right connections with guards will get him access to food and cigarettes and the right pair of boots will keep him from losing toes to frostbite. But when Valery’s university mentor steps in to take them from the prison camp to a mysterious unnamed town, he’s told he will serve the rest of his sentence studying the effects of radiation on animals. But why exactly is there so much radiation in this town? And what is being hidden from its thousands of inhabitants?

MORE FROM AROUND THE WEB:

Check out Buzzfeed’s list of new historical fiction coming out this summer.

10 new historical fiction books by beloved authors to check out.

Medium’s guide to the best historical fiction books to read in 2022.

Don’t forget you can get three free audiobooks at Audiobooks.com with a free trial!


That’s it for now, folx! Stay subscribed for more stories of yesteryear.

If you want to talk books (historical or otherwise), you can find me @rachelsbrittain on Instagram, Goodreads, Litsy, and occasionally Twitter.

Right now I’m reading Reprieve by James Han Mattson and Scattered All Over the Earth by Yōko Tawada. What about you?

Categories
Past Tense

Revolutionary Women Fight Back in Historical Fiction

It’s been a week, hasn’t it? I honestly don’t know what else to say except that I thought some revolutionary women were in order. It feels like a good time to remember how much women have fought not only for ourselves and our own rights, but for our people and countries and futures. Keep fighting. Keep reading the books they don’t want you to read.

In the Time of Butterflies Book Cover

In the Time of the Butterflies by Julia Alvarez

Inspired by the true story of the Mirabal sisters, In the Time of Butterflies recounts the incredible legacy of the young women, wives, and mothers who were assassinated for their role in an underground movement to overthrow the dictatorial Dominican government of Trujillo. From their teenage years to their growing involvement in the revolution and their eventual discovery and murder, this novel is a tale of resistance and resilience as well as the incredible courage of these women to fight for what it right even when the cost for doing so is unthinkable high.

Do Not Say We Have Nothing Book Cover

Do Not Say We Have Nothing by Madeleine Thien

Over two generations, the first survivors of Mao’s cultural revolution and the second the students who would go on to protest in Tiananmen Square, a family reimagines themselves through the changing political landscape of China. In Vancouver, Maria and Ai-Ming try to piece together their family’s fractured history and their revolutionary roots, even as Ai-Ming seeks refuge from the student occupation taking place in Tiananmen Square.

Love and Fury Book Cover

Love and Fury by Samantha Silva

Mary Wollstonecraft was a feminist before her time, determined to fight for women’s equality amidst the constraints of the late eighteenth century. Set during the arduous birth of her daughter, Mary Shelley–a trailblazing woman in her own right–Wollstonecraft recounts the story of her life to her newborn daughter and the midwife trying desperately to keep them both alive.

The Book of Night Women Book Cover

The Book of Night Women by Marlon James

Lilith was born into slavery on a Jamaican sugar plantation, and even then, as nothing more than a newborn, the women around her recognize a power in her. As she grows and comes into her own, that power will joined with the The Night Women, a group who have long been planning a revolt. But will Lilith be what helps them to victory and freedom or the weak link in a fragile conspiracy that could change all their lives forever?

Bronze Drum Book Cover

Bronze Drum by Phong Nguyen (August 9, 2022)

In ancient Vietnam, two warrior sisters raised an army of women to overthrow the Han Chinese who had taken over their land. Trung Trac and Trung Nhi, daughters of a Lord, have trained all their lives in Vietnamese traditions, but increasingly oppressive rule of the Han Chinese finally push them to their limit. And with an army of women behind them, these two sisters will overthrow the occupying government and rule as kings over a united people.

MORE FROM AROUND THE WEB:

The History Channel talks how the Mirabal sisters helped topple a dictator.

Read an excerpt from Madeleine Thien’s Do Not Say We Have Nothing.

Los Angeles Public Library interviews Samantha Silva, author of Love and Fury, on her inspiration and research process.

Don’t forget you can get three free audiobooks at Audiobooks.com with a free trial!


That’s it for now, folx! Stay subscribed for more stories of yesteryear.

If you want to talk books (historical or otherwise), you can find me @rachelsbrittain on Instagram, Goodreads, Litsy, and occasionally Twitter.

