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Historical Fiction
December 2013
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"Men are afraid women will laugh at them. Women are afraid men will kill them."
~ from Nicola Griffith's Hild
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New and Recently Released!
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| Hild: A Novel by Nicola GriffithSet in a richly detailed seventh-century Anglo-Saxon England, this lush, sweeping novel envisions the life of St. Hilda of Whitby, whose wyrd (fate) is to become "the Light of the World." When her father, an exiled ætheling, is murdered, Hild joins the household of her uncle, King Edwin "Snakebeard" of Northumbria. Bright, curious, and highly observant, Hild soon gains a reputation for being able to predict the future, becoming her uncle's trusted seer -- a position as precarious as it is prestigious. Navigating courtly intrigue, as well as a multicultural society prone to violence and unrest, Hild also challenges the gender roles of her era by becoming an influential religious leader and patron of the arts. |
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| The Last Banquet by Jonathan GrimwoodIn 1790, Jean-Marie d'Aumont writes his autobiography, starting at age five when he's found sitting on a dung heap, eating beetles (the brown ones taste sour, the black sweet). Rescued and sent to a school for the sons of destitute nobles, d'Aumont becomes a soldier by trade, but develops an obsession with tasting every flavor the world has to offer. A friend of such real-life luminaries as Benjamin Franklin, the Marquis de Sade, and Voltaire, d'Aumont applies his intellectual curiosity to becoming an epicurean and sensualist of the first order. Skillfully depicting the Enlightenment, the court of Louis XVI at Versailles, and the French Revolution, this richly detailed tour of 18th-century France, though lighter and bawdier in tone, may appeal to readers who enjoyed Patrick Suskind's Perfume. |
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| The Two Hotel Francforts: A Novel by David LeavittDuring the summer of 1940, American expatriates congregate in Lisbon, Portugal, awaiting the SS Manhattan, a ship dispatched by the State Department to transport stranded U.S. citizens back to their homeland. At the Café Suiça, Pete and Julia Winters meet Edward and Iris Freling, a husband-and-wife team of mystery writers, who, due to their freewheeling bohemian lifestyle and little dog Daisy, initially resemble a real-life Nick and Nora Charles. However, as the couples' lives become increasingly intertwined, sinister undertones emerge and all four characters' actions and decisions prove to have far-reaching implications. |
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| Red Sky in Morning: A Novel by Paul Lynch"Night sky was black and then there was blood," begins Paul Lynch's gritty, lyrical debut. In 1832 County Donegal, impoverished tenant farmer Coll Coyle accidentally kills local landowner Master Hamilton, then flees to America with Hamilton's sadistic foreman, John Faller, in hot pursuit. Coyle survives a harrowing trans-Atlantic journey, followed by life in a cholera-ridden labor camp in Philadelphia, where he finds work laying railroad track across Pennsylvania. However, Faller, an expert tracker, doggedly traces Coyle's steps, determined not to rest until he has his revenge. |
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| Rustication: A Novel by Charles Palliser"Rusticated" (i.e. sent down in disgrace) from Cambridge, 17-year-old Richard Shenstone returns home in December of 1863. With no means of earning a living (or supporting his opium addiction), he's in no position to help his recently widowed mother or his troubled sister, Effie. Feeling trapped in the "benighted backwater" of rural Thurchester, Richard occupies himself by attempting to identify the author of a series of profane letters sent to local residents, accusing them of terrible crimes while threatening violence. Like author Charles Palliser's previous novels, The Quincunx and The Unburied, Rustication is an atmospheric, intricately plotted tale of psychological suspense with Gothic overtones. |
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| The Valley of Amazement by Amy TanThis sweeping family saga by acclaimed novelist Amy Tan, author of The Joy Luck Club, focuses on the relationship between Lulu Minturn (better known as Lulu Mimi), a white woman who owns one of Shanghai's finest courtesan houses, and her half-Chinese daughter Violet, whose desire to learn more about her ancestry takes her on a journey of self-discovery that she may not survive. Transporting readers back and forth between 19th-century China and 20th-century California, this lyrical, dramatic book may appeal to fans of Lisa See's Shanghai Girls or Mingmei Ye's Peach Blossom Pavilion. |
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| Astray by Emma DonoghueIn her "wonderfully imaginative, transporting" (Booklist) return to historical fiction, Room author Emma Donoghue presents a diverse collection of 14 short stories inspired by past events. "The Lost Seed" introduces an embittered Puritan seeking revenge on his neighbors, while "Daddy's Girl," set in 19th-century New York City, stars a young woman who learns a shocking secret about her famous father after his death. "The Gift" unfolds through the correspondence between an impoverished mother and the man who adopts the child she's forced to give up. These individuals and others come to life in Donoghue's detailed portraits, which provide intimate glimpses into their times and places. |
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| The Frozen Thames by Helen Humphreys"In its long history, the river Thames has frozen solid forty times," reveals author Helen Humphreys in her brief introduction to this richly detailed, meticulously researched short story collection, comprised of 40 vignettes that span seven centuries of British history, from 1142 to 1895. Beginning with the besieged Queen Matilda's daring escape from her tower window during a snowstorm, Humphreys brings to life indelible moments, large and small, including a Frost Fair on the ice, a massive ship trapped in the frozen Thames, and Henry VIII's royal procession down the river. |
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| Tales of the New World by Sabina MurrayThis lyrical, atmospheric collection of ten short stories by PEN/Faulkner Award-winning author Sabrina Murray focuses on historical explorers and adventurers. In "Translation," a Venetian scholar chronicles Ferdinand Magellan's expedition to the Indies, while "Balboa" follows the Spanish conquistador as he "discovers" the South Seas. "Fish" finds Victorian spinster Mary Kingsley rejecting her sheltered existence and exploring the African interior, while "His Actual Mark" contrasts Edward Jon Eyre's close bond with a young aboriginal man with his later suppression of a Jamaican slave rebellion. Tales of the New World artfully explores the intersection of history and science in a manner that may appeal to fans of Andrea Barrett's Ship Fever or Servants of the Map. |
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| Life Studies: Stories by Susan VreelandBest known for her lush, lyrical novels about the lives of artists, such as Clara and Mr. Tiffany and The Forest Lover, author Susan Vreeland offers 17 art-themed short stories in this collection. Some are biographical studies of Impressionist and Modern painters -- including Monet, Morisot, Renoir, Cezanne, Van Gogh, and Modigliani -- as seen through the eyes of their families, friends, lovers, acquaintances, and servants. Others explore the ways in which ordinary men and women are liberated by the arts, often in surprising ways. All are "stimulating and enriching" (Kirkus Reviews). |
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