Historical fiction is a brilliantly broad genre of fiction, with the potential to span so much of human history and culture. Because of this fact, many of the best historical fiction books come from far and wide — from Latin America to Japan, and everywhere in-between.
But, of course, the UK has a particular affinity for historical fiction, so many of the novels you’ll find on this extensive list are British. This is a celebration of historical fiction, showcasing the breadth and scope of the genre; how creative its authors are and what they can do with our rich histories.

Must-Read Historical Novels
You’ll find here novels that explore periods as well-trodden as the two World Wars, and ones as rich as China’s Ming Dynasty. Through these historical fiction books, you’ll meet Henry VIII, William Shakespeare, Madame Tussauds, Abraham Lincoln, and so many more.
You’ll spend time in a French asylum, on the wide plains of Argentina, and the battlefields of Ancient Greece. These are some of the best historical fiction books you’ll ever read; books that will take you across so much of this world’s rich, vibrant, and tumultuous history.
Wolf Hall by Hilary Mantel

Wolf Hall manages to be many things. For many readers, it is the defining book of the historical fiction genre, at least in the UK.
Hilary Mantel’s Wolf Hall and its direct sequel, Bring Up the Bodies, both won the Booker Prize, while the final book of the trilogy, The Mirror and the Light, was shortlisted for the Women’s Prize. The Guardian newspaper called Wolf Hall the best novel of the 21st Century (so far).
Wolf Hall is, undeniably, a masterpiece of historical fiction. It’s dense and its language can be challenging, but it is beautiful, clever, and enthralling. Telling the fictionalised biography of the legendary English politician Thomas Cromwell, Wolf Hall throws readers into the fraught and frightening world of Henry VIII’s court.
Mantel paints Cromwell as a more sympathetic character than history has done, and uses that altered perspective to tell one of the most engaging historical novels ever penned. Few novels have made as much of an impact on their respective genres as Wolf Hall has; unquestionably one of the best historical fiction books of all time.
Little by Edward Carey

Edward Carey is a true talent, and his books are a gift to contemporary literature. Little, a fictionalised biography of Madam Tussauds, is his finest work.
Little follows the life of Marie Grosholtz, from her birth in Alsace, France in 1761, through her adolescence and deep into her adulthood. We follow Marie, nicknamed Little, as she loses her father, and soon after her mother, before spending most of her life as the ward, student, and apprentice of an eccentric anatomist.
Dr. Curtis teaches Marie everything there is to know about human anatomy, and the two travel through much of central and western Europe before eventually settling in Paris. As Little progresses, we experience the French Revolution and see the deepest innards of the Palace of Versailles, all through the eyes of the woman who would become Madame Tussauds.
Both an intimate and subtly gothic novel and a wildly epic biography, Little is one of the very best historical fiction books ever written.
Hamnet by Maggie O’Farrell

Maggie O’Farrell’s Hamnet, which won the Women’s Prize for Fiction 2020, is a fictionalised retelling of the life of Agnes Hathaway, wife of William Shakespeare, as well as the tragically short life of their son Hamnet, whose death inspired the creation of the play Hamlet.
Gorgeously crafted, Hamnet shifts between the wider biography of Agnes as she meets and marries The Bard, and shorter chapters that detail the final days of Hamnet’s life. There are supernatural whispers throughout; the framing and pacing jolts and twists unapologetically; Shakespeare himself is never given a name, with the prose remaining firmly on the other people in his life.
Hamnet is a personal favourite novel of mine, especially within the genre of historical fiction. It does so much so well. Expertly plotted, gorgeously written, with dynamic and tragic characterisation. A must-read historical fiction book.
Love and Fury by Samantha Silva

