|
Historical Fiction February 2019
|
|
|
|
| The Only Woman in the Room by Marie BenedictStarring: Hedwig Kiesler, the Austrian Jewish trophy wife who flees 1930s Vienna and reinvents herself as Hollywood star Hedy Lamarr -- while secretly pursuing her dream of becoming an inventor.
About the author: Marie Benedict wrote The Other Einstein, which similarly illuminates the overlooked scientific contributions of women.
Further reading: Margaret Porter's forthcoming novel Beautiful Invention, or the biography Hedy's Folly by Richard Rhodes. |
|
| Prague Spring by Simon MawerWhat happens: A coin flip sends two Oxford students on an impulsive trip to Czechoslovakia in the summer of 1968, a period of political optimism known as the "Prague Spring." Meanwhile, a British diplomat gathers intelligence in the lead up to the Warsaw Pact invasion.
Why you might like it: Full of well-researched historical detail, this character-driven novel by the author of the Walter Scott Prize-winning Tightrope "limns the Cold War to affecting and ultimately chilling effect" (Kirkus Reviews).
You might also like: Paul Vidich's atmospheric George Mueller novels, which offer a similar blend of historical fiction and spy novel. |
|
| That Churchill Woman by Stephanie BarronPresenting: Lady Randolph Churchill -- née Jennie Jerome, the American heiress who snags a titled husband and scandalizes Victorian England's high society with her political ambition and affaires de coeur.
Why you might like it: This biographical novel offers a sympathetic portrait of an intelligent woman who rebels against the restrictive social mores of the late 19th century.
You might also like: Karen Harper's American Duchess or Therese Anne Fowler's A Well-Behaved Woman, about Gilded Age heiresses who seek personal fulfillment within socially advantageous yet emotionally impoverished marriages. |
|
| The Perilous Adventures of the Cowboy King: A Novel of Teddy Roosevelt and His Times by Jerome CharynWhat it is: A biographical novel about Theodore Roosevelt, the 26th president of the United States.
Want a taste? "[Edith] always said I was Sinbad the Sailor, who sallied forth from adventure to adventure, outwitting all his foes, and Sinbad I was.”
About the author: Jerome Charyn is known for his iconoclastic character studies of prominent Americans such as The Secret Life of Emily Dickinson and I Am Abraham: A Novel of Lincoln and the Civil War. |
|
| The House at the Edge of Night by Catherine BannerWhat it's about: The Esposito family and their experiences on the Mediterranean island of Castellamare from World War I to the Great Recession.
Read it for: An atmospheric and leisurely paced tale of island life, full of colorful characters and spiced with magical realism.
For fans of: Corelli's Mandolin by Louis de Bernières. |
|
| Gateway to the Moon by Mary MorrisStarring: New Mexico teen Miguel Torres, an aspiring astronomer, and his 15th-century converso ancestor, Luis de Torres.
What happens: In parallel narratives separated by 500 years, Miguel discovers his Jewish heritage, as Luis, fleeing the Inquisition, sails to the New World with Columbus.
Reviewers say: "With prose as clear as the star-strewn sky, Morris’ novel explores people’s hidden connections" (Booklist). |
|
| Barkskins by Annie ProulxWhat it's about: In the deep, dark forests of 17th-century New France (now Canada), indentured censitaires work as "barkskins," or woodcutters bound to their seigneur as they toil in the "evil wilderness."
Meet: René Sel and Charles Duquet, censitaires whose paths diverge dramatically: one marries a Mi’kmaw woman and becomes the patriarch of a large, mixed-race family, while the other escapes servitude to become a wealthy trader.
You might also like: Joseph Boyden's The Orenda, which shares Barkskins' setting but focuses on the region's indigenous inhabitants. |
|
| Some Sing, Some Cry by Ntozake Shange and Ifa BayezaIntroducing: The formerly enslaved Betty Mayfield and her musically gifted descendants, whose lives intersect with pivotal moments in African American history from Reconstruction to the present day.
About the authors: Sister playwrights Ifa Bayeza and the late Ntozake Shange are best known for The Ballad of Emmet Till (Bayeza) and for colored girls who have considered suicide / when the rainbow is enuf (Shange).
For fans of: Lalita Tademy's Cane River; Ayana Mathis' The Twelve Tribes of Hattie. |
|
| The Beauty Queen of Jerusalem by Sarit Yishai-Levi; translated from the Hebrew by Anthony BerrisWhat it is: A women-centric multigenerational saga set in 20th-century Jerusalem.
Why you might like it: Revolving around complicated mother-daughter relationships, this dramatic novel contains scandals, secrets, forbidden love, and a family curse. |
|
|
|
For personalized reading recommendations from Durham County librarians, try My Next 5! Simply complete an online form to tell us a little about what genres, books, and authors you like (or dislike). A DCL librarian will review your submission and reply with a list of the next five books you should read -- all ages of readers welcome!
|
|
Want to keep up-to-date on new books at the library? on everything from Horror to Home & Garden!
|
|
NoveList Plus is a comprehensive database of fiction and nonfiction titles for all ages, including recommendations, articles, and lists for your fiction and nonfiction needs. DCL cardholders can access NoveList Plus from any computer.
|
|
Check out the library's top ten checkouts! Lists include top tens for adult fiction and nonfiction, movies, young adults fiction, picture books and kids' fiction.
|
|
If you are having trouble unsubscribing to this newsletter, please contact the Durham County Library at
919-560-0100, Administration Building, 101 E. Morgan St., Durham, NC 27701
librarywebmaster@durhamcountync.gov
|
|
|