Today, one of the links that came through was to a list of the 100 All Time Best Historical Fiction books. You know that I can't go past that without having to comment on it! What I don't know is how this list was collated, who were the judges etc, but it's still a fun exercise to look at! I have commented about the books that I have read in purple
Interesting that Philippa Gregory is apparently the only Tudor author worth reading!
How many of these have you read? Are there any must read HF books that aren't on the list? Are there any books on this list that you can't believe I haven't read yet? Let's talk the best historical fiction novels you have read.
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Ancient & Prehistoric Go way back in these books from prehistoric and ancient times.
- The Penelopaid: The Penelopaid offers a rewriting of the Odyssey, Odysseus, Helen, and life in Hades.
- Death Comes as the End: Agatha Christie’s novel is set in Thebes in 2000 BC.
- The Clan of the Cave Bear: The Clan of the Cave Bear is about the interactions between Neanderthals and Cro-Magnons. (Can't wait to read the sixth book in the series which is out early next year! Have been reading these books since my late teens)
- Centennial: Read Centennial to trace the history of northeast Colorado from prehistoric times to the 1970s.
- The Secret Magdalene: The Secret Magdalene challenges views of historical events in the New Testament.
- The Red Tent: In The Red Tent, you’ll find a retelling of the story of Dinah from the Bible. (This is the book that started me on my blogging journey. I just had to talk to someone, anyone about it when I read it!)
- Earth’s Children: The Earth’s Children series is set in Europe during the Upper Paleolithic era, discussing the co-existence of Cro-Magnons and Neanderthals. (See comment on 3 above)
- London: Edward Rutherfurd’s novel begins with the birth of the River Thames to present time.
- Sarum: Sarum follows the story of England from prehistoric times to the creation of the country of England.
- The Bull from the Sea: The Bull From the Sea follows the story of the mythological hero Theseus in Ancient Greece.
- Pharaoh: See the stresses and threats that culminate in the fall of Egypt’s Twentieth Dynasty and the New Kingdom in this novel.
- The Egyptian: This classic recreates Egypt in the 14th century.
You can study the Roman empire in these novels.
- I, Claudius: I, Claudius covers the life of Claudius and the Julio-Claudian Dynasty of the Roman Empire.
- The First Man in Rome: Colleen McCullough’s novel shares the history of important figures in the late Roman republic.
- Masters of Rome: Masters of Rome is set during the last days of the old Roman Republic.
In these books, you’ll learn about medieval times.
- The Deryni Novels: Katherine Kurtz’s series is set in a medieval kingdom similar to the British Isles of the 10th and 12th centuries.
- The Mists of Avalon: The Mists of Avalon follows the life of a priestess working to save her culture.
These novels will take you all the way to the 15th century.
- The Physician: Noah Gordon’s novel is about a Christian boy on a journey across Europe to study medicine with the Muslims in the 11th century.
- Ivanhoe: Ivanhoe is responsible for an increase in interest in the Middle Ages during the Romanticism era.
- Pope Joan: This novel follows the life of medieval legend Pope Joan, who dresses as a man and eventually becomes the pope. (I thought this was on okay read, but not spectacular)
- The Pillars of the Earth: Ken Follet’s popular novel, The Pillars of the Earth, is about the building of a 12th century cathedral’s construction in Kingsbridge, England.
- The Journeyer: Study the life of Marco Polo in this historical novel.
- The Name of the Rose: Italian author Umberto Eco’s murder mystery combines learning in an Italian monastery in 1327.
- Katherine: Anya Seton’s novel tells the story of Katherine Swynford and John of Gaunt. (Classic historical fiction if there is such a thing.)
- The Sunne in Splendor: Follow King Richard III from his time as a young boy to his defeat at the Battle of Bosworth Field. (My first Richard III novel, and still the best)
- The Agony and the Ecstasy: Irving Stone shares this biographical novel about the sculptor Michelangelo.
- Princess Mononoke: This period drama follows fantastical Japanese elements.
- The Historian: Check out The Historian for the folklore of 15th century Vlad the Impaler.
The Tudor era is studied in these novels. Haven't read The Boleyn Inheritance, but have read the others.
- The Constant Princess: Philippa Gregory’s historical novel follows a fictionalized story of Catherine of Aragon’s life.
- The Queen’s Fool: The Queen’s Fool discusses the lives of Mary I of England and Elizabeth.
- The Boleyn Inheritance: The Boleyn Inheritance is all about the fourth and fifth marriages of King Henry VIII.