Like Maggie O’Farrell’s Hamnet, Samantha Silva’s Love and Fury is a historical novel that shines a light on a woman often overshadowed by someone close to them who found greater fame. In this case, that person is pioneer feminist and mother of Mary Shelley, Mary Wollstonecraft.
Often simply contextualised as the Frankenstein author’s mother, Mary Wollstonecraft is also credited as being one of the Western world’s first feminist writers, having famously penned A Vindication on the Rights of Woman.
Beyond that, however, little is ever said about Mary Wollstonecraft. As Love and Fury demonstrates, however, she had an incredible life of her own. Wollstonecraft spent most of that life educating — and fighting for the education of — young British women at a time when women’s education was seen as pointless at best by the men in power.
Love and Fury is a historical novel that shows the true strength of Mary Wollstonecraft’s life and deeds beyond the book she is most famous for.
Buy a copy of Love and Fury here!
The Remains of the Day by Kazuo Ishiguro

Written by my own personal favourite author, Kazuo Ishiguro, The Remains of the Day is a historical novel about regret and human malleability. The Remains of the Day begins with our protagonist and narrator, a butler named Stevens, setting out on a road trip across England.
Stevens has worked at Darlington Hall for many years and his new employer, a nouveau riche American, happily encourages him to take a vacation while he himself is away in the US on business. Stevens plans to reunite with Darlington Hall’s former housekeeper, a woman whom he clearly had deep feelings for.
Stevens, however, has always been married to his job. He is a rigid, unmovable traditionalist with a particular attitude towards life, work, and class; one that he deems right and proper. This stern and conservative outlook has cost Stevens so much potential joy, and now he has a chance to right those wrongs.
This is a truly elegant and beautiful literary masterpiece, and a must-read piece of historical fiction.
Buy a copy of The Remains of the Day here!
An Artist of the Floating World by Kazuo Ishiguro

Before he wrote The Remains of the Day, Ishiguro focussed his attention on the country of his birth, and wrote the heart-wrenching historical novel An Artist of the Floating World. This novel takes us to a time shortly after the end of World War II and the fall of the Japanese Empire, and its story follows the life and memories of an aged and once-renowned ukiyo-e painter named Ono.
Ono has had a long and revered career as an ukiyo-e artist but, when war began brewing, he strayed from the teachings of his master and turned his hand to making propaganda posters. With the war over, Ono and his works are now a symbol of embarrassment. His family, neighbours, and old friends look at him with shame.
An Artist of the Floating World is a masterpiece, not only in its setting and its themes of shame, political corruption, and time’s ability to change us. An Artist of the Floating World presents a challenge of perspective and sympathy rarely explored so well in literature. This Ishiguro novel is another masterpiece of literary fiction and historical fiction.
Buy a copy of An Artist of the Floating World here!
All the Light We Cannot See by Anthony Doerr

All The Light We Cannot See, which won the Carnegie Medal and Pulitzer Prize, has become one of the giants of modern American literature. Set against the backdrop of war-ravaged France, All The Light We Cannot See tells the story of Marie-Laure, a blind French woman, and the path that leads her to the orphaned Werner, a member of the Hitler Youth.
The glue that holds this historical novel together is its lovable cast of characters, including Marie-Laure’s father, a miniaturist and keeper-of-keys at the Museum of Natural History. The relationship between him and his daughter is a deeply moving one, as is the story of young Werner, who witnesses the effects of Nazism from the inside, and from a young age.
All The Light We Cannot See is one of the most powerful, moving, and satisfying American novels of this century, and one of the best historical fiction books we have.
Buy a copy of All the Light We Cannot See here!
Babel by R.F. Kuang

Babel is one of the most raw, powerful, politically aggressive, and savvy historical novels you’ll ever read; one that also mixes in dark academia and a sprinkle of urban fantasy. Set in Oxford, 1836, Babel tells the story of a boy from Canton (Guangdong) China who narrowly escapes dying of cholera with the rest of his family as he is whisked away by a rich and powerful white man.
This man is Professor Lovell, an English academia who brings Robin to London, teaches him Greek and Latin, encourages his studies in translation, and then sends him off to Oxford University.
There, Robin is enrolled in the Royal Institute of Translation, housed in the tallest tower in Oxford, the titular Babel. Robin is also recruited into the ranks of a radical political group known as Hermes, who seek to disrupt the British Empire and its economic powers in order to free its annexed and strangled nations.
Babel is a masterpiece of historical fiction that tackles the monstrous, inhuman actions of the British Empire head-on. It’s a novel with teeth and claws, and an absolute must-read.
Perfume by Patrick Süskind
Translated from the German by John E. Woods

