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741 items found for "six historical"

  • Review of The Fighting Bunch: The Battle of Athens by Chris DeRose

    If you like compelling nonfiction, you might also want to check out the post Six of the Best Nonfiction

  • Review of The Guncle by Steven Rowley

    in recent years has been primarily focused on shutting off the outside world, but the demands of a six

  • Three Books I'm Reading Now, 6/10/24 Edition

    The Books I'm Reading Now I'm reading The Goddess of Warsaw, Lisa Barr's dual-timeline historical fiction 01 The Goddess of Warsaw by Lisa Barr In Lisa Barr's newest historical fiction, The Goddess of Warsaw

  • Three Books I'm Reading Now, 2/9/21 Edition

    book has a major twist, made even more interesting by listening to the audio version. 03 Office of Historical She uses everyday moments to illustrate how the truth of history can be skewed and determined by who title novella, a black student from Washington, DC, finds herself involved in unraveling a complicated historical bravery; a mystery with a twist; and a collection of stories about race, relationships, and the power of history

  • Review of North Woods by Daniel Mason

    Mason's novel isn't simply a historical fiction story linked through timelines. But North Woods isn't a charming historical fiction novel.

  • Three Books I'm Reading Now, 3/28/22 Edition

    01 A Flicker in the Dark by Stacy Willingham The summer Chloe Davis was twelve, six girls went missing

  • Review of The Last Confession of Autumn Casterly by Meredith Tate

    was listed in the Greedy Reading List Three Books I'm Reading Now, 10/13/20 Edition, as well as in Six

  • Review of The Unwilling by John Hart

    I mentioned my love for Hart's book The Last Child in the Greedy Reading List The Six Best Mysteries

  • Review of Here and Now and Then by Mike Chen

    This was also listed in my Greedy Reading List of Six Riveting Time-Travel Escapes.

  • Three Books I'm Reading Now, 9/9/24 Edition

    Makepeace spy mystery, The Trap ; I'm listening to Miss Morgan's Book Brigade , Janet Skeslien Charles's historical Brigade by Janet Skeslien Charles I love a book about scrappy librarians , and Janet Skeslien Charles's historical

  • Review of Cultish: The Language of Fanaticism by Amanda Montell

    If you're into nonfiction, you might like the titles on the Greedy Reading List Six Compelling Nonfiction

  • Three Books I'm Reading Now, 2/5/24 Edition

    reclaim versions of their lives using competitive magical tasks, The Book of Love; and I'm listening to a historical Walsh Unsinkable is historical fiction set in two timelines by Jenni L. Walsh.

  • Three Books I'm Reading Now, 9/10/21 Edition

    in recent years has been primarily focused on shutting off the outside world, but the demands of a six

  • Review of Blacktop Wasteland by S.A. Cosby

    This book made my Greedy Reading List of My Six Favorite Summer 2020 Reads.

  • Review of Olive, Again by Elizabeth Strout

    This book is part of the Greedy Reading List Six Book Club Books I Loved Last Year.

  • Review of And Then She Vanished (Joseph Bridgman #1) by Nick Jones

    If you like books that play with time, you may like the books on the Greedy Reading List Six Second-Chance

  • Review of The Trackers by Charles Frazier

    In The Trackers, Cold Mountain author Charles Frazier offers historical fiction featuring a Great Depression-era If you're interested in Great Depression-era historical fiction like I am, you might also like the books

  • Review of When These Mountains Burn by David Joy

    This book made my Greedy Reading List for My Six Favorite Summer 2020 Reads.