Right now I’m reading Nuclear Family by Joseph Han. What about you?

Categories
Past Tense

Learn a Little Spycraft with Historical Fiction

Spies. They’re the stuff of legend and blockbuster movies, not to mention crime fiction and thrillers galore. But they also play an interesting role in historical fiction, revealing the roles undercover agents have played in historical events and telling the untold stories of women and other minorities who so rarely get their own blockbuster spy treatment. These five historical spy novels feature CIA operatives, FBI field agents, and undercover KGB spies. And they’re all an excellent mix of thrilling and atmospheric. If nothing else, these books will be sure to liven up your summer reading list!

The Half-Life of Ruby Fielding Book Cover

The Half-Life of Ruby Fielding by Lydia Kang

In 1942, war rages overseas, and siblings Will and Maggie do their best to contribute to the war effort stateside. Maggie works at the Navy Yard while Will secretly scouts for the Manhattan Project. But when the discover a woman hiding under their back stairs, they are captivated by the mysterious past of this stranger with an affinity for poisons and a talent for killing small creatures. With whispers of spies and the world’s first atomic bomb in the work, questions about what this women wants–and her sudden appearance in their lives–begin to sink in. Is she someone the siblings can trust or a threat to everything they’re working for?

A Woman of Intelligence Book Cover

A Woman of Intelligence by Karin Tanabe

Katharina Edgeworth has a seemingly perfect life with a job at the UN, a pediatric surgeon of a husband, two healthy sons, and heir to a fortune. But the post-war American dream has become her own living nightmare. When the FBI approach her to become an informant, tasked with joining the inner-circle of a high-ranking Soviet spy who was once her friend. As a courier, Katharina is tasked with carrying stolen government documents from D.C. to Manhattan. But even as she navigates the demands of the FBI and secrecy of the KGB, people around her are losing their covers and their lives. And Katharina could be next.

American Spy Book Cover

American Spy by Lauren Wilkinson

During the heart of the Cold War, an FBI intelligence officer suspects her stalling career has something to do with her age, gender, and race as a young Black woman working in an old boy’s club. But then she’s offered an opportunity to join a shadowy task force aiming to undermine the revolutionary president of Burkina Faso. The United States is suspicious of his communist leanings, and even though Marie respects what he’s doing, she knows this may be her only chance for advancement in the FBI. But over the next few years, as she observes, seduces, and ultimately takes part in the coup that will overthrow President Thomas Sankara, she begins to question what it means to be a good spy, a good American, and, more importantly, a good person.

Code Name Verity Book Cover

Code Name Verity by Elizabeth Wein

When a British spy plane crashes in Vichy, France, two girls–one a pilot, one a spy–know their chances of survival are slim. But one of them just might be able to escape. After being captured, “Verity” confesses to her Nazi captors to avoid a grisly execution. But as she tells the story of the pilot Maddie, her best friend who she left in the wreckage of the fuselage, the intricate story of these two girls’ friendship is brought to life. And it’s not quite the story you think it is. After all, it’s a spy weaving it.

When We Left Cuba Book Cover

When We Left Cuba by Chanel Cleeton

Beatriz and her family lost everything in the Cuban Revolution. Now, having fled to America, she’s ready to seek her revenge against Fidel Castro, who had her twin brother murdered. And she knows it’s only with the help of the CIA that she can do it. But as the Cold War swells and Beatriz is consumed by her quest for revenge, she realizes allies and enemies can become an ever-changing target, and she’ll have to make a choice between avenging her past or looking forward to her future when she finally gets her chance at looking Fidel right in the eyes.

MORE FROM AROUND THE WEB:

Read an excerpt of Lydia Kang’s The Half-Life of Ruby Fielding.

Check out Lauren Wilkinson’s answers to reader questions about her book, American Spy.

BOOK RIOT RECS:

5 Historical Spy Thrillers Based (in Part) on Real Events

9 Great Books About Female Spies

Learning the Past From Spy Fiction

Don’t forget you can get three free audiobooks at Audiobooks.com with a free trial!


That’s it for now, folx! Stay subscribed for more stories of yesteryear.