- The Other Boleyn Girl: Learn about the life of 16th century aristocrat Mary Boleyn.
Check out these novels to read about the 16th and 17th centuries.
- The Last Light of the Sun: This fantasy novel draws heavily on the Viking invasions of Saxon England.
- The Drawing of the Dark: A 16th century Irish mercenary soldier is the focus of Tim Powers’ book.
- The Scarlet Letter: Nathaniel Hawthorne’s work tells the story of an adulteress who gives birth in 17th century Puritan Boston.
- Forever Amber: In this novel, Amber St. Clare sleeps her way up through the ranks of 17th century English society. Another classic.
- Year of Wonders: Year of Wonders is based on a small village in Derbyshire trying to survive the Plague. (Loved this book, except for the very strange ending!)
- Shadows on the Rock: 17th century Quebec is discussed in this novel by American writer Willa Cather.
- City of Dreams: City of Dreams tells the story of early Manhattan. (I really liked this one too. It covers a long period of time and a lot of action, but is a very interesting read)
- The Three Musketeers: Alexander Dumas wrote this novel about inseparable friends in the 17th century.
These books offer the stories of the American frontier.
- Mr. Tucket: Gary Paulsen’s novel is about Francis Tucket, who strays from his family’s wagon on the Oregon Trail.
- My Antonia: See life from the perspective of an immigrant girl on the Nebraska plains in this novel.
- Cenceit: Conceit shares the story of Peggy Donne, who is the daughter of poet John Donne.
- Silence: Silence is a historical fiction novel about a Jesuit missionary in 17th century Japan.
- Girl with a Pearl Earring: Girl with a Pearl Earring recreates the setting in which the famous Vermeer painting was created. (None of the Tracy Chevalier books I have read since have lived up to the enjoyment I got from this book!)
In these novels, you’ll go from the 18th century to more modern times.
- Rob Roy: Rob Roy takes place in the time of the Jacobite Rising in Scotland.
- Roots: Study Kunta Kinte’s life and resulting family in Roots.
- Outlander: Read this novel series that highlights Scottish clan life in the 18th century. (Jamie and Claire. Jamie in particular. Sigh.)
- The Talisman Ring: The Talisman Ring is a historical romance novel set in the Georgian era.
- The Ladies of Grace Adieu and Other Stories: This collection of eight short stories are written in 18th and 19th century England.
- Arthur & George: Read the stories of two very different men brought together in late 19th century Britain. (Really didn't enjoy this one all that much.)
- Henry Paget Flashman: Flashman is a an antihero of the 19th century. (I've read one of the Flashman books. It's very politically incorrect, but a lot of fun.)
- Jonathan Strange & Mr. Norrell: In this novel, you’ll find an alternative history to 19th century England.
- Snow Flower and the Secret Fan: See the lives of women in 19th century China in Snow Flower and the Secret Fan. (I have enjoyed all of Lisa See's historical fiction novels.)
- Wuthering Heights: Wuthering Heights is set in northern England’s Yorkshire moors in the 1800s.
- Alias Grace: Alias Grace discusses the 1843 murders of Thomas Kinnear and his housekeeper Nancy Montgomery in Canada.
- Lonesome Dove: Follow retired Texas Rangers from Texas to Montana in Lonesome Dove. (It's nearly time for me to read this book again.)
- Les Miserables: Victor Hugo’s novel depicts the lives of poor French characters in the early 19th century.
- The Count of Monte Cristo: The Count of Monte Cristo takes place in Europe during the 1800s.
- The Last Empress: Anchee Min’s novel shares an account of Empress Dowager Cixi’s life.
- City of Glory: City of Glory discusses New York during the War of 1812. Another Beverly Swerling novel that I enjoyed immensely
- Death Comes for the Archbishop: In this novel, Willa Cather writes about a Catholic bishop and priest establishing a diocese in New Mexico Territory.
- One Thousand White Women: One Thousand White Women writes the story of May Dodd and other pioneer women who intermarried among the Cheyenne Indians.
- The Alienist: Caleb Carr’s novel studies murder in 1896 New York City.
- The Angel of Darkness: The Angel of Darkness is a sequel to The Alienist, sharing the mystery of Senora Linares’s missing child.
Study more recent history in these novels.
- Teito Monogatari: Read this book to see the history of Edo from an occultist perspective.
- The Good Earth: Pearl S. Buck won the Pulitzer Prize for this book about the family life of a Chinese village before the 1949 Revolution. This was a very interesting read that I read with an online book club a number of years ago.
