TheBookSwarm
Ask Question

Favorite historical fiction, please! ?

Favorite historical fiction, please! ?

Karen #recommend #historical fiction

31
Reply

247 Answers

Sharyn

Dorothy Dunnett, the best historical fiction writer few have read. Brilliant writing. Few fictional characres aming real figures. Game of Kings, 1500’s, 6 book series with best hero ever. Read the firs 100 pages and start again, because nothing you thought was happening is what happened.

5
Reply
Beth

These Is My Words, by Nancy E. Turner.

10
Reply
KarenQuestion author

This is one of my favorite books EVER!!!

1
Lori

America’s First Daughter.

3
Reply
Patricia

The Feast of All Saints by Anne Rice

1
Reply
Steve

Pillars of the Earth. My FAVORITE book!
https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/5043.The_Pillars_of_the_Earth?ac=1&from_search=true

13
Reply
Kelly

@Steve ME TOO!!!!!

4
Lorraine

and mine!

2
Sheryl

Mine too…Along with The Source!

3
Francesca

@Steve , amazing series. I loved them all

1
Jennifer

@Steve loved this so much and the one that followed.

0
Phyllis

Katherine by Anya Seton. An oldie but goodie.

6
Reply
Mickie

@Phyllis One of my favorites!!!!!

0
Vicki

Outlander

10
Reply
Brenda

My favorite reading material. Where do I begin? The Master & Commander series by Patrick O’Brian. The Awakening Land series by Conrad Richter. Pillars of the Earth by Ken Follett. That’s for a start.

6
Reply
Brenda

The Poldark series by Winston Graham. Love love love these books. He is so good at developing characters, I missed them when I wasn’t reading.

2
Brenda

The Archer’s Tale by Bernard Cornwell – it’s the first in a trilogy about the 100 Years War. Engaging characters lead you on a quest for the Holy Grail.

0
Jean

@Brenda I am over half-way through Bella Poldark and I don’t know what I’m going to do when I’m done.

0
Brenda

I know. It took me a while before I could read anything else. I had to just meditate on them. The Twisted Sword just about did me in. I mourned for weeks.

0
Mary

The Constant Princess by Phillips Gregory

3
Reply
Amanda

Bregdan chronicles

1
Reply
Suzanne

I am just finishing Ken Follett’s Kingsbridge trilogy. Excellent!
I was also reminded recently about James Michener’s books. I think they were the first historical fiction I read. They often start in prehistoric times and work (quickly) forward. They are all excellent … Centennial is a favourite as is The Source.

8
Reply
Julie

The One Man, Lilac Girls, The Girl From the Train, the Nightengale, Unbroken, Beneath a Scarlet Sky..

6
Reply
Jeff

1632 by Eric Flint.

2
Reply
Denise

One Thousand White Women.

8
Reply
KarenQuestion author

I loved that one.

2
Denise

It was so unexpectedly good.

2
Suzanne

Just put a hold on it!

2
Jennifer

@Denise on my top 10

2
Jennifer

@Denise so good!

1
Jean

All the Light We Cannot See. The Poldark series by Winston Graham.

6
Reply
KarenQuestion author

I loved those!

1
Linda

@Jean loved Poldark

0
Michelle

The Girl Who Wrote In Silk, Daughter of a Daughter of a Queen, and Next Year in Havana.

1
Reply
Ken

Blood Meridian…Cormac McCarthy

2
Reply
Ta

Ken Follett A Column of Fire

4
Reply
Suzi

Pillars of the Earth by Ken Follet

8
Reply
KarenQuestion author

I loved that one.

1
Julie

Love all of Philippa Gregory’s books. Also just finished Lilac Girls, so good.

8
Reply
Laura

And Ladies of the Club by Helen Hooven Santmeyer

5
Reply
Yanti

The Nightingale

10
Reply
Tamzin

William F Buckley’ Blackford Oaks spy novels.

1
Reply
Renee

“Sarum” by Edward Rutherfurd

6
Reply
Cate

The Good Journey…actually, favorite book ever.

1
Reply
Shelley

The Historian by Elizabeth Kostova.

4
Reply
Victoria

Following

0
Reply
Matt

The Book of Negros.

1
Reply
Lynda

Time & Again by Jack Finney

5
Reply
Leslie

@Lynda I loved that book!

0
Lynda

I borrowed Mum’s copy and then once I finished it, I just had to find my own so I could read it whenever I wanted to.

0
Leslie

@Lynda There’s a sequel called From Time To Time that is quite good too!

