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Historical Fiction February 2018
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| Carnegie's Maid by Marie BenedictWhat it's about: Hired as a lady's maid to Margaret Carnegie, Irish immigrant Clara Kelly becomes the confidant of her mistress' son, wealthy industrialist Andrew Carnegie. However, their differences in station may doom their budding relationship.
Why you might like it: Carnegie's Maid offers a chaste love story and plenty of upstairs/downstairs drama, as well as a nuanced depiction of the immigrant experience in the rapidly industrializing 1860s United States. |
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| The Girls in the Picture by Melanie BenjaminStarring: Silent film actress Mary Pickford and screenwriter Frances Marion, whose (complicated) friendship underpins their enduring creative partnership.
Read it for: an engaging story anchored by strong female characters, as well as a behind-the-scenes look at the early years of America's film industry.
For fans of: Karina Longworth's podcast You Must Remember This, which focuses on both famous and lesser-known figures in Hollywood history. |
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Impossible Saints by Clarissa HarwoodEscaping the constraints of life as a village schoolmistress, Lilia Brooke bursts into London and into Paul Harris's orderly life, shattering his belief that women are gentle creatures who need protection. Lilia wants to change women's lives by advocating for the vote, free unions, and contraception. Paul, an Anglican priest, has a big ambition of his own: to become the youngest dean of St. John's Cathedral. Lilia doesn't believe in God, but she's attracted to Paul's intellect, ethics, and dazzling smile.As Lilia finds her calling in the militant Women's Social and Political Union, Paul is increasingly driven to rise in the church. They can't deny their attraction, but they know they don't belong in each other's worlds. Lilia would rather destroy property and serve time in prison than see her spirit destroyed and imprisoned by marriage to a clergyman, while Paul wants nothing more than to settle down and keep Lilia out of harm's way. Paul and Lilia must reach their breaking points before they can decide whether their love is worth fighting for.
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| Red Sky at Noon by Simon Sebag MontefioreWhat it's about: Sprung from the gulag and assigned to one of Stalin's penal battalions, middle-aged Jewish writer Benya Golden becomes an unwilling combatant in the Eastern Front of World War II. His situation goes from bad to worse when a disastrous battle leaves him trapped behind enemy lines.
Series alert: Benya first appeared as a supporting character in author Simon Sebag Montefiore's novel Sashenka, which also makes use of complex characters and meticulous research to illuminate Soviet history. |
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| The English Wife by Lauren WilligWhat it's about: Her brother is murdered during a masquerade ball. His glamorous wife is missing. Janie Van Duyvil is determined to discover what happened.
Why you might like it: Parallel narratives, set in Victorian London and Gilded Age New York, blend murder mystery and romantic drama.
Author alert: Best known for her popular Pink Carnation series, author Lauren Willig displays her knack for characterization and twisty plotting to this atmospheric stand-alone. |
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| The Hours Count by Jillian CantorWhat it's about: In 1953, Julius and Ethel Rosenberg are convicted of conspiracy to commit espionage and executed. Friends and neighbors are shocked: could this ordinary middle-class Jewish-American couple really have sold atomic secrets to the Soviets?
Why you should read it: This haunting novel reveals a dark chapter of 20th-century American history in which anti-Semitism and Cold War paranoia collide with tragic results. |
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| Under the Wide and Starry Sky by Nancy HoranStarring: Scottish author Robert Louis Stevenson and Fanny Van de Grift Osbourne, the American divorcée who becomes his wife, collaborator, and traveling companion.
Author alert: Though it's got a happier ending than Loving Frank, Nancy Horan's latest novel also follows a creative couple's scandalous courtship and unconventional love affair.
For fans of: the authentic characters in Erica Robuck's Call Me Zelda or The House of Hawthorne, both of which feature literary couples. |
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| Mrs. Houdini by Victoria KellyWhat it's about: Bess Houdini, widow of famous magician Harry Houdini, reflects on her marriage while searching for the coded messages her husband promised he'd send from the afterlife.
Read it for: an intimate portrait of a marriage that evolves alongside Houdini's rise from vaudeville curiosity to international celebrity.
You might also like: Steven Galloway's The Confabulist, which similarly adds a dash of supernatural intrigue to the life of Houdini. |
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| Villa America by Liza KlaussmannIntroducing: Married American expats Sara and Gerald Murphy, who decamp to the French Riviera in the 1920s and become the center of a social circle that inspires F. Scott Fitzgerald's novel Tender is the Night.
Look for: cameos by Scott and Zelda Fitzgerald, Ernest Hemingway, and Pablo Picasso, among other Lost Generation luminaries.
You might also like: Paula McLain's The Paris Wife, whose characters and setting overlap with Villa America's as it depicts another glamorous but troubled marriage between cultural icons. |
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The castle of kings
by Oliver Pötzsch
When the only man she has ever loved shoots a rogue knight to protect her, the unconventional daughter of a harsh overlord flees with him against a backdrop of the raging 16th-century Peasants' War, during which her bond with a tame falcon leads to revelatory dreams.
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Contact your librarian for more great books!
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Lambton County Library 787 Broadway St. Wyoming, Ontario N0N1T0 519-845-3324www.lclibrary.ca |
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