  • Three Books I'm Reading Now, 10/13/20 Edition

    This title was listed in the Greedy Reading List Six Newish Young Adult Mysteries I Want to Read. 03

  • Review of A Good Girl's Guide to Murder (A Good Girl's Guide to Murder #1) by Holly Jackson

    I mentioned this book in the Greedy Reading List Six Newish Young Adult Mysteries I Want to Read as well

  • Review of Moonlight Drive by A.R. Hadley

    If you like stories about music, you might like the books on the Greedy Reading List Six Rockin' Stories

  • Three Books I'm Reading Now, 1/28/21 Edition

    I mentioned my love for Hart's book The Last Child in the Greedy Reading List The Six Best Mysteries

  • Review of The Color of Lightning by Paulette Jiles

    This is the third Paulette Jiles Civil War-era historical fiction book I've read and adored. #historicalfiction, #civilwar, #southern, #fourstarbookreview, #thecoloroflightning

  • Review of Let Us Descend by Jesmyn Ward

    through the presence of this accompanying female spirit, which ties Annis to her ancestry and family history presented as powerful, and it is able to control storms, but its advice, based upon accounts of the histories

  • Three Memoirs I'm Reading Now, 10/7/20 Edition

    If you like memoirs, you might also like to take a look at the Greedy Reading List Six Illuminating Memoirs

  • Review of The Unsinkable Greta James by Jennifer E. Smith

    If you like books about music, you might also like the titles on the Greedy Reading List Six Rockin'

  • Review of A Gentleman in Moscow by Amor Towles

    ICYMI: Towles's closed-door tale of a Russian aristocrat under house arrest in a grand Moscow hotel manages to be at times playful, poignant, and wonderfully subversive. Let us concede that the early thirties in Russia were unkind. It's 1922, and Count Alexander Rostov has been placed under house arrest by the Bolsheviks. He is to remain in a grand hotel across from the Kremlin called the Metropol, where he will live out the rest of his days. An aristocrat used to spending his life at leisure or bustling about for his own pleasure, he now lives in an attic room, able only to peer out at the upheaval taking place throughout Moscow and witness events from a distance. Thus, it is the opinion of this committee that you should be returned to that hotel of which you are so fond. But make no mistake: should you ever set foot outside of the Metropol again, you will be shot. Next matter. The time structure of the story is interesting; Towles moves the reader in time from the starting day of Rostov's confinement to one day later, then two days later, and four days later in a doubling pattern that ends sixteen years later, then presents events in halved time periods (eight years, four years, two years, and so on) until the end of the book. The gifted storyteller Towles manages to craft a tale of  a political prisoner's decades spent under house arrest in a bustling Moscow hotel without its' feeling claustrophobic, but instead, delightfully playful, richly wrought, and wonderfully subversive. Do you have any Bossy thoughts abou tthis book? Towles is also the author of Rules of Civility and The Lincoln Highway.

  • Review of Rules of Civility by Amor Towles

    ICYMI: The post-Depression-era city of New York is such a powerful presence in this story, it feels like a main character. I was taken by this Amor Towles story and blatantly neglected my responsibilities in order to read it. Which is just to say, be careful when choosing what you’re proud of—because the world has every intention of using it against you. I recently began reading Table for Two by Amor Towles, and I was reminded that I haven't posted Bossy reviews of my first two Towles reads, A Gentleman in Moscow and Rules of Civility. In Rules of Civility, 25-year-old Katey is in a Greenwich Village jazz bar in post-Depression New York when she meets a successful banker. The chance encounter leads to a surprising turn of fortune in which Katey finds herself immersed in the highest social circles of New York. I couldn't stop reading this--and admit to neglecting various duties in order to get back to it. I loved the old-New York setting, which was so vivid, the city felt like a main character. The various "let me teach you about" types of asides regarding art and social constructs of the time, etc., were interesting but also extremely jarring; they didn't make sense to me when coming from the main protagonist. And sometimes the "main protagonist is inexplicably well read and savvy" types of moments made me pause. I was completely hooked and kept thinking about this story after I'd finished it. Do you have any Bossy thoughts about this book? Amor Towles is also the author of A Gentleman in Moscow and The Lincoln Highway.