What begins with one of the most alluring opening lines soon spirals into a gorgeously twisted tale of death and strangeness, written and translated with staggering beauty. Perfume tells the tale of the 18th century French orphan Jean-Baptiste Grenouille, who slipped from his mother while she worked at a fish market and then promptly died. And while his beginnings are bleak, he soon grows into an unusual kind of monster.
Grenouille has the uncanny ability to identify smells from miles away. His nose is unnaturally attuned, and he will eventually kill for the smells he desires most. We watch him grow up, become apprentice to a perfumer in Paris, and eventually leave when he grows tired of other people. But the smells of certain women drive him to commit terrible crimes in this blend of historical fiction and poetic fantasy.
Perfume is a grotesque novel about the intersection between death and obsession, as well as the corruption of power and dominance. An unsavoury yet addictive work that proves to be an entirely compulsive read.
Clytemnestra by Costanza Casati

While we at Books and Bao love ourselves some Greek Mythology, and there are many great retellings of the Greek classics out there right now, this is about historical fiction. And one of the best of these historical novels set within Ancient Greece is Costanza Casati’s Clytemnestra.
This is a dark, angry, intimate, epic that follows the life of the titular Clytemnestra, a Spartan princess who is known for being the wife and murderer of Agamemnon, king of Mycenae.
Clytemnestra begins with our protagonist’s youth, growing up alongside her sister Helen, falling in love with a decent man, and eventually having his son. But we know that, eventually, she will be married to the bloodthirsty tyrant king Agamemnon; her sister Helen will marry his brother and be stolen to Troy by Paris, thus beginning the Trojan War.
This masterpiece of historical fiction covers all of this and so much more, sparing none of the tragedy that befalls our protagonist. A tense, angry feminist masterpiece of a novel, Clytemnestra is a must-read; one of the most essential historical fiction books on the shelves right now.
Buy a copy of Clytemnestra here!
Read More: The Best History Books Ever Written
Nettleblack by Nat Reeve

Nettleblack is the debut novel by non-binary British author Nat Reeve; a laugh-out-loud funny and delightfully charming novel in so many surprising ways. Taking influence from Shakespeare, Dickens, and Agatha Christie, and also reminiscent of the settings found in the film Hot Fuzz and the show Schitt’s Creek, Nettleblack is an absolute delight.
Nettleblack is set in the late 19th Century and tells the story of Henry Nettleblack, youngest daughter of a family who made their fortune developing a medicinal tincture. When Henry’s eldest sister wishes to marry her off into the gentry, she runs away from home, and an absurd twist of fate lands her in the ranks of a quirky, odd local vigilante group who call themselves the Dallyangle Division.
There, she meets and works clumsily alongside a host of eccentric characters with names that would make Dickens jealous and personalities lifted from Shakespeare’s finest comedies. One of these characters is Pip Property, a wonderful dandy of a non-binary character.
Nettleblack warms and entertains in equal measure; it is a celebration of strangeness and difference. It congratulates those of us who don’t fit the status quo and gives us a wonderful world to escape to.
Buy a copy of Nettleblack here!
In Memoriam by Alice Winn

