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741 items found for "six historical"

  • Review of A Power Unbound (Last Binding #3) by Freya Marske

    been sooooo excited to read this final installment in Freya Marske's Last Binding trilogy, a queer historical

  • Review of The Paper Palace by Miranda Cowley Heller

    I mentioned Wild Game in the Greedy Reading List Six More Illuminating Memoirs to Lose Yourself In.

  • Review of Wellness by Nathan Hill

    We learn about Elizabeth and Jack's histories and motivations, their stunted emotional statuses and the

  • Three Books I'm Reading Now, 3/24/21 Edition

    the sixth and final book in Turner's Queen's Thief series (which I listed in the Greedy Reading List Six

  • Review of Those We Thought We Knew by David Joy

    Toya Gardner has returned from Atlanta to her rural North Carolina town to track her family's history When two terrible crimes shake the small community, they also bring to light generations of dark history

  • My Twelve Very Favorite 2021 Reads

    Cosby; I loved Blacktop Wasteland last year (it was one of my Six Favorite Summer Reads) and I just read She weaves songs into her stories and personal history, and the placement of the music feels seamless of essential projects—the creation of Central Park, the founding of the Met Museum and the Natural History

  • Three Books I'm Reading Now, 7/18/22 Edition

    superstar action hero; I'm listening to The Book Woman of Troublesome Creek, Kim Michele Richardson's historical Troublesome Creek by Kim Michele Richardson Kim Michele Richardson's The Book Woman of Troublesome Creek is historical

  • Three Wackily Different Books I'm Reading Right Now, 9/3/20 Edition

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

  • Review of Nocturne by Alyssa Wees

    The early story captured my attention with ballet, an orphan's struggles, and Depression-era Chicago, but once Nocturne shifted into dark fantasy I didn't feel connected. In Alyssa Wees's slim (it's 240 pages) fantasy novel Nocturne, set in the Little Italy of 1930s Chicago, promising young dancer Grace dreams of becoming a prima ballerina. As the Depression rages, orphaned Italian immigrant Grace rises through the ranks of the Near North Ballet Company--losing friends, becoming more jaded, and ultimately gaining a valuable, secretive benefactor who may be the key to her job security--but he may not be what he seems. Grace is faced with compromises and tradeoffs, and she must decide where her own loyalties lie and determine how far she's willing to go to keep hold of her long-held dream. I felt connected to Wees's story through Grace's early struggles, her sole real connection, to friend Emilia, and her ballet training and performances. The understated dark undercurrents felt powerful and mysterious. But once the fantasy elements became the focus, the story felt more like a series of ethereal concepts to me. The predator-prey, death-and-life, constricting-and-controlled scenario is orchestrated by an evasive, sinister, and, I felt, annoying man (every Sunday night Grace is forced into a dance and some evasive conversation, and meanwhile she must wait around all week for this?). The story began to feel more juvenile in tone to me as it evolved into a twisted fairy tale, which I often enjoy. Grace's benefactor, who barely speaks, seeks to control her, and has professed his romantic interest in her, has been watching and fixating on her since her childhood (ugh), yet this predatorial scenario is made out to feel more romantic than a horror. As Nocturne became less anchored in emotions and motivations that I could grasp, I lost my connection to Grace. There are twists, and I enjoyed Grace's strong stand at the end, but by that point I had lost my feeling of investment in her story. I received a prepublication edition of this book courtesy of NetGalley, Random House Publishing Group, and Ballantine. Do you have any Bossy thoughts about this book? Alyssa Wees is also the author of The Waking Forest. You can check out my Bossy reviews of other fantasy titles here.

  • Three Books I'm Reading Now, 5/18/21 Edition

    If you like fiction about bands and music, you might like the books on the Greedy Reading List Six Rocking

  • Review of City of Windows (Lucas Page #1) by Robert Pobi

    I mentioned this book in the Greedy Reading List The Six Best Mysteries I Read Last Year.