- The Color Purple: The Color Purple shares female black life in the South during the 1930s.
- Ragtime: Ragtime is a mix of American families and historical figures in important American events, set from 1900 until 1917.
- Middlesex: Middlesex tells the story of Greek immigration to the United States. Fascinating book. Listened to it on audio years ago, and it is still one of the best listening experiences I have had.
- A Thousand Splendid Suns: Learn about the lives of Afghan women in their lives from the 1960s to 2003. Excellent book. Historical fiction though?
- Snow Falling on Cedars: Study a murder case on the Washington coast in 1954 on Snow Falling on Cedars.
- The Grapes of Wrath: John Steinbeck’s award winning novel tells the story of sharecroppers in the Great Depression.
- The Joy Luck Club: The Joy Luck Club looks into the lives of immigrant Chinese women in the United States. I read this book years ago.
- A Tree Grows in Brooklyn: A Tree Grows in Brooklyn follows three generations of an American family beginning in 1912.
- Water for Elephants: Water for Elephants focuses on a traveling circus in the time of the Great Depression. Another excellent read
- The Thorn Birds: The Thorn Birds follows the Cleary family in the Australian outback from 1915 to 1969. Wow. What a book! I remember watching the mini series when I was a teenager and being shocked, and then reading the book. Need to revisit this one.
A popular subject, these novels are set in times of war.
- Captain Alatriste: Arturo Perez-Reverte’s novel series follows the adventures of a Spanish soldier in the 17th century.
- Gone with the Wind: This romantic novel is set in Civil War and Reconstruction Georgia. Another classic!
- Slaughterhouse-Five: Slaughterhouse-Five is a World War II-era science fiction novel by Kurt Vonnegut.
- Sharpe: Bernard Cornwell’s Sharpe series is all about Sharpe in the Napoleonic Wars.
- A Tale of Two Cities: Charles Dickens set this novel in London and Paris during the time of the French Revolution.
- The Corps: WEB Griffin’s series wrote this series about the Marine Corps in the years surrounding World War II and the Korean Conflict.
- Horatio Hornblower: Horatio Hornblower’s series follows a junior Royal Navy Captain on a mission in Central America during the Napoleonic Wars.
- War and Peace: The epic novel War and Peace discusses the details of the events leading up to Napoleon’s invasion of Russia.
- The Book Thief: The Book Thief explores Death in WWII Germany. Loved this book when I read it a couple of years ago.
- Memoirs of a Geisha: Arthur Golden’s book tells the story of a Kyoto geisha during the time of World War II. Not so fussed about this one. It was good but I didn't think it was great. Maybe it had been overhyped to me by the time I got to it.
- Tales of the Otori: Lian Hearn’s historical novel series is based on feudal Japan.
- King Rat: King Rat is set in a Japanese POW camp in 1945.
- Doctor Zhivago: See the story of a man torn between two women in the Russian Revolution of 1917 and the Russian Civil War.
- The English Patient: You will learn about the histories of a series of men living out World War II in an Italian villa.
- The Killer Angels: The Killer Angels is a Pulitzer Prize winning novel about the Battle of Gettysburg.
- Number the Stars: Number the Stars is a historical fiction about the Holocaust in WWII.
- Cold Mountain: Charles Frazier’s story discusses a wounded deserter from the Confederate army.
- All Quiet on the Western Front: German veteran Erich Maria Remarque shares the stress of World War I in this novel.
- The Shadow of the Wind: Just after the Spanish Civil War in Barcelona, a young writer is mysteriously approached to write a book. One of my favourites!
- The Fiery Cross: The Fiery Cross features the politics and turmoil of the American Revolution. Part of the Outlander series. Surprised to see this one make it into the list when others didn't!
- Like Water for Chocolate: See love, longing, and magical realism in this Mexican Revolution novel.Another one that I read years ago that I would like to revisit.
- World Without End: Check out Ken Follet’s novel with a plot incorporating the Hundred Years’ War and the Black Death.
- Tales of the South Pacific: James A. Michener’s collection of short stories about World War II won a Pulitzer Prize.
I'm looking to read more books by Japanese authors or about Japanese history and culture, and Silence is one that has been on my list for what seems like forever.
ReplyDeleteI see a lot of familiar names on that list, but I'm wondering about PG being the be-all on the Tudors as well.
ReplyDeleteNice to see M. Dumas on the list, he is excellent.