0
Lynda

Yeah I’ve only heard it on tape though… the person reading it was awful, but the storyline was fantastic!

0
Leslie

@Lynda It’s good. Thriftbooks is my lifesaver!

0
Lynda

I’ll have to ask at The Really Good Bookstore at Browns Plains to see if Wendy can get the second one in for me. 😀

0
Karen

Oooooh, that book is so, so good!

0
Anna

Aztec by Gary Jennings

3
Reply
Denise

and Journeyer about Marco Polo.

0
Anna

@Denise ooh! I must read that!

1
Denise

If you can find it and liked Aztec, you’ll love it.

0
Cathy

The Orphan’s Tale by Pam Jenoff

2
Reply
Sarah

Secrets is a charmed life

0
Reply
Yvette

The Good Earth by Pearl S. Buck

7
Reply
Heather

I liked Queen by Alex Haley & The Kent Family Chronicles by John Jakes. Of course I read all of those in middle school, so………

0
Reply
Margaret

Nightingale

5
Reply
Michael

The First Man in Rome series by Colleen McCullough. I love it.

1
Reply
Heather

Oh! Colleen McCullough! Did you read Creed for the 3rd Millennium?

1
Michael

@Heather no I didn’t. Honestly never heard of it. What is it about?

0
Heather

https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/182465

1
Heather

Ok…. so had I read this description, I’m not sure I would have read the book…..

1
Michael

@Heather lol. I looked it up elsewhere. Sounds interesting. I’ll have to put it in my to read pile.

0
Bonnie

The Amelia Peabody mysteries by Elizabeth Peters.

1
Reply
Leslie

Pillars of the Earth by Ken Follett and Lonesome Dove by Larry McMurtry. Also the Plantagenet series by Sharon Kay Penman.

7
Reply
Sheila

The Book Thief

9
Reply
Agnes

By far! Destiny of the Republic! And I e read many!!

4
Reply
Anne

Loved this too but it isn’t historical fiction.

2
Bill

Flashman by George MacDonald Frasier

0
Reply
Leslie

At the moment it’s Cadfael by Ellis Peters

4
Reply
Kelly

The Shoemaker’s Wife

2
Reply
Sari

I liked Under the North Star-trilogy by Väinö Linna and Purge by Sofi Oksanen if I speak historical fiction for my homecountry. (Even though I think that the Egyptian by Mika Waltari is the book which almost every other in here will say if we thinks books with history and which are coming from Finland).

But Gone With the Wind (with books for Rhett and Scarlet also) and The Jewel of st. Petersburg and whole Russian Concubine-series by Kate Furnivall are my favorites. And also books by Sarah Lark are quite interesting and the same is with books by Lucinda Riley. Because I’m not sure that Anna Karenina by Leo Tolstoy will be like historical fiction. It is one one my top3 books but not sure if other sees it like historical fiction. Usual for examples War and Peace will be more like that genre/type, I think.

0
Reply
Traci

The Traitors Wife by Allison Pataki

1
Reply
Angi

The Nightingale, Ken Follet’s Centuries Trilogy, Before We Were Yours, The Two-Family House, The Kitchen House, House Girl, The Underground Railroad (Colson Whitehead)

2
Reply
Will

Sarah’s Key

4
Reply
Michael

All of Bernard Cornwell.???

1
Reply
Janine

The DaVinci Code!

1
Reply
Francesca

Shanna

0
Reply
Jackie

The Century Trilogy by Ken Follett. New York by Edward Rutherford.

3
Reply
Jennett

CS Harris Sebastian St. Cyr series

1
Reply
Christa

Quicksilver and the entire Baroque Cycle by Neal Stephenson

0
Reply
Michael

Also By Edward Rutherford m Paris and Russia.???

5
Reply
Anne

Tale of two cities

5
Reply
Kathy

The Other Boleyn Girl

9
Reply
Kayla

Jane Seymour The Haunted Queen – Alison Weir

1
Reply
Julie

Pam Jenhoff books!

1
Reply
Ashley

Beneath a Scarlett Sky and The Invisible Bridge

3
Reply
Diane

The Abbots Tale. (English middle ages)

by Conn Iggulden

1
Reply
Wanda

@Diane anything by Conn Iggulden

0
Kelsey

The Book Thief! Written beautifully.

10
Reply
Kelsey

And its not fiction but The Hiding Place is an incredible nonfiction/memoir!

2
Reply
Karen

F

0
Reply
Bridget

Carolly Erickson writes some amazing historical fiction. Mostly with women characters!

1
Reply
Theresa

Gabaldon “Outlander”

3
Reply
Brooklyn

Anything from Philippa Gregory, Alison Weir or Anne O’Brien.