Alice Winn’s debut novel feels, in its tone and execution, like a time capsule. The feeling of public schoolboy life, the forbidden love between two young men on the verge of adulthood, and the cruel, cold, uncaring nature of life in the trenches of the Great War — all of it is brought to life through thoughtful language that dances between unrelenting, unapologetic viscerality and witty, friendly banter.
This is the story of Gaunt and Ellwood, upper-class lads in their teens, arrogant and charming, each madly and secretly in love with the other. When Gaunt’s German mother persuades him to enlist in order to stop the rumours that their family are spies, Ellwood follows him into the trenches. What follows is a romance that blossoms in the unlikeliest of places.
In Memoriam is a war novel that is as kind as it is unkind, written with gusto and humour. The love and friendship on display is comforting, and the exposure of war and trench life is exactly as harrowing and discomfiting as it should be. A powerful piece of historical war fiction.
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The Mercies by Kiran Millwood Hargrave

Kiran Milwood Hargrave is one of the most exciting and beloved authors of the UK today. Having written several celebrated YA novels, The Mercies was her first novel for adults, and it made waves upon its publication.
Inspired by true events, The Mercies is set in 1617 Norway — specifically the island of Vardo. The book begins with a freak winter storm taking the lives of every man from the island community — all were fishermen, and all were tragically at sea when the storm suddenly hit.
Vardo is now an island of women. Soon enough, a man of God arrives from Scotland to “take control”. He has brought with him his wife, a woman inspired when she finds a community devoid of men. The Mercies is written with astonishing prose. A truly gorgeous novel, from beginning to end. It is the perfect length, expertly paced, utterly flawless in its writing and atmosphere.
Buy a copy of The Mercies here!
The Dance Tree by Kiran Millwood Hargrave

Kiran Milwood Hargraves’ follow-up to The Mercies was the riveting and strange The Dance Tree: a historical novel about patriarchy, superstition, and oppression.
Set in 16th Century Strasbourg, The Dance Tree follows Lisbet, a young woman who has been struggling to carry a child to term. She is pregnant again, and desperately praying that this one will last. Her husband’s sister was sentenced to seven years of penance for a sin nobody will mention, and she is set to return during this blisteringly hot summer.
Amongst these big changes, the town has also been taken by a strange “disease” as women walk into the town square and start to dance. They dance for days until collapsing, and then dance some more. Kiran Millwood Hargrave continues to prove herself an author of some of the very best historical fiction books coming out of the UK right now.
Buy a copy of The Dance Tree here!
The Confessions of Frannie Langton by Sara Collins

The Confessions of Frannie Langton is one of the most impactful historical novels of recent years; all the more impressive considering it is a debut novel. Sara Collins is a Black British writer and ex-lawyer who also penned the screenplay for the TV adaptation of her novel.
The Confessions of Frannie Langton begins with our protagonist on trial for murder. It’s 1826, she was born and educated on the plantations of Jamaica, and she has since worked as a maid for the wealthy Benham family in London. Mrs Benham, a woman Frannie dearly loved, is dead, and it’s Frannie who stands to hang for the murder. But did she do it? And if so, why?
A truly mind-bending tale of race, class, empire, love, queerness, and so much more. A true modern classic amongst the very best historical fiction books.
Buy a copy of The Confessions of Frannie Langton here!
The Square of Sevens by Laura Shepherd-Robinson

Laura Shepherd-Robinson has made a deserved name for herself writing historical thrillers, but The Square of Sevens is a larger beast than that. While still a novel led by mystery and intrigue, it is less of a thriller and more of an historical drama set in the Bath and London of the 1730s and ’40s.
Our protagonist is a girl named Red, who grew up travelling the roads of England with her father, performing cartomancy using the pseudo-mythical art known as the square of sevens. She never knew her mother, and early in the novel her father dies, but not before urging a kindly and wealthy man to take his daughter in.
This man, Antrobus, raises Red as “Rachel” in a life of comfort, until her life becomes unravelled when she turns sixteen. As she searches for the truth about her parents — specifically who her mother might have been — Red is soon forced to flee to London.
There, she uses her skills to survive and follow a trail that will hopefully lead her to the truth of her family, and so much more. The Square of Sevens is a lengthy and dense historical mystery novel full of intrigue, delivering constant twists and turns that keep the reader on their toes.
Buy a copy of The Square of Sevens here!
Lucky Red by Claudia Cravens