Glad to see a few of my favorites and a few that are on my TBR shelf, too. But I'd definitely question a few of these choices and and PG should absolutely not be the only Tudor author. Only one of her books would be on my list.
ReplyDeleteWhat a fun list--I have read 23 of them.
ReplyDeleteI got an email a few weeks ago from someone supposedly connected with this asking if I would feature it on my blog. Although I found the list interesting, I was curious as to who compiled it and how so I replied asking for that information to include with the post. I never heard back from them - so I decided not to post it.
ReplyDeleteA lot of good books on there. Mind if I grab and link?
ReplyDeleteI'm really disappointed in the very small variety of books that cover the Tudors. I demand a re-count! LOL.
ReplyDeleteIt looks like I've read only 16 of these. I've got a bit more reading to do! :)
ReplyDeleteGreat list with a lot of familiar authors and a few new ones to add. :-)
ReplyDeleteGirl with a Pearl Earring recreates the setting in which the famous Vermeer painting was created. (None of the Tracy Chevalier books I have read since have lived up to the enjoyment I got from this book!)
ReplyDeleteHave you read Remarkable Creatures (copyright 2010)? It's very good.
I've read 35 of these books.
why was this book listed under American set stories.....wasn't it Dutch??
DeleteI find a lot wrong with this list, personally. Asia only shows up twice (and one is a story about a Western missionary) until 1700?! Not to mention the entire continent of Africa. Or the Americas prior to European settlement. Or... the South Pacific in general. So euro-centric! And I won't even get into the Phillippa Gregory thing... Though I'm glad to see Talisman Ring on there :)
ReplyDeleteSo what
DeleteI'm glad Alias Grace made it on there. It seems like a pretty good list but there are so many better "Tudor authors" than PG! That are more historically accurate.
ReplyDeleteI guess Aarti said it first, but I was going to say I'm sad to see so little of Asia (I was looking for China and see zero) or Africa, or ...
ReplyDeleteI'd really like to know who compiled the list and what criteria they used. It definitely contains a few of my favorites, But there are others that seem a bit dubious.
I've read a couple- Year of Wonders, Girl with A Pearl Earring, etc
ReplyDeleteLOVE Water with Elephants- such a good book! I also loved 1000 White Woman- you should check it out- it was on my list for years and then when I finally read it I couldn't believe I'd waited so long- I couldn't put it down!
I'm excited to read a few others- but PG? it's disappointing they only listed her for the Tudor period- I'm always looking for more books about that time period so that's no help at all!
This is a great list - especially when looking for a new read from a particular era, or just to see what's recommended. I'm definitely going to nab it for myself!
ReplyDeleteI loved City of Dreams so, so much! It doesn't seem to be all that well known though, so it's great to find someone who also enjoyed it! I've been meaning to get her other book but I keep forgetting.
I have a number of these on my shelf - more than I've actually read, I'd say. The slim pickings for the Tudor period surprised me too.
Thank you for sharing this list. I have read some but will definitely add others to my list. Historical Fiction is one genre that I have a desire to read more of so your blog post is quite timely for me.
ReplyDeleteI thought I'd read a lot of HF, but only 13 on this list! A few of my favorites are on it, though: Water for Elephants, Year of Wonders, A Tale of Two Cities, and Outlander. (Sigh)
ReplyDeleteI'm listening to Middlesex right now - and I agree, it is a fantastic audio selection! I've only got two discs to go.
Great list - I might pinch it! I don't think I read historical fiction but only books that happen to be in a historical setting. :-)
ReplyDeleteYou didn't like Arthur and George? I was blown away by it. I picked it up not knowing what it was about and bit by bit I realised who the Arthur in the title really was. I thought the story was amazing and very sad.
LOL @ the PG only for the Tudor section....that's just too funny. I'm amazed Wolf Hall didn't make the list.
ReplyDeleteI read your note about Lonesome Dove....it is indeed about time for a re-read. Isn't My Friend Amy doing a group read of it this summer, I think?
Michele, maybe this list was created before Wolf Hall made it really big? As for Lonesome Dove, I seem to already have 5 or 6 huge books lined up for this summer/winter so I am not sure I can fit another one in, but we will see.
ReplyDeleteMae, I really thought it was okay, but not exceptional. The parts about Arthur, and then towards the end were good.
Carrie, I listened to Middlesex and loved the narration, until the tape broke.
Kathleen, HF is one of my absolute favourite genres!
Shannon, I do see it mentioned occasionally, but yes, I wish more people read Beverly Swerling.
