Historical Fiction
April 2026

Recent Releases
Daughter of Egypt
by Marie Benedict

Lady Evelyn Herbert defies societal expectations in 1919 and accompanies her father, Lord Carnarvon, and archeologist Howard Carter on digs in Egypt, where she seeks the tomb of Hatshepsut. In 1400s BCE, Hatshepsut becomes pharaoh against the odds. Following the lives of two women whom history almost forgot, this evocative novel is the latest from acclaimed author Marie Benedict. Read-alikes: Gill Paul's The Collector's Daughter; Saara El-Arifi's Cleopatra.
Book of Forbidden Words
by Louise Fein

In 1552 England, former nun Lysbette writes of a utopian world for women, but people find her words heretical and she's killed before her book can be printed. This leads Charlotte Guillard, a real-life Parisian publisher, to encode the work for posterity. In 1952 New York, bored housewife and World War II codebreaker Millie decodes the manuscript, but McCarthyism makes the centuries-old ideas inside still dangerous. Try these next: A.D. Bell's The Bookbinder's Secret; Chanel Cleeton's The Lost Story of Eva Fuentes.
Autobiography of Cotton
by Cristina Rivera Garza

Real-life 20-year-old activist and writer José Revueltas goes to Tamaulipas to support a 1934 Mexican cotton workers’ strike (which later forms the basis of his revolutionary novel Human Mourning). At the same time, a husband and wife travel to the fields to work. Weaving literary fiction with family history, political history, biography, analysis, and more, this is the intriguing latest by the Pulitzer Prize-winning author of Liliana's Invincible Summer: A Sister's Search for Justice.
Mule Boy
by Andrew Krivak

In 1929, 13-year-old Ondro Prach begins work as mule boy in the coal mines where his father died. When an accident kills everyone on his crew except him, he's left with trauma and survivor's guilt. He drinks, goes to prison as a conscientious objector during World War II, and is ready to talk years later when the miners' families ask him about the men who were lost that day. "This is flawless," raves Publishers Weekly. Try this next: Anne Michaels' Held; Nathaniel Ian Miller's The Memoirs of Stockholm Sven.
White River Crossing
by Ian McGuire

In the Canadian winter of 1766, news that there's gold further north leads the manager of a Hudson Bay Company outpost to send a secret group to investigate. Led by two Native couples, the party of three prospectors includes the manager's loathsome deputy, the intellectual first mate from the company's whaling sloop, and the manager's naive 19-year-old nephew. But an act of sexual violence will make a dangerous trip even more so in this atmospheric novel. Try this next: Kathleen Grissom's Crow Mary.
A Far-Flung Life
by M.L. Stedman

On a vast sheep station in 1958 Western Australia, a fatal accident changes the lives of the MacBrides. Left behind are injured teenager Matt, his older sister Rose, and his grief-stricken mom Lorna, who are eventually joined by a bright young boy. Exploring how loss and secrets reverberate for decades, this emotional family saga is the long-awaited sophomore novel from M.L. Stedman (The Light Between Oceans). Try these next: Heather Rose's A Great Act of Love; Michelle Huneven's Bug Hollow.
The Sea Child
by Linda Wilgus

After her husband dies in the Napoleonic Wars, Isabel leaves London to rent a seaside cottage in Cornwall. She was found in the area as a girl, alone and wet on the beach, and hopes to learn about her past, but all she discovers is that locals think she's a sea creature's child. When an injured smuggling ship's captain is brought to her, she secretly nurses him and they become close, but a visiting revenue man signals danger. This romantic, swashbuckling debut novel is full of adventure.
A Beast Slinks Towards Beijing
by Alice Evelyn Yang

Though she's busy with her New York job and boyfriend, Qianze takes in her estranged father, who seems to have dementia. The story moves to the past when he begins talking about his family, leading to stories from the Japanese occupation of Manchuria and the Chinese Cultural Revolution. With elements of magical realism, this emotionally intense debut novel ponders history, family relationships, and the effects of intergenerational trauma. Read-alikes: Wendy Chen's Their Divine Fires; Ali Araghi's The Immortals of Tehran.
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