4
Reply
Linda

Following

0
Reply
Mazliza

Time’s Echo.

2
Reply
Bev

Devil in the White City

9
Reply
Wanda

@Bev not fiction, still great

0
Karen

Half a Yellow Sun by Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie

2
Reply
Stacey

The Winthrop Woman by Anya Seton. Regeneration by Pat Barker.

1
Reply
Becca

Loving Frank
The Book Thief
Orphan Train

6
Reply
KarenQuestion author

I loved all of those!

1
Becca

@Karen I’ll keep thinking! I’ve read so many I loved and have no tracking method. Wish I had kept track of all the books I’ve read in my life! ?

1
KarenQuestion author

Oh, me too!!

1
Heather

All good, esp. Orphan Train!

3
Suzanne

Loving Frank -yes !

3
KarenQuestion author

Our local libraries hosted Christina Baker Kline (Orphan Train) in the summer and her talk was very interesting. There’s a lot about her research in her blog:http://christinabakerkline.com/blog/my-next-novel/

1
Thania

Ahab’s Wife

2
Reply
Samantha

Following

0
Reply
Mary

I loved Grace Burrows series starting with “Too Scot to Handle.” YEs, romances, but each has a great twist to it that focuses on an issue of that era. And well-written.

0
Reply
Mary

Also “America’s First Daughter” about Thomas Jefferson’s eldest daughter called “Patsy.” And “The Hamilton Affair” which focuses on Alexander Hamilton’s wife.

0
Reply
KarenQuestion author

My book club just read The Hamilton Affair and really enjoyed it. Thanks!

1
Syntha

Hild

0
Reply
Diane

The Merry Millionaire by J.A. Wells

1
Reply
Susan

Hotel on the Corner of Bitter and Sweet; just finished Becoming Mrs. Lewis.

4
Reply
Ashley

@Susan I looooved Hotel ♥️

2
Debbi

Bruce Holsinger.

2
Reply
Ruthie

I read mostly historical fiction and have many that I love. I have 2 that I always recommend …
The Fall of Marigolds by Susan Meisner and Lisette’s List by Susan Vreeland.

3
Reply
Ruthie

Now reading Gateway to the Moon by Mary Morris. A very unusual topic and fascinating. It is about when the Jews were expelled from Spain at the time of Columbus’ voyage and how they settled in New Mexico!!

2
Reply
Elaine

I’ve never heard of Gateway to the Moon. Sounds very interesting. It’s now on my list. Thanks!

0
Debra

The Historian, Thread of Grace, Paris:a Novel

2
Reply
Tobias

Really enjoying Lincoln in the Bardo atm by George Saunders.

4
Reply
Amy

ANYTHING by Sharon K Penman and Edward Rutherford. Both are so historically accurate and Penman is a master at bringing historic characters to life. Love, love, love!!!!!

6
Reply
Stephanie

Water for Elephants ???

7
Reply
Debra

Outlander!!❤️❤️

5
Reply
Terri

The Bear and the Nightingale—Medieval Russian w a fantasy/folklore element

3
Reply
Sydney

The belle plantation series by Tamerea Alexander

1
Reply
Maria

Any of the many books by C.W. Gortner!

2
Reply
Laura

Michener. Rutherfurd. Penman.

3
Reply
Stephanie

The Nightingale ???

5
Reply
Elaine

I also loved this book.

1
Christine

“Name of the Rose” by Umberto Eco.

5
Reply
Kinda

Julie garland was always fun

1
Reply
Suzanne

The Other Boleyn Girl by Philippa Gregory
The Traitor’s Wife by Allison Pataki

2
Reply
Colleen

doomsday book by Connie Willis

2
Reply
Amy

The Kitchen House by Kathleen Grissom

8
Reply
Jennifer

@Amy loved that book

0
Margaret

Men To Match My Mountains, by Irving Stone.

3
Reply
Leslie

City of Thieves, excellent book

2
Reply
Sarah

Outlander series, Ken Follett books-Pillars of the Earth is a favorite, All the Light We Cannot See, too many to list! ?

5
Reply
Elaine

I really liked the Ken Follett series, but I loved All the Light we Cannot See.

0
Suzanne

Loved both Ken Follett’s trilogies. Just finished All the Light We Cannot See! Excellent too.

0
Ellen

America’s First Daughter by Laura Kamoie and Stephanie Dray

1
Reply
Elizabeth

Year of Wonders by Geraldine Brooks.

3
Reply
Perry

Some goodn’s I have read this year ?