  • Review of Moonbound by Robin Sloan

    The dragons are a large part of the history--and are purported to exercise control over humans and creatures

  • Review of Blood: A Memoir by Allison Moorer

    You might also like the list Six Illuminating Memoirs I've Read This Year.

  • Review of A Restless Truth (Last Binding #2) by Freya Marske

    The second book in Marske's series is an irresistible queer magical mystery thriller with Edwardian England details, racy encounters, vulnerability and love, and witty banter on a ship bound for England. A Restless Truth is the second in Freya Marske's queer fantasy mystery Last Binding trilogy that began with A Marvellous Light. A Marvellous Light was full of details of life in Edwardian England, gay love, mystery, magic, wonderful dialogue, and plenty of heart. I adored it. In A Restless Truth, the character of Maud Blyth (Robin's sister, introduced in book one) expects adventure when she agrees to help save the magical world by serving as companion to an elderly magician on an ocean liner. By doing so, Maud aims to help her beloved older brother resolve a magical mystery that's been decades in the making. But when her charge drops dead on day one, Maud must identify the murderer, try to get her hands on a magical object essential to untangling the mystery at hand--and try to survive the voyage without being murdered herself. Maud and each of her unlikely allies are fantastic characters. The mystery element kept me hooked, and details of proper Edwardian etiquette and clothing were wonderful. Marske doesn't skimp on presenting multiple magical elements, which I loved--and she includes many detailed, saucy, passionate encounters between our main characters. I was struck by the drastic manner in which Violet attempted to free herself from the shackles of marriage and the subsummation of a woman to her husband that was expected at the time. (This reminded me of the measures taken by the main protagonist in another book I recently read, A Study of Scarlet Women, in order to secure freedom from a stifling marriage.) A Restless Truth is fun and quirky yet has depth, an appealingly complicated mystery, and a satisfying version of a resolution that sets up book three. I received a prepublication edition of this book courtesy of Macmillan-Tor/Forge, Tordotcom, and NetGalley. Do you have any Bossy thoughts about this book? The third book in the Last Binding series will be titled A Power Unbound. Its publication date has not been announced.

  • Three Books I'm Reading Now, 5/9/22 Edition

    romantic life, career, and his future at an East London commune; Revelations, Mary Sarratt's immersive historical In Revelations, Sharratt offers an immersive historical fiction novel that includes thoroughly researched

  • Shhh! Science and Nature Bossy Book Gift Ideas

    Six More Book Gift Ideas for the Holidays Shhh! More Book Gift Ideas for the Holidays Shhh!

  • Review of Unsinkable by Jenni L. Walsh

    Unsinkable is historical fiction by Jenni L. Walsh that's set in two timelines.

  • Shhh! Kid and Teen Book Gift Ideas for the Holidays

    Six More Book Gift Ideas for the Holidays, and Shhh!

  • Three Books I'm Reading Now, 9/18/23 Edition

    loved A Curious Beginning, the first book in Deanna Raybourn's feisty Veronica Speedwell series of historical

  • Review of The Golden Enclaves (Scholomance #3) by Naomi Novik

    And Novik offers touching moments when surprising truths about El's, Orion's, and their parents' histories and the intricacies of nations' relationships and airborne dragon battles within the books' alternate history

  • Three Books I'm Reading Now, 12/22/20 Edition

    French is the author of six books in the Dublin Murder Squad series: In the Woods, The Likeness (my absolute

  • Three Books I'm Reading Now, 11/5/21 Edition

    The Books I'm Reading Now I'm reading Natasha Pulley's The Kingdoms, which involves historical fiction Natasha Pulley is also the author of The Watchmaker of Filigree Street, another historical fiction story

  • Three Books I'm Reading Now, 12/19/22 Edition

    Copperfield; and I'm reading Rachel Hawkins's upcoming mystery set in an Italian villa with a sinister history But Emily digs into the villa's complicated and dark history, and as she delves into the past, the growing