  • Three Books I'm Reading Now, 4/10/23 Edition

    The Books I'm Reading Now I'm reading Cold Mountain author Charles Frazier's newest historical fiction 01 The Trackers by Charles Frazier In The Trackers, Cold Mountain author Charles Frazier offers historical

  • Three Books I'm Reading Now, 7/22/21 Edition

    (I mentioned her Shadow and Bone series in the Greedy Reading List Six Royally Magical Young Adult Series

  • Three Books I'm Reading Now, 9/11/23 Edition

    Edan Lepucki's science-fiction time-travel novel, Time's Mouth; I'm reading Paulette Jiles's newest historical Loss, and Vengeance by Paulette Jiles I got full-body chills when I saw that Paulette Jiles had a new historical

  • Review of A Deadly Education: Lesson One of the Scholomance by Naomi Novik

    also wrote the fantastic Spinning Silver and Uprooted, both of which appear on the Greedy Reading List Six

  • Three Books I'm Reading Now, 7/16/21 Edition

    Nothing to See Here and Alice Hoffman's The World That We Knew--featured in the Greedy Reading List Six

  • Review of The Phoenix Crown by Kate Quinn and Janie Chang

    Quinn and Chang share an adventure- and danger-laden story of women artists, women of color, and women of various social classes in San Francisco just before the Great 1906 Earthquake--as well as their determination to find justice. In 1906 San Francisco, two very different women seek new beginnings: Gemma is a gifted soprano whose career is in need of an overhaul, while Suling is an embroideress in Chinatown who is set against entering into the marriage that's been arranged for her. Henry Thornton is a wealthy railroad magnate and owner of the mysterious Phoenix Crown, an artifact legendary because of its origins in Beijing's Summer Palace. Thornton draws both Suling and Gemma into his world by offering to be their patron. But Thornton isn't a selfless, kind benefactor--he's a cruel, cutthroat, flighty villain holding deadly secrets. When San Francisco is devastated by an earthquake and the widespread destruction of its aftermath, Thornton disappears--and the Phoenix Crown with him. Those he's left behind are traumatized, reeling from cruelties, close calls, and haunted by the deaths Thornton exacted on others. Five years later, the crown reappears--spurring more mystery and questions than answers. When the authorities require too much time and evidence to take control, the varied women he's left in his wake, far from cowed, become determined to take down Thornton themselves. At times the story felt as though it was shifting into overly dramatic soap-opera territory for me, and while I understood the buildup to the earthquake, I didn't enjoy the interjections of multiple omniscient countdowns to the event. Yet I loved the rich early-1900s San Francisco setting, the focus on the arts, the strong women characters, and the varied representation of classes and circumstances, so I was willing to go wherever Quinn and Chang were taking me. It's evident that the authors exhaustively researched the era, prominent figures, and circumstances within San Francisco for women, artists, people of color, and others. Do you have any Bossy thoughts about this book? Kate Quinn is the author of the fantastic titles The Diamond Eye, The Huntress, The Rose Code, and The Alice Network.

  • Review of The Whalebone Theatre by Joanna Quinn

    The Whalebone Theatre begins with offbeat children's performances on a lazy, decadent English estate in the 1920s and builds to the young-adulthood of each of three characters, which are deeply shaped by World War II. The war and all its deprivations seem relentless, but for Cristabel, there is a strange and guilty thrill running through it, for it is exactly this thinning of the ordinary that allows the unordinary through. Joanna Quinn's debut novel is a hefty 558 pages, and the story sweeps through time from the 1920s malaise of the children and the excess of the adults on a secluded English estate, Chilcombe Manor, on to World War II, as experienced by a community of family and friends. Quinn traces the lives of the unflappable orphan Cristabel Seagrave, her stepsister Flossie, and her cousin Digby (raised in the same household as siblings); as well as their inept parents, their parents' unpredictable friends--mainly artists and partiers--that flock to Chilcombe and stay and stay; and the servants who make possible the family's privileged life of debauchery, boredom, and flashes of thrill. Cristabel, Flossie, and Digby are often uncomfortable with the roles placed upon them by others (the difficult and wild orphan, the pleaser of a daughter without a backbone, and the cherished, golden male heir) as they seek to establish their own identities. The nontraditional parental figures--a Russian artist and frequent visitor, a rough-edged maid, a figurative uncle--exert occasional, sometimes powerful influence over the children and how they consider their places in the world. The beginning of the book moves quite slowly, which is fitting for the decadent, ongoing series of lavish dinner parties, hangovers, persistent hangers-on, and malaise occurring for the adults, who are largely without pressing business or life missions where they might direct their generational wealth. The children are largely unattended during this time, but their bonds to each other are solidified. The pacing of the story picks up, appropriately, when World War II begins to shift the world, exerting changes that finally trickle down to Chilcombe and its inhabitants. I loved reading as the children come into themselves--in fits and starts--as young adults, and I came to care deeply about them, their roles in the wartime efforts, and their potential for various happy-ever-afters. The Whalebone Theatre meanders from children's makeshift performances put on in a theatre framed by whale ribs to spy missions related to the French Resistance and the tragedies of war. This is a lovely book to sink into. I listened to The Whalebone Theatre as an audiobook, narrated wonderfully by Olivia Vinall. Do you have any Bossy thoughts about this book? The Whalebone Theatre is Joanna Quinn's debut novel. For books I've read and reviewed about World War II, click here.