Bloods game – Angus Donald

Giles Kristian – the bleeding land

Giles Kristian – Lancelot

Conn Iggulden – Dunstan

0
Reply
Marie-Joseé

The royal physician’s visit – Per Olov Enquist

0
Reply
Olga

anything by Karen Maitland

0
Reply
Eleanor

Sharon Penman. Amazing

1
Reply
Wandy

I enjoyed learning more about the history of Israel and the struggles of the Jewish people in Exodus by Leon Uris. And there’s a love story.

4
Reply
Wanda

@Wandy Trinity is great also

1
Wandy

@Wanda yep, I read Trinity when it was first published in the 70’s. I had forgotten it was by Uris as well. ?

0
Wanda

@Wandy he wrote a kind of sequel to it. Wasn’t as good as Trinity, but it was good too.

1
Leslie

People of the Book by Geraldine Brooks.

4
Reply
Rachel

1000 White Women

5
Reply
Rachel

The Devil in the White City!

8
Reply
Wanda

@Rachel that’s not fiction…but it was a great book

1
Elaine

Actually, it is fiction. Listed by the publisher as Historical Fiction. And I agree, a great book.

0
Jean

Elaine Smith I checked my copy and the genre on the back is “History”, so it is non-fiction, according to the publisher. We all agree, though, it’s a good book.

0
Terry

All time favorite book – Nightingale by Kristin Hannah. Orphan Train is a close second.

3
Reply
Diane

@Terry, we must have very similar tastes in reading as those are mine too! Just picked up a used copy of the Lilac Girls and can’t wait to start it.

2
David

I liked Wolf Hall.

5
Reply
Kay

Abundance by Sena Jeter Naslund–about Marie Antoinette, great if you like descriptions of setting/clothes/etc, and a really compelling story. Also anything by Lisa See!

2
Reply
Sabre

I just read The Alice Network and enjoyed it very much.

5
Reply
Laura

Loved it!

0
Andrew

The Cathedral of the Sea / Catedral del mar by Idelfonso Falcones (14th C. Barcelona)

2
Reply
Cathy

Following, because my TBR needs more books.

2
Reply
Beth

Diana Gabaldon Oulander series

5
Reply
Bonnie

Sharyn McCrum

2
Reply
Barbara

No Angel part of a Trilogy By Penny Vincenzi set in England during WW1 and WW2

2
Reply
Janet

Burr by Gore Vidal

1
Reply
Tabatha

The Widow of the South by Robert Hicks.

2
Reply
Laurie

Cane River and Red River, in that order by Lalita Tademy.

0
Reply
Laurie

Anything re WWII

1
Reply
Laurie

Secrets of a Charmed Life

1
Reply
Laurie

Before We Were Yours

3
Reply
Leigh

@Laurie ❤️this book

0
Laurie

The Help

6
Reply
Laurie

Anything By James Michener or Edward Rutherford. Same type of books.

2
Reply
Wandy

@Laurie which is your favorite Michener? I’d like to try one.

0
Kelly

Yes to Edward Rutherford!!

0
Lynn

@Wandy My favorite was Centennial but all his books are wonderful. A personal favorite might be influenced by a love of or interest in a certain place.

0
Wandy

@Lynn True, thanks for recommendation. I’ll def check it out. ?

0
Elaine

Katherine by Anya Seton, because it led me to an interest in the medieval era.

2
Reply
Linda

@Elaine KATHERINE

0
Janet

Anything by Tracy Chevalier or Susan Vreeland.

2
Reply
Janie

The Century trilogy by Ken Follette

2
Reply
Carolyn

News of the World, Lonesome Dove, The Book Thief, The Reader

5
Reply
Debra

Ah! Lonesome Dove!

1
Carolyn

@Debra Talked my book group into reading it. They did so reluctantly but ended up loving it!

1
Debra

@Carolyn — good job. I wish that my son would believe me and read it!

1
Bonnie

Prairie Fires.

1
Reply
Lara

Forever Amber

1
Reply
Julie

The Aviator’s Wife by Melanie Benjamin; The Paris Wife by Paula McLain

2
Reply
Debra

Excellent.

0
Elaine

I wasn’t wild about The Paris Wife, but I loved Circling the Sun.

0
Deborah

Philipa Gregory-Tudor Books

1
Reply
Cordelia

None— I hate historical fiction,

0
Reply
Terri

@Cordelia okie dokie, then

2
KarenQuestion author

I love to feel like I’m learning about history while reading a good book.

1
Mary

Steven Saylor ..The Roma Sub Rosa historical mystery series.