  • Review of A Marvellous Light (Last Binding #1) by Freya Marske

    The first book in Marske's duology is full of Edwardian England detail, gay love, mystery, magic, wonderful dialogue and banter, and plenty of heart. I adored it. A Marvellous Light, the first in Freya Marske's Last Binding duology, starts with a devastating ending (the demise of a character, caused by nefarious magicians) and a less-than-promising beginning (Robin Blyth's first day in his civil service job, for which he doesn't feel remotely qualified nor interested). Robin is trying to keep the household afloat after the deaths of his parents, to support his bright, ambitious younger sister, and to date some handsome men along the way. He soon realizes that (a) magic exists (!), (b) he's mistakenly been assigned the job of liaison to a secret magical society, (c) his office has been ransacked and a curse has been placed on him, (d) his curmudgeonly, book-smart coworker Edwin may be the key to saving them all, and (e) maybe he's falling for Edwin just the tiniest bit, despite himself. Marske offers immersive Edwardian England detail in this adorable, captivating, magical, queer book. Robin and Edwin's love is romantic and sweet and heartbreaking and sexy; the mystery at the heart of the book seems only to be solvable by the biggest book nerd in existence; and the story's magical details are fascinating and odd. I was completely hooked by A Marvellous Light, and I tried to slow down my reading to make it last. The amount of heart in this book was exquisite. Do you have any Bossy thoughts about this book? I didn't see a mention anywhere in the book of a sequel, and some aspects felt tantalizingly unresolved, so I was relieved to find out that another book is coming. The second and final book in Marske's duology, A Restless Truth, is scheduled for publication in November.

  • Three Books I'm Reading Now, 3/14/22 Edition

    finder of missing girls from Erin Kate Ryan; and I'm listening to Dawnie Wilton's fictional musical history Ryan explores various alternate histories and life tracks for Paula Jean while "Mary" digs more deeply Sunny Shelton shapes an oral history of her two idols, tracing their family lives, youthful experiences

  • Review of Beasts of a Little Land by Juhea Kim

    Juhea Kim's looping story of Korea, courtesans, pickpockets, and the powerful figures complicating and shaping all of their lives involves love triangles, superstition, heartbreak, and a complicated, shifting interconnectedness that spans decades. In a snowy forest in 1917 Korea, an unlikely moment of kindness shared by a Korean hunter toward a Japanese officer creates a connection that binds the fates of the two men forever. Meanwhile Jade, a young girl who has been sold to a courtesan, befriends JungHo, a young orphan boy in Seoul. JungHo grows older and becomes involved in the fight for independence, while Jade finds an unlikely romantic interest. Beasts of a Little Land tracks Jade's schooling, found family, artistic expression, and her social position as a courtesan within the culture, while following JungHo as he sets sights on more than pickpocketing and scrambling to find enough to eat one day at a time. Conflicts between Korea and Japan and war and occupation swirl around them and those within their orbits--Jade's adoptive family members Lotus, Luna, Dani, and Silver; JungHo's childhood clan all grown up; each of their loves; and the wealthy and influential men pulling strings on all sides. In Beasts of a Little Land, Juhea Kim explores friendship, enemies, trust, possibility, heroes, and beasts of all kinds. The story is looping and cyclical, with interconnected webs of interaction, power, and love. Some of what various characters cling to in hopes of saving themselves or securing their futures ends up being their undoing. Do you have any Bossy thoughts about this book? Beasts of a Little Land is Juhea Kim's debut work. Kim is donating a portion of the proceeds of the book to the Phoenix Fund, a conservation nonprofit working to protect the Siberian tiger and the Amur leopard.