  • Review of The Fixed Stars by Molly Wizenberg

    If you like memoirs, you might also like Six Illuminating Memoirs I Read This Year.

  • Review of The Vaster Wilds by Lauren Groff

    Lauren Groff's beautiful and brutal novel The Vaster Wilds follows a young servant girl running from the Jamestown colony's disease and starvation; she reveals her secrets while scrabbling for survival in the unforgiving wilderness. The world, the girl knew, was worse than savage, the world was unmoved. It did not care, it could not care, what happened to her, not one bit. She was a mote, a speck, a floating windborne fleck of dust. Lauren Goff's novel The Vaster Wilds begins in the Jamestown colony in the early 1600s. A servant girl is fleeing her early colonial household in the brutal aftermath of plague and starvation. Our main protagonist knows she is being chased because of something she's done, but the facts of the situation aren't revealed to the reader until late in the book. (She doesn't realize, as the reader does, due to the omniscient narrator, that her pursuer succumbs to death early on, and that she is evading new dangers but has no need of pushing on to escape threats of repercussions from her household.) The orphan girl is essentially nameless--she doesn't attach to any of the insulting, ridiculing, or general names adults have carelessly thrown at her in her short life. She is uneducated but thoughtful, and she frequently considers issues of faith and life, separating these from the faulted holy men who introduced her to such concepts. She has visions of the past and of versions of the future in which her spirit transcends the pain and violence and knife-edge of death upon which she has survived. Upon being on her own for the first time, she discovers that she is capable of cleverness in the wild as she dives deeper and deeper into the unforgiving wilderness. She manages to problem-solve enormous challenges and, against all odds, survive. Her life in the wild consists of scrabbling for sustenance and carving out shelter; floating deadly cold rivers; and fleeing from wild strangers and beasts. Hers is a brutal existence buoyed only by meandering thoughts of the past--including her life's one tender connection, to the young daughter of her former household, her former charge--and her growing wonder at the mysteries of the natural world, which are wonderfully imperfect and beautifully wrought by Groff. I listened to The Vaster Wilds as an audiobook. Do you have any Bossy thoughts about this book? Groff is also the author of Fates and Furies, Matrix, The Monsters of Templeton, and other novels.

  • Review of Lady Tan's Circle of Women by Lisa See

    Lisa See offers a vivid peek at the lives of women in 15th century China, complete with a fascinating female-doctor element that kept me captivated. No mud, no lotus. Lady Tan's Circle of Women is my first book club read of 2024, and wow, does this one start off with a bang. Full-force details of foot-binding, and See doesn't stint on the page time spent on the topic. Whew! Tan Yunxian's grandmother is one of only a few female doctors in 15th century China, and Yunxian is learning all she can from her beloved family matriarch. When terrible tragedies strike, Yunxian's comfort comes in the unlikely form of her father's kind and caring concubine. Yunxian's eventual arranged marriage means she lives under the thumb of a controlling mother-in-law, who severely curtails her ability to practice medicine, as in the family's opinion, Yunxian's main goal should be to birth sons. See presents Yunxian as a feminist in many ways, but doesn't allow her to feel more modern than might seem plausible. She resists some of the constraints put upon her, particularly those credited to tradition rather than wisdom, yet she feels authentically of this time period. The title is interesting; since finishing I have thought more about the eclectic community of women that make up Yunxian's world and the deep ties she builds with some characters that often feel unexpected. I love a female-doctor and medical storyline, and I was particularly captivated by that aspect of Lady Tan, including the treatments, techniques, and beliefs that feel of the time period at hand. I listened to this as an audiobook. Do you have any Bossy thoughts about this book? Lisa See is also the author of Snow Flower and the Secret Fan and The Tea Girl of Hummingbird Lane.