Lucky Red is a sapphic historical novel set in the American Wild West of the late 19th century. Our protagonist, Bridget, is a beautiful young redhead whose childhood was plagued with bad luck, to say the least. Bridget was raised by her dumb and useless father, who sold their house for next to nothing. Then, out on the dusty road together, the father and daughter take shelter where he is bitten and killed by a rattlesnake.
Alone, Bridget wanders until she reaches the frontier town of Dodge, Kansas. There, her luck changes as she is taken in by the good and kind women of the Buffalo Queen brothel, where she works and finds a community. She takes to sex work easily, enjoys the gift of food and shelter, and builds a solid bond with the other women at the Queen. And soon enough, she comes to realise that, while men are her work, women are what she loves and craves.
Lucky Red is an exciting historical novel about sex, lust, love, and the bonds between women in small communities where the world is a dangerous, difficult place.
Pachinko by Min Jin Lee

Min Jin Lee’s Pachinko is a sincerely beloved novel; an epic family saga that takes the reader on a soulful journey through early 20th century Korea and Japan. Four generations of a Korean family take us through their lives in the midst of the tragic and tumultuous annexation of Korea by the Japanese Empire.
Today in post-empire Japan, many zainichi Koreans continue to live, descended from those Koreans who were forced to move to Japan in the years leading up to World War II.
We begin with Sunja, a young and poor Korean who is pulled mercilessly in different directions by the actions and choices of men. As we read, we travel from rural, coastal Korea to both the highest and lowest parts of Japanese society. Pachinko is an incredible family saga and one of the best historical fiction books of all time.
Lady Macbeth by Ava Reid

Lady Macbeth is Ava Reid’s feminist reimagining of both Shakespeare’s iconic character and the events of the play itself. Reid’s Lady M, Roscille, is a young French princess who has been sent by her father to marry the Thane of Glammis. There, she is met with brutality—both in the desolate landscape and in the men who roam the halls of Macbeth’s castle. Young and savvy, she must find a way to survive amongst all this hopelessness.
Roscille is believed to be witch-kissed, cursed to doom any man who lays eyes on her; and so she is constantly veiled and behaves in a reserved manner. But she is also savvy, and she will use her intelligence to do more than just survive. She will come to understand and tame this blood-soaked landscape and the murderous men who wage wars on it.
Roscille is a far cry from Shakespeare’s Lady Macbeth. Rather than being the power-hungry puppetmaster, poking and prodding at her cowardly husband, she is a woman out of her depth who must learn to bend this place and its men to her will. Calling this a feminist retelling is a little misleading, since Lady M has always been a beacon of feminine strength. Instead, Roscille is simply a different kind of heroine; one a little more true to history, perhaps.
Beloved by Toni Morrison

Toni Morrison is widely regarded as one of the greatest American writers, and rightly so. Her novels set a standard for fiction that is hard to match.
Beloved, one of her most celebrated books, was written in 1987 and set in 1873, after the end of the American Civil War. Our protagonists are former slave Sethe and her teenage daughter Denver. Their home is haunted by a ghost which they believe to be that of Sethe’s own eldest daughter.
When a former slave from the same plantation on which Sethe once worked, a man named Paul D, turns up at their home, he drives the ghost away. Paul D then invites the mother and daughter to a carnival, and when they return home, a young woman named Beloved is waiting for them on their front porch.
Beloved is a story of slavery, of its traumas and the ways in which it defines a person, their family, and their community. It is a classic of American fiction, a true masterpiece, and one of the very best historical fiction books.
Finger Bone by Hiroki Takahashi
Translated from the Japanese by Takami Nieda

