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Historical Fiction November 2020
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| The Wright Sister by Patty DannWhat it's about: Katherine Wright Haskell, the remarkable yet overlooked younger sister of the famous Wright Brothers, who tells the story of her education, teaching career, and sometimes turbulent relationship with her brother Orville through a series of diary entries.
Did you know? Katherine was the only member of her family to earn a college degree, and the financial support she provided her brothers was crucial to their aviation efforts. |
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| The Abstainer by Ian McGuireWhat it is: the compelling and intricately plotted story of an Irish American Civil War veteran’s 1867 arrival in Manchester, England, where he gets involved with an underground Irish independence organization that puts him on the radar of a troubled local constable determined to take the movement down.
Reviewers say: "This well-told, suspenseful tale will appeal to fans of Deadwood and Cormac McCarthy" (Kirkus Reviews). |
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| Black Bottom Saints by Alice RandallWhat it's about: the heyday of Black arts and culture in 1950s Detroit, as narrated by real-life local legend Joseph “Ziggy” Johnson, who rubbed elbows with big names like Dinah Washington, Sammy Davis Jr., and artists signed with the upstart record label that would later be called Motown.
About the author: Vanderbilt professor Alice Randall is a songwriter, novelist, and essayist known for her novel The Wind Done Gone, a retelling of Gone with the Wind from a slave’s perspective. |
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| The Last Great Road Bum by Héctor TobarInspired by: the true story of Joe Sanderson, an Illinois teenager who left a comfortable life to hitchhike around the world and witnessed key 20th-century moments such as the Tet Offensive, Nigeria’s Biafra crisis, and most important for his own fate, the 1980s civil war in El Salvador.
Don't miss: the sardonic footnotes in which “Joe” argues with author Héctor Tobar’s version of his life story. |
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| The Devil and the Dark Water by Stuart TurtonWhat it is: a dramatic and intricately plotted historical mystery set during the 17th century, on a long sea voyage from the Dutch East Indies back to Amsterdam.
All aboard! Just before the ship sets sail, a man ravaged by leprosy tries to warn the passengers and crew that the voyage is doomed -- moments before he spontaneously combusts.
Passengers include: Imprisoned British spy Samuel Phipps; colonial Governor General Jan Haan, on his way to a cushy promotion; and if sailor superstitions are to be believed, a demon named Old Tom on whom they blame a series of violent deaths. |
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This Tender Land
by William Kent Krueger
What it's about: the escape of four children being held at the abusive Lincoln Indian Training School in Minnesota, a place designed force them into conformity and rob them of their identities.
Why you might like it: It has the feel of a 1930s Huckleberry Finn, with a long journey downriver and lots of colorful characters that the kids meet along the way.
For fans of: The Nickel Boys by Colson Whitehead, which tells the story of black boys suffering horrific abuse at a reform school in the last years of Jim Crow.
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| Gun Island by Amitav GhoshWhat it is: Steeped in Bengali folklore, this is a thought-provoking and stylistically complex story of displacement, identity, and the life of the mind.
Starring: Dinanath 'Deen" Datta, a rare book dealer whose trip to Calcutta gets derailed after he learns of a local legend involving a gun merchant, a mangrove jungle, and the Hindu goddess Manasa Devi.
Why you might like it: Deen’s curiosity and deep knowledge of literature and mythology help to ground some of the novel’s more mystical elements and lend it a contemplative tone. |
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| The Mermaid and Mrs. Hancock by Imogen Hermes GowarWhat it's about: When London merchant Jonah Hancock becomes the owner of a mummified "mermaid" specimen, his decision to display it publicly results in some colorful new acquaintances, including brothel madam Mrs. Chappell and beguiling courtesan Angelica Neal.
Read it for: well-developed characters; witty, period-appropriate dialogue; and a vividly drawn setting that captures the sights, sounds, and smells of 18th-century London.
For fans of: the panoramic view of British society in Michel Faber's The Crimson Petal and the White. |
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Landfalls
by Naomi J. Williams
What it is: a richly detailed fictional account of the Lapérouse expedition, which sets out in 1785 to circumnavigate the globe -- and never returns.
Why you might like it: Comprised of interlinked vignettes, this meticulously researched novel unfolds from multiple perspectives that illuminate different aspects of the ill-fated expedition.
Reviewers say: This debut "conjures up the long-forgotten past" with "astonishing vividness and immediacy" (The Guardian).
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The Glass Ocean
by Beatriz Williams, Lauren Willig, and Karen White
What it's about: Three women -- two in the past, one in the present -- connected by the final voyage of the RMS Lusitania.
Contains: a shipboard mystery, spies and secret documents, a valuable manuscript, family secrets, a love triangle, and more...
Author alert: Following the success of their previous collaboration, The Forgotten Room, "Team W" -- bestselling authors Beatriz Williams, Lauren Willig, and Karen White -- join forces once again.
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Contact your librarian for more great books!
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Winchester Public Library 80 Washington St. Winchester, Massachusetts 01890 781-721-7171www.winpublib.org/ |
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