  • Review of The Comfort of Crows: A Backyard Year by Margaret Renkl

    Renkl is also the author of Late Migrations: A Natural History of Love and Loss and Graceland, At Last

  • Three Books I'm Reading Now, 2/28/22 Edition

    01 Our Woman in Moscow by Beatriz Williams In Beatriz Williams's historical fiction, Our Woman in Moscow In Williams's historical fiction mystery, four years later, Iris's twin sister Ruth finally receives

  • Review of Girl One by Sara Flannery Murphy

    Now she must delve into the darkness of her history to try to save her mother--and uncover her own true women discover strange, unique powers as they rely on each other and attempt to unravel their shared history grave danger--and unlock remarkable freedom for each of the women long plagued by their complicated histories

  • Three Books I'm Reading Now, 4/8/24 Edition

    listening to Emily Habeck's odd and sweet novel Shark Heart: A Love Story; I'm reading Heather Webb's historical

  • Such a Fun Age by Kiley Reid

    How much of what we consider fact and truth is skewed by our histories, our prejudices, our privilege

  • Three Books I'm Reading Now, 8/14/23 Edition

    novel, set in Yellowstone National Park, The Ranger; and I'm listening to the second in an irresistible historical

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

    inspirations, influences, approach, pushing the limits, and storytelling through song; The Last Green Valley, historical life-and-death period in the life of an ethnically German family at the end of World War II in this historical Sullivan built this historical fiction around the true story of an ethnically German family running from Mark Sullivan also wrote Beneath a Scarlet Sky, another historical fiction book based upon a real person

  • Three Books I'm Reading Now, 3/11/24 Edition

    Morris's historical fiction novel, set in 11th century Scotland with events surrounding the imagined

  • Review of The Enchanted by Rene Denfeld

    case, a former priest and the Lady--an investigator searching for information in the convicts' past histories

  • Review of The Body: A Guide for Occupants by Bill Bryson

    Under, as well as two books about the English language, Mother Tongue and Made in America, and A Short History of Nearly Everything and A Really Short History of Nearly Everything.

  • Review of A Well-Behaved Woman by Therese Anne Fowler

    #historicalfiction, #oldnewyork, #fourstarbookreview

  • Review of Half Wild: Stories by Robin MacArthur

    If you like short stories, check out The Office of Historical Corrections--a very different short story

  • Review of Lessons in Chemistry by Bonnie Garmus

    Females are overshadowed, abused, and generally wronged throughout the book, a reflection of realistic, historic

  • Review of The Sparrow by Mary Doria Russell

    Russell has also written Children of God (The Sparrow, #2); the character-driven historical fiction book about Doc Holliday), which I really liked; and other books set in the American West (such as Epitaph); historical

  • Review of Force of Nature (Aaron Falk #2) by Jane Harper

    author of The Dry (Aaron Falk #1) and The Lost Man, which I mentioned in my Greedy Reading List The Six

  • Three Books I'm Reading Now, 3/27/23 Edition

    The Books I'm Reading Now I'm reading Amy Harmon's Revolutionary War-set historical fiction about a young

  • Review of Soulless by Gail Carriger

    #historicalfiction, #fantasyscifi, #LGBTQ, #series, #fourstarbookreview

  • Review of The Midnight Library by Matt Haig

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

  • Review of Evil Eye by Etaf Rum

    Yara is put on probation at the college where she is an assistant art history teacher after calling out

  • Review of Big Time: Stories by Jen Spyra

    I've reviewed lately include Sarahland by Sam Cohen, Half Wild by Robin MacArthur, and The Office of Historical

  • Review of Caste: The Origins of Our Discontents by Isabel Wilkerson

    Wilkerson is exceptional at laying out absurdities, horrors, disturbing historical events, shocking trends

  • Review of The Light After the War by Anita Abriel

    #historicalfiction, #WWII, #fourstarbookreview

  • Review of Light Changes Everything by Nancy E. Turner

    #historicalfiction, #Western, #series, #threestarbookreview

  • Review of The Lincoln Highway by Amor Towles

    Towles crafts a solid historical fiction adventure for his young-men protagonists, balancing weighty

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