Novels about World War II are a dime a dozen. Some are excellent; some are forgettable and even offensive (looking at you, John Boyne, you terrible, terrible writer). Finger Bone is one of those rare novels that transcends its genre. This is a masterpiece of Japanese war fiction that encourages us to wrestle with that age-old question: where is the good in war?
Our protagonist is a young, nameless Japanese soldier in Papua New Guinea. As this short novel progresses, we watch him make and lose friends, connect with frightened locals, and survive injury and illness.
Taking place partly in a field hospital and partly in the thick of the jungle, Finger Bone is wonderfully reminiscent of the poems of Wilfred Owen. A raw tale about the darkest, bleakest moments of warfare. This is about innocent men suffering fatal wounds, struggling to overcome malaria, forging bonds, and watching those bonds get cut in the blink of an eye.
Few war novels have such a raw, powerful, painful effect on the reader as Finger Bone does, and it does so in such a short space of time. Read it in one sitting, and it’ll change you forever.
Buy a copy of Finger Bone here!
For Thy Great Pain Have Mercy on My Little Pain by Victoria MacKenzie

Easily one of the most raw, beautiful, and poetic historical fiction books you’ll ever read, For Thy Great Pain Have Mercy on My Little Pain is a true triumph of feminist literature. This 160-page novel tells the story of two medieval women who existed at the same time, both of whom wrote two valuable texts that were almost lost to time — one of which was the first known book written in English by a woman.
Julian saw a series of visions of Christ at a young age. This, and the loss of so many loved ones to disease, led her to become an anchoress, locked away in a church cell for decades. In this holy and revered, but dismal and oppressive role, Julian hears the stories and confessions of those who visit her window.
Margery, a younger woman, has also seen visions of Christ, and even takes to the street to share them with the public. This behaviour is risky, and makes her a villain to friends and strangers alike. A truly beautiful piece of feminist historical fiction, this novel is one-of-a-kind and a must-read, whether you’re a fan of historical fiction books or not.
Our Hideous Progeny by C.E. McGill

For their debut novel, Scottish author decided to write a spiritual sequel to Frankenstein. That kind of choice takes guts to make, but C.E. McGill proved they could do it.
Set in the 1850s, at a time of scientific change and advancement in Europe, Our Hideous Progeny follows Victor Frankenstein’s great niece, Mary. She and her husband are desperate to make names for themselves in the world of science — specifically geology and palaeontology.
At a time when the newly-discovered fossils of prehistoric creatures have taken the world by storm, for a woman to discover that her great uncle, mad though he may have been, might have been able to reanimate a dead thing and conquer death, is a very exciting thing to learn.
Mary and her husband Henry also have their own marital issues. She lost a newborn child and he has been secretly gambling away their money instead of dealing with his grief. Then there’s the subtly growing friendship, and potentially romantic bond, between Mary and her husband’s younger sister.
Our Hideous Progeny is a novel that juggles so much — speculative science, gothic themes and atmosphere, whispers and backstabbing, betrayal and hope and, perhaps most importantly, dinosaurs.
Buy a copy of Our Hideous Progeny here!
At Night All Blood is Black by David Diop
Translated from the French by Anna Moschovakis

At Night All Blood is Black, which won the International Booker Prize in 2021, is a heartrending historical novel by Senegalese-French author David Diop. This World War I novel tells the story of Alfa, a Senegalese man stationed in the French trenches.
When the novel opens, Alfa is cradling the dying body of his friend Mademba, whose body has been torn open. From here, At Night All Blood is Black uses the backdrop of trench warfare to explore the relevant themes of racism, humanity, and masculinity.
This is a story of binaries: the in-group and out-group; us vs. them; Black and white; hero and coward. This is a French historical novel that explores the toxic side of male camaraderie and how racism continues to live and thrive even while staring death in the face.
While you do need a steeled mind and a strong stomach to read it, At Night All Blood is Black is certainly one of the best historical fiction books of recent years.
Buy a copy of At Night All Blood is Black here!
The Miniaturist by Jessie Burton