0
Reply
Lindsey

Currently definitely Lust for Life by Irving Stone.

2
Reply
Lindsey

It’s not actually fiction but it’s written in the form of a novel.

0
Terri

No, it’s a novel.

0
Lindsey

That’s what I said.

0
Terri

@Lindsey Novels are fiction. The book is fiction.

0
Lindsey

In what way? It is based on real life events according to the letters Vincent sent to his brother and interviews with friends and family members.

0
Lindsey

As opposed to a completely made-up story with fictional characters set historically with references to real events that impact but are somewhat removed from the story line.

0
Terri

It’s fiction based on a true story as opposed to narrative non-fiction. Other examples of this type of biographical fiction include The Invention of Wings by Sue Monk Kidd, Beneath a Scarlett Sky by Mark T Sullivan, Depths of Glory by Irving Stone, and Remarkable Creatures by Tracy Chevalier. All novels. All fiction. All based on real people and events. Deeply researched, but fictional dramatizations. If Lust for Life was not fiction, it would be called a biography.

2
Sherry

The Great Alone

1
Reply
Ken

Dead Man’s Walk…Larry McMurtry

3
Reply
Kymberly

@Ken yasss!

1
Elaine

I’ll have to check into that one. I loved Lonesome Dove.

0
Andrea

All the Light We Cannot See!

8
Reply
Maree

Burial Rites by Hannah Kent

2
Reply
Geeti

Wolf Hall and Bring up the Bodies by Hilary Mantel. I used to love Jean Plaidy/Victoria Holt/Philippa Carr books written by the same prolific authoress.

2
Reply
Elaine

I also love those two by Hilary Mantel.

0
Kelsea

Yellow Crocus, Laila Ibrahim is so wonderful, but heartbreaking. There’s a sequel as well.

1
Reply
Michele

Remarkable Creatures by Tracy Chevalier! Absolute best historical fiction book that I have read

3
Reply
Laura

Loved it!

2
Jason

All the Light We Cannot See

4
Reply
Amanda

The Beacon at Alexandria

1
Reply
Lindsey

Also, Birdsong.

1
Reply
Laura

The Signature of All Things by Elizabeth Gilbert is among my favorite books in recent years. The Madonnas of Leningrad also had a big impact on me. And I learned a lot about the WASPS (women pilots in WWII) in The All-Girls Filling Station’s Last Reunion, and enjoyed Fannie Flagg’s great characters.

3
Reply
Jennifer

Roots

1
Reply
Patricia

The Feast of All Saints by Anne Rice.

0
Reply
Ronnie

The first one I read: Alaska

0
Reply
Leslie

Have to say i enjoy Bernard Cornwell and his Sharpe series but most of his historical ones are well researched from what i can find.

0
Sukanya

Roots, Midnight’s Children

1
Reply
Jennifer

@Sukanya definitely Roots!

0
Mary

The Autobiography of Henry VIII: With Notes by His Fool, Will Somers by Margaret George.

2
Reply
Louise

I don’t read much historical fiction these days, but when I was young I loved Jean Plaidy. Murder Most Royal was my favourite.

0
Reply
Jean

Beneath a Scarlet Sky by Mark Sullivan. Year of Wonders by Geraldine Brooks. Pretty much all of Ken Follett’s historical novels. A lot of Michener’s books, like Chesapeake. It’s my favorite genre, I can’t choose just one.

2
Reply
Bonnie

Shogun by James Clevell – Amelia Peabody series by Elizabeth Peters – Mary Russell series by Laurie King

0
Reply
Ken

O Pioneers! Willa Cather…

1
Reply
Anne

Snow Falling on Cedars; When the Emperor was Divine.

1
Reply
Patricia

The Trees by Conrad Richter.

0
Reply
Deborah

The Other Boleyn Girl by Philippa Gregory. This book got me interested in the Tudors and other English royalty.

1
Reply
Leigh

Following

0
Reply
Kelly

“The Nightingale”
by Kristin Hannah

1
Reply
Leave a Answer Cancel

You must be logged in to post a comment.

Loading Please wait
Log in
Register
Categories
  • get the book
  • questionnaire
  • recommend
  • review
Genres
animal art biography business chick lit classics comics contemporary cookbooks crime detective fantasy fiction gay and lesbian graphic novel historical fiction history horror humor and comedy kids languages manga memoir music mystery nonfiction novel paranormal philosophy poetry psychology religies religion romance scary science science fiction self help spirituality sports suspense thriller travel young adult young adults
  • Contact
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions

2019 © TheBookSwarm