If you want to talk books (historical or otherwise), you can find me @rachelsbrittain on Instagram, Goodreads, Litsy, and occasionally Twitter.

Right now I’m reading The Daughter of Doctor Moreau by Sivlia Moreno-Garcia. What about you?

Categories
Past Tense

Set Sail with these Historical Fiction Novels Set on the High Seas

Hi, historical fiction fans! Summer is fully underway here in the southern United States, and I’ve been trying to stay cool during several days of heat advisories. So, obviously I’ve been thinking about the ocean and diving into cool bodies of water, as one does on days when the heat index is well over 100 degrees. And what better way to immerse myself in some ocean breeze than to search out maritime historical fiction? I’ve found six historical fiction novels stretching all the way back to the eleventh century set entirely or in part on the high seas. Let’s set sail with some maritime historical fiction then, shall we?

Devotion Book Cover

Devotion by Hannah Kent

Hanne comes from a family of Old Lutherans in nineteenth-century Prussia, where worship must be done in secret and their community is under constant threat. But while a journey to Australia could mean safety for her community, it will also have devastating consequences for Hanne and her new friend Thea, a kindred spirit who accepts Hanne for who she is. Cramped quarters and a raging typhus epidemic on board mean that even if the community makes it to Australia, they’ll never be the same.

African Town Book Cover

African Town by and Irene Latham and Charles Waters

This novel in prose tells the story of the last slave ship brought illegally to America in the 1860s, long after the United States had outlawed the importation of enslaved people though not slavery itself. From the horrors of the Middle Passage to swamplands along the Alabama river, African Town tells the story of the 110 men, women, and children kidnapped from Benin who would eventually go on to establish a community of survivors after the Civil War.

She Rises Book Cover

She Rises by Kate Worsley

The stories of a dairy maid who runs away to a bustling naval port to work as a lady’s maid to an eccentric woman and a teenager pressganged into naval service intertwine in this tale of the dangerous allure of the sea. It’s a story of love, identity, and survival.

Cinnamon and Gunpowder Book Cover

Cinnamon and Gunpowder by Eli Brown

What’s more fun than a pirate story? How about a pirate story about a kidnapped chef forced to cook elaborate meals on the high seas? Renowned chef Owen Wedgwood only has one hope of surviving the pirate Mad Hannah Mabbot and that’s by cooking the most exquisite food every seen aboard a pirate ship every Sunday without fail. The larder might not be well stocked, but if Wedgwood wants to survive his new pirate life, he’ll have to make the best meals of his life.

The Sea Road Book Cover

The Sea Road by Margaret Elphinstone

This novel tells the story of the Viking exploration of the North Atlantic from the perspective of a daring woman, Gudrid. In a time when the old Norse gods are still invoked even as Christianity gains favor and the sea is the only gateway to the rest of the world, Gudrid and other Viking explorers voyage into the unknown, from the northern ice fields to the shores of North America.

A Long Petal of the Sea Book Cover

A Long Petal of the Sea by Isabel Allende

With Spain in the grips of civil war, a group of refugees embark on a treacherous journey through the mountains and to the ocean where a ship chartered by Pablo Neruda waits to usher them across the Atlantic. For Roser, a pregnant young widow, and an army doctor named Victor Dalmau, a life of exile in Chile offers new hope even as the rest of the world breaks out into war. It’s a story of hope, exile, and belonging set against the backdrop of the Spanish Civil War and World War II.

More From Around the Web

Hannah Kent discusses why and how she veers away from historical accuracy in Devotion.

NPR talks with Charles Waters and Irene Latham about how African Town traces the history of the last slave ship sent to the U.S.

Read or listen to this interview with Isabel Allende on her newest novel A Long Petal of the Sea.

Don’t forget you can get three free audiobooks at Audiobooks.com with a free trial!

Book Riot Recs

8 Books Set on the High Seas

Historical Fiction Books to Pack for Your Summer Vacation.


That’s it for now, folx! Stay subscribed for more stories of yesteryear.

If you want to talk books (historical or otherwise), you can find me @rachelsbrittain on Instagram, Goodreads, Litsy, and occasionally Twitter.

Right now I’m reading The Dance Tree by Kiran Millwood Hargrave. What about you?