Jessie Burton’s debut novel, The Miniaturist, remains her most beloved and successful novel; a piece of historical fiction that propelled her into the realm of admired and respected contemporary British authors. Set in Amsterdam, 1686, at the height of the Dutch East India Company’s power, The Miniaturist follows Nella, the young wife of the successful merchant trader Johannes Brandt.
As a wedding gift, Brandt presents Nella with a detailed and beautiful miniature copy of their home, which she is invited to decorate and add to by visiting an enigmatic local miniaturist who will provide what she needs.
The Brandt home is one of secrets and paranoia. Johannes’ sister Marin also lives there, and she is a particularly venomous and closed-off woman whom Nella is fearful of. As revelations come to light and Nella begins to understand her husband and his family better, her world begins to shift and fall off its axis.
The Miniaturist is an exciting, exhilarating read, defined by its twists and revelations. One of the most successful historical novels of this century, and for good reason.
Buy a copy of The Miniaturist here!
Ithaca by Claire North

Renowned author of science fiction novels Claire North (pseudonym of Catherine Webb) turned her attention to Greek history and mythology to bring us a feminist retelling with Penelope, wife of Odysseus, at its heart. Odysseus has been absent for eighteen years. He sailed with an army to fight in the Trojan War, and while other leaders and warriors returned, he never has. And so, the suitors have come knocking.
As she sits and weaves a funeral shroud, Penelope is inundated with suitors looking to marry her and take Odysseus’ place on the throne of Ithaca. Her son, Telemachus — who never knew his father — insists that Odysseus will return, and raiders are threatening the delicate peace of Penelope’s kingdom.
The story of Ithaca is told by the goddess Hera, and she provides us with a host of colourful, mostly female, characters, fleshing out the world of Ithaca and the life of Penelope. Ithaca is an excellent piece of Greek mythology retold with a feminist twist, and one of the best historical fiction books of recent years.
The Bewitching by Jill Dawson

Written by renowned author Jill Dawson, The Bewitching is a literary historical novel based on real events which took place in the Cambridgeshire village of Warboys in the late 1500s.
After village local Alice Samuel visits her new neighbours, the Throckmortons, she is inexplicably accused of witchcraft by their daughter Jane, who has recently been suffering from fits. Though her accusation is strange and baseless, it planets a seed, and the family begin to wonder if Alice has in fact somehow cursed Jane and other members of the Throckmorton family.
We watch their suspicions grow through the eyes of their faithful maid, Martha, while also occasionally turning to Alice to better understand her life, her husband, and the village itself. This is a beautiful literary novel about paranoia, suspicion, patriarchy, and power; one of the smartest and best historical fiction books of recent years.
Buy a copy of The Bewitching here!
The Pillars of the Earth by Ken Follett

Historical fiction, by its definition, can take us almost anywhere in time, but many often focus on more recent centuries.
Ken Follett’s colossal historical epic, The Pillars of the Earth, takes us all the way back to 12th century Britain. Its sequels jump forward in time until we reach the Elizabethan period. Despite its setting, the town of Kingsbridge, being fictional, many of the novel’s other elements are factual and delightfully detailed.
This is a novel that follows the building of a cathedral in the aforementioned town, and is set against a civil war known as the Anarchy, which was fought between England and Normandy. The war lasted for fifteen years and serves as the backdrop for this novel, with many historical events, such as the infamous sinking of the White Ship, being captured in this novel.
Much like Hilary Mantel’s Wolf Hall, this is a novel that dramatises the politics and people of a time in British history that is so far from us today, it almost feels like legend. An incredible epic, and one of the most beloved and successful historical fiction books to have ever come out of the UK.
Buy a copy of The Pillars of the Earth here!
The Manningtree Witches by A.K. Blakemore