  • Review of Dear Edward by Ann Napolitano

    This book is part of the Greedy Reading List Six Book Club Books I Loved Last Year.

  • Review of The Last Graduate (Scholomance #2) by Naomi Novik

    also wrote the fantastic Spinning Silver and Uprooted, both of which appear on the Greedy Reading List Six

  • Review of The Winter Soldier by Daniel Mason

    ICYMI: The Winter Soldier is a World War I tale full of medical details and lovely, unlikely bonds. This is a five-star read from the author of North Woods. Lucius is a young medical student when World War I sweeps across Europe. With romantic notions in his head about noble work in a field hospital filled with brilliant surgeons, he enlists and heads to his post in the remote Carpathian Mountains. But there he finds one solitary nurse, Sister Margarite, bravely keeping together the makeshift clinic, which has been decimated by typhus. The other doctors have all left. Lucius is surrounded by grave injuries but has never even wielded a scalpel He'll learn more from Sister Margarite--who he's falling for--than he ever could have in his classes. She's been building an immense wealth of practical knowledge while trying to save the broken soldiers. This was wonderful. The details of World War I injuries and methods of treatment were fittingly grim and sometimes gruesome, but Mason's writing is beautiful and evocative, conveying the cold and brutal nature of war and loss, the chilling nature of acts done in coldhearted necessity, and the warm, promising hope of love. The novel began a little slowly for me, but when it got going I became completely lost in it. I read this with my book club. Do you have any Bossy thoughts about this book? Daniel Mason is also the author of North Woods, The Piano Tuner, A Far Country, and A Registry of My Passage Upon the Earth.

  • Review of When Women Were Dragons by Kelly Barnhill

    exquisite, the strong-woman elements are irresistible, and despite what felt like slow pacing while historical In Kelly Barnhill's When Women Were Dragons, a historic event has occurred but is being denied by the government and historians alike: a Mass Dragoning, in which thousands of women transformed into dragons Through various preserved historic accounts and young Alexandra Green's observations, the reader begins

  • Three Books I'm Reading Now, 3/3/21 Edition

    that play with time and alternate realities, you might also like the books on the Greedy Reading List Six

  • Review of The Unmaking of June Farrow by Adrienne Young

    June struggles with the complicated implications of her family's curse of hallucinations and mental illness...until she realizes that the red door and visions of the past are real memories from her own time-travel experiences. I wasn't the first Farrow, but I would be the last. June Farrow is biding her time on her family's flower farm in the small town of Jasper, North Carolina. But she's been seeing and hearing visions for a year now, and she believes they're linked to the curse that the community believes has its hold on the Farrow women. June would love to end the curse, the fraying of the Farrow women's minds, once and for all--by never having a child and allowing the mental illness to die with her. But when she realizes she can walk through a magical red door, she finds unexpected circumstances--and realizes that she may be able to reinvent her path forward--and possibly also shift the events of the past. Young builds a story of traveling through time and of shimmers of other realities that might have been--or possibly did occur; whether they happened or not is not always clear. The Unmaking of June Farrow involves some maddening determination on certain characters' parts to keep the time-travel element wholly secret from those who would ultimately be faced with it. (If even the bare bones of this crucial information were shared on a need-to-know basis, a character's possibility of showing up as herself in a dangerous point in time--for example, a time in which she may have been accused of a grave crime--could help secure her own safety and preserve her existence through various timelines and her implications on others.) It was tough not to feel frustrated at characters' reluctance to even allude to the giant elephant in the room, once the situation was laid bare for the reader. Receiving only vague advice (which initially feels faulty, to say the least) about simply walking through the vision of a red door that appears to her leads June into a dangerous situation in the past--a past from which she built deep roots at one point, then simply disappeared. The mystery of why June left a past timeline is intriguing and keeps the story going. The story shifts between events of 1912, 1946, 1950, 1951, and 1989. Late in the book, June begins to understand the "folding of time" and intuits how timelines may have combined. It's a complicated web of cause and effect, and for much of the book I wasn't certain that the bundle of events affected by time-travel added up (which age and version of which person exists in which time, and how does the interaction between different versions affect everything else), but I was willing to roll with it. The circumstances of the ending are largely satisfying, the emotional connections June ultimately makes are poignant, and there's a character-reveal twist that was sweet and lovely. I received a prepublication edition of this book courtesy of NetGalley and Random House Publishing Group: Ballantine, Delacorte Press. Do you have any Bossy thoughts about this book? Adrienne Young is also the author of Fable, its sequel Namesake, and The Last Legacy, loosely set in the worlds of Fable and Namesake, and Spells for Forgetting.

