Historical Fictionistas discussion
Recommendations?
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1900s
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Allison
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Aug 04, 2009 04:31PM

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All Quiet on the Western Front
A Long Long Way
To the Last Man A Novel of the First World War




The same goes for Water for Elephants.
The Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society
Gone to Soldiers
Skeletons at the Feast



Also, I'm getting pretty addicted to mysteries lately, so one more to the TBR doesn't seem so bad. :-)
I feel like 1900s includes victorian era, and I'm suprised a certain doggy hasn't been pushing a certain book which involves some gables, I think they are green....

If everyone doesn't immediately read Anne of Green Gables (and LIKE it), you will be banned from the group forthwith.

added it to my list.

If everyone doesn't immediately read [book..."
I've read the first three and liked them very much. I can stay. Phew! :)

East of Eden. I adore Steinbeck and this is by far his most epic, most beautiful book. Read it. Please.

That's probably about the extent of my WWI reading too...Oh well.
And I loved Water for Elephants.


To the Last Man A Novel of the First World War by Jeff Shaara is also a good possibility. Shaara has a good series of well researched historical fiction

Charlotte Gray was good from what I remember. It's about a British female spy in France in WWII.
The Chestnut Tree is about what life was like in Britain for the women left behind in WWII. There's a sequel too, about everyone readjusting after the "boys" came home.

Also portrayed was a young Jewish woman in a work camp, and her story was fabulous and heart wrenching.
Anyway...it was fantastic!
Hi MJ... I'd appreciate it if you would not advertise your book here. We're here to discuss HF, not provide a billboard for advertisement of upcoming books, even if said books are genre appropriate.
This is a private group, and while we're not trying to pick and choose our members, we do want to avoid being marketed to, which is why I have not made the group public.
You've mentioned your book already in the appropriate area, which I don't mind even though that is your only post other than this one, but simply because it is listed in the GR Giveaway - but please participate in discussions regarding other books as well as your own.
Thank you!
This is a private group, and while we're not trying to pick and choose our members, we do want to avoid being marketed to, which is why I have not made the group public.
You've mentioned your book already in the appropriate area, which I don't mind even though that is your only post other than this one, but simply because it is listed in the GR Giveaway - but please participate in discussions regarding other books as well as your own.
Thank you!



Donna! I really like that book. but I think I enjoyed Memoirs of a Geisha more. have you read that one?

Hi Erin, Yes I've read Memoirs of a Geisha and it is really tough choice which I like better but I think it would be Memoirs of a Geisha too.

Even if you have no interest in comic books or graphic novels, I would recommend this novel to everyone. It's brilliant!!!

Agree with the recommendation of Maisie Dobbs by Jacqueline Winspear, this book is set partially during WW1, but all her series deal with the horrors and aftermath of the war.
And really can't recommend this one highly enough - non fiction - Vera Britain's Testament of Youth; being autobiography, it really hooks you through to the end.
Hmm, Pat Barker's Regeneration Trilogy.



I love this cover:

Its a great cover, and so representative of the lead character, Celia. She's a real piece of work! :-)



I also really like the "between" books. I've been reading the Josephine Tey mystery series by Nicola Upson as well as the Montmaray series by Michelle Cooper.

I've got a Josephine Tey / Nicola Upson on order from Amazon so am looking forward to that. I haven't heard of the Montmaray series so shall investigate those. Thanks :-)

I also enjoy the periods between the war especially in England. If you like historical mysteries I suggest the Maisie Dobbs series.

I can't recommend them enough.

I also enjoy the periods between the war especially in England. If you ..."
Thanks Nancy. Will have a look at Maisie Dobbs.


All Our Worldly Goods
To the End of the Land
The Dovekeepers
Second Hand Smoke
Skeletons at the Feast
A Thread of Grace
A Pigeon and a Boy
The majority chose Second Hand Smoke by Thane Rosenbaum and Skeletons at the Feast by Chris Bohjalian.



I don't speak for the group,but I'd definitely categorize historical mysteries as HF. I really like Rebecca Cantrell's central character, Hannah Vogel. She has an unusual perspective on her period. As for science fiction, I would say that it depends. I see HF as portraying events as they happened. Time travel can bend the past. At the very least they are bringing observers into time periods where they don't belong. Even if the original intention was to observe, this can change history. It then becomes an alternate universe, and I don't consider that HF.

I'm half -way through her latest, and very different book,called Doc. Doc is about Doc Holliday of 'Wyatt Earp and the Gunfight at the OK Corral' fame. Very different from her scientists and the Roman Catholic Church exploring other planets. I can't quite put it in words, but it puts a different spin on the people she talks about. It's Deadwood (TV show) but very different.
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