The Manningtree Witches, one of my own personal favourite novels, begins in 1643, in a place almost devoid of men, after so many went off to fight in the English Civil War. We follow Rebecca West and her bitter mother Beldam West, as they come face-to-face with the Witchfinder General.
This is a novel which reveals the blackest hearts of men and the true power and reason behind the witch hunts of Europe and America. But The Manningtree Witches is also a novel about family ties and female friendships; about the power of community bonds in the face of oppression.
We follow a battle between the powerful and the vulnerable, the men and the women, the suspicious and the suspect, the strong and the weak. The Manningtree Witches is a beautiful short novel about patriarchy, written with wit and strength and stunning language that evokes the time period perfectly. One of the most poetically beautiful and best historical novels you’ll ever read.
Buy a copy of The Manningtree Witches here!
The Glutton by A.K. Blakemore

A.K. Blakemore’s second historical novel continues her immaculate trend of injecting poetry into prose, and writing tales of tragedy and hardship with so much beauty and elegance.
The Glutton is based on the real-life story of Tarare, a young Frenchman born near Lyon in the year 1772. When the novel begins, Tarare is in his late twenties and on his deathbed, telling his tale to a nun who believes him an offence; an abomination, but who is curious enough to listen and learn about The Bottomless Man.
Tarare is said to have been a scrawny man with an unslakable hunger; a man who gained fame by publicly eating live animals, household objects, and possibly even a human child. All of this hearsay is injected into the novel, and we read on as Tarare is born, raised, leaves home, and wanders headlong into the French revolution.
The Glutton is a stunningly written tale full of gruesome events, visceral language, and unforgivable acts. But it’s also a politically-charged tale of class and poverty. This is the unbelievable tale of a young man growing up, being beaten and abandoned, finding a family, and witnessing a revolution. Easily one of the best historical fiction books of recent years.
Buy a copy of The Glutton here!
The Mountains Sing by Nguyen Phan Que Mai

For fans of Pachinko (above), The Mountains Sing is a sweeping family saga set against the tumultuous and disastrous backdrop of change and war in 20th century Vietnam. Here, we follow the Tran family across decades of political shifts, beginning with their relocation from their own rural farm to the city of Hanoi during the rise of Communism.
This leads to the beginnings of the Vietnam War, which tears the Tran family apart as some of the men travel to Ho Chi Minh to bear arms and fight. Nguyen Phan Que Mai herself has discussed the difficulties of writing this novel in English, and the pride she felt in writing something so comprehensive.
She has mentioned how the family’s matriarch is the grandmother she had always wished for, and how this novel was born from her own experiences living through the Vietnam War. A wonderfully personal tale, but also one that takes us across generations and landscapes, painting a vivid and uncomfortably real image of 20th century Vietnam.
Buy a copy of The Mountains Sing here!
The Adventures of China Iron by Gabriela Cabezon Camara
Translated from the Spanish by Fiona Mackintosh and Iona Macintyre

Another favourite of mine, The Adventures of China Iron is a unique kind of historical novel; one that prioritises queer joy in the face of patriarchy. Set against the wild and rugged landscape of 19th century Argentina, this is the story of a young woman, after all hope has left her, finding love and adventure in spite of the odds.
The titular China Iron was abused. She married and sired the child of a singer who left her. She gave that child up. Now, she is alone on the road, with nothing to her name.
As her true story gets underway, China is picked up on the road by a Scottish woman named Liz, who is looking to make her fortune in this new and mysterious land. Soon after their journey begins, China begins to crave Liz. She is a woman who feels a great deal – she lusts and yearns; she wants to love and be loved.
The Adventures of China Iron is a proudly queer and feminist book that, rather than getting angry, laughs in the face of the rigid, conservative, patriarchal status quo.A wonderful adventure across a picturesque landscape, a tale of queer and feminist liberation, and one of the best historical fiction books you’ll ever read.
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The Vaster Wilds by Lauren Groff

Lauren Groff’s intensely emotive and visceral novel about a nameless English girl taken across the ocean to the New World, only to continue her life of servitude and confront