  • Review of The Tainted Cup (Shadow of the Leviathan #1) by Robert Jackson Bennett

    In Robert Jackson Bennett's novel, The Tainted Cup , he blends a rich, historical fiction-feeling story

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

    life in general, from Kate Bowler; The Saints of Swallow Hill, Donna Everhart's recently published historical Sparks Like Stars, Nadia Hashimi's luminous historical fiction about a childhood lived in Kabul and a out No Cure for Being Human. 02 The Saints of Swallow Hill by Donna Everhart This Depression-era-set historical a tale of intense hardship, bad luck, and rough circumstances in a difficult period of our nation's history

  • Review of Trust No One (Devlin and Falco #1) by Debra Webb

    If you like mysteries, you might also want to look at the Greedy Reading List The Six Best Mysteries

  • Three Books I'm Reading Now, 7/2/21 Edition

    loved last year's gritty, character-driven mystery-thriller Blacktop Wasteland so much that it made my Six

  • Review of Maddalena and the Dark by Julia Fine

    Julia Fine's Maddalena and the Dark is a gothic story set in 1700s Venice in which two young women's lives and destinies become intertwined through a series of dark, magical promises designed to secure the elusive destinies they desire. There has already been a bargain, and this is something else that Luisa does not know. It's early 1700s Venice at a prestigious music school for orphans, the Ospedale della Pietà. Quiet, unassuming Luisa has always aimed to be the best at the violin. She wants to join the famed girls' orchestra and to one day become a protégé of Antonio Vivaldi. But her meek and mild manner invites only cold shoulders and contempt from her fellow students. That is, until the mysterious Maddalena arrives. Maddalena is sent to the Pietà temporarily after scandal threatens to ruin her family's longstanding reputation. Her attendance at the school is a last-ditch attempt to preserve her marriage prospects and assert some sense of propriety. Yet she desperately yearns for some measure of independence, which is not easily available to the women of that time. And what is there to trust? A mother who runs out on you? A brother who sells you like chattel and a father too busy to care? The other girls at school only know that Maddalena draws them into her orbit, and everyone wants to be near her. Some are puzzled when she chooses Luisa to be her bosom friend. Nevertheless, Luisa and Maddalena become fast friends, and their link grows every deeper. Then Maddalena hatches a plan in which each of them might help the other achieve her ambitious dream. But a young woman in that time has little say over her destiny. The girls make dark deals and may need to give up all that is precious in order to secure the power they need to determine their fate. Why is it that a girl must always lead the way into unpleasantness?... So many of the girls she grew up with have already been given to old widowers--no one says a word if a husband is sixty and his new bride is sixteen. So many of the girls she grew up with die in childbirth, to be replaced by fresh blood, ad infinitum, until the old man finally dies. Maddalena and the Dark has a distinct gothic tone, and the story treads ever deeper into seedy, suspect, forbidding scenes of magical realism that seem to foretell certain destruction. Do you have any Bossy thoughts about this book? I received a prepublication version of this book courtesy of NetGalley and Flatiron Books. Julia Fine is also the author of The Upstairs House and What Should Be Wild.

  • Three Books I'm Reading Now, 8/27/21 Edition

    you like nonfiction books that read like fiction, you might try the books on the Greedy Reading List Six

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