Jenn, I have had 1000 White Women on my TBR list for a long time, but I don't think my library has it!
Wordlily and Aarti, yes, no Africa other than Africa, and very little Asian.
Bonnie, I have Remarkable Creatures here to read, but haven't got to it yet. I have heard very mixed reviews of it though.
Alisonwonderland, aren't there always more books to read!
Cortney, it shouldn't be that hard to find other good Tudor books should it? There are enough of them out there.
Elena, feel free!
Daphne, I had forgotten that they had emailed me as well. In the end I decided to post it with the disclaimer about not knowing what criteria etc was used because I thought it would be interesting and maybe create a little discussion.
Lady Q and Misfit, seems plenty of people aren't happy with the Tudor section of the list.
Charley, I can't say I have read a lot of Japanese history - a couple here and there but that is about it!
Marg, if you want my take on the book Remarkable Creatures by Tracy Chevalier, here's my review where I rated it 9 of 10:
ReplyDeletehttp://bonniesbooks.blogspot.com/2010/03/remarkable-creatures-by-tracy-chevalier.html
As for One Thousand White Women by Jim Fergus, I rated it 9.5 of 10 and think it's worth buying, if your library doesn't have a copy. Here's my review:
ReplyDeletehttp://bonniesbooks.blogspot.com/2007/08/one-thousand-white-women.html
Where is the Aubrey-Maturin series by Patrick O'Brian?
ReplyDeleteA number I didn’t see mentioned
ReplyDeleteMulti-era
James Michener - Source, Edward Rutherfurd - Sarum, Iain Pears - Dream of Scipio and Stone's Fall, William Golding - Scorpion God, Anthony Burgess - Earthly Powers, Borislav Pecik - Golden Fleece
Prehistory - Ancient
Golding - The Inheritors, Luo Guanzhong - Romance of the Three Kingdoms, Boleslaw Prus - Pharoah, Amita Kanekar - Spoke in the Wheel, Alfred Duggan - Elephants and Castles, Mary Renault - multiple, Frank Yerby - Goat Song, Borislav Pekic - Search for the Golden Fleece, Barry Unsworth - Songs of the Kings, Marguerite Yourcenar - Mémoires d’Hadrien, Robert Graves - Claudius the God, Count Belisarius, Duggan - Founding Fathers, Winter Quarters, Three - Company, Family Favourites, Little Emperors, Robert Harris - Pompeii, Imperium, Conspirata, Lustrum, Thornton Wilder - Ides of March, Benita Kane Jaro - Key, Door in the Wall, Lock, Taylor Caldwell - Pillar of Iron, Gore Vidal - Julian, Burgess - Kingdom of the Wicked
Mediaeval
Peter Ackroyd - Clerkenwell Tales, Sigrind Undset - Kristin Lavransdatter, Walter Scott - Talisman, Washington Irving - Tales of the Alhambra, Anya Seton - Katherine, Umberto Eco - Baudolino, Golding - Spire, Robert Louis Stevenson - Black Arrow, Unsworth - Morality Play
Renaissance
George Eliot - Romola, Victor Hugo - Notre Dame de Paris, José Saramago - História do Cerco de Lisboa, Shusaku Endo - Silence, Alexandre Dumas - Reine Margot, Amin Maalouf - Leo Africanus, Orhan Pamuk - My Name is Red
Tudor
Hilary Mantel - Wolf Hall, Scott - Kenilworth and Woodstock, Ackroyd - House of Doctor Dee, Ford Madox Ford - Fifth Queen trilogy, Burgess - Nothing Like the Sun
Stuart (GB/Europe)
Daniel Defoe - Memoirs of a Cavalier, Scott - Peveril of the Peak, Pears - An Instance of the Fingerpost, Graves - Wife to Mr. Milton, Defoe - Journal of the Plague Year, Neal Stephenson - Baroque Cycle, Tremain - Restoration, Scott - Waverley, Rose Tremain - Music & Silence, Louis Goldman - Castrato, Anne Rice - Cry to Heaven, Saramago - Baltasar and Blimunda, Italo Calvino - Baron in the Trees
Georgian (GB/Europe)
Lion Feuchtwanger - Jud Süss, Patrick Süskind - Perfume, Charles Dickens - Barnaby Rudge, Unsworth - Quality of Mercy
French Rev./Napoleon
Mantel - Place of Greater Safety, Patrick O’Brian - Aubrey-Maturin series, C.S. Forester - Horatio Hornblower series, Thomas Flanagan - Year of the French, Burgess - Napoleon Symphony, Unsworth - Losing Nelson
Colonial
Peter Carey - True History of the Kelly Gang, Patrick White - Voss, Golding - To the Ends of the Earth; Nathaniel Hawthorne - Scarlet Letter, James Fennimore Cooper - Last of the Mohicans, Unsworth - Sacred Hunger; Esther Forbes - Johnny Tremain, Winston Churchill - Richard Carvel
19th c. U.S.
Vidal - Burr, Seton - My Theodosia, Dragonwyck; Vidal - Lincoln, Thomas Kenneally - Confederates, Stephen Crane - Red Badge of Courage, E.L. Doctorow - March; T.C. Boyle - Road to Wellville, Steven Millhauser - Martin Dressler, Mark Helprin - Winter’s Tale
Same era, S. America: Gabriel García Márquez’ General in His Labyrinth
19th c. UK/Europe
Romain Rolland - Jean Christophe, Thomas Mann - Buddenbrooks, Giuseppe di Lampedusa - Leopard, Vilhelm Moberg - Emigrants, Burgess - Abba Abba; Ackroyd - Dan Leno and the Limehouse Golem (aka Trial of Elizabeth Cree), Graves - They Hanged My Saintly Billy
Raj
Rabindranath Tagore - Home and the World, M.M. Kaye - Far Pavilions, Salman Rushdie - Midnight’s Children, Paul Scott - Raj Quartet
WW I/Russian Rev.
Aleksandr Solzhenitskyn - August 1914, Helprin - Soldier of the Great War, Pat Barker - Regeneration Trilogy, Sebastian Barry - Long Long Way, Sebastian Faulks - Birdsong, Richard Powers - Three Farmers on Their Way to a Dance, Susan Hill - Strange Meeting, Robert Goddard - In Pale Battalions, Unsworth - Land of Marvels; Mikhail Bulgakov - White Guard, Solzhenitskyn - November 1916
Whatever became of Jean Plaidy?
What a great list of recommendations! I’m currently reading “Turkoise” by Joan M. Sargent. If you go to her website, http://jmsargent.com/, you can find out more about her and the book. It’s truly captivating, and I highly recommend it! I’ve been looking for another book for when I’m finished with this one and I think I now have plenty to choose from! Thanks!
ReplyDeleteI'd add The Saxon Series by Bernard Cornwell. There's great historical fiction out there about Europe/Asia from 300 AD through 1400 AD.
ReplyDeleteWhy is Girl With the Pearl Earring listed under American Frontier?!?!
ReplyDeleteAnd if none of you have read Nora Lofts, Bless This House is an amazing read for those who love history. The Townhouse trilogy is also amazing and captivating, more so than any of the Rutherford books, and I love those books, but Nora did it first and at times, better.
I'm really disappointed to see that Herman Wouk's excellent war novels are missing. Specifically:
ReplyDeleteThe Winds of War
War and Remembrance
The Caine Mutiny
The Hope
To Dance With Kings is one of the best historical novels I've ever read.
ReplyDeletehttp://www.chapters.indigo.ca/books/Dance-with-Kings-Novel-Rosalind-Laker/9780307352552-item.html
No books by Steven Saylor?? Rome and its sequel Empire , very surprise..
ReplyDeleteGreat list, but some of those books aren't considered historicals, since they were written during the same period in which they were set. Grapes of Wrath is not a historical; also Wuthering Heights, A Tree Grows in Brooklyn, and Slaughterhouse-Five. My Antonia and The Good Earth might not be historicals either.
ReplyDeleteWould like to add one to the list. One of my favorite historical novels was Barry Lyndon by William Makepeace Thackeray.
ReplyDeleteMany Native Americans would disagree that 1000 White Women is a good book. It's a great story, but it's not historically accurate in it's portrayal of Indians.
ReplyDeleteAfrican American historical fiction - Native Son. Tudor era - Wolf Hall. WW2 - Captain Corelli's Mandolin. All brilliant!
ReplyDeleteGood list - but no Dorothy Dunnett?
ReplyDeleteDorothy Dunnett's The House of Niccolo is a wonderful read. And her King Hereafter (Macbeth) is fascinating.
DeleteThank you for this fantastic review! "Gone with the Wind" is a definite favourite of mine. Here is my list of top 15 historical romance novels of all time: http://catehogan.com/top-15-historical-romance-novels/ Some classic and more current titles. I'd love your feedback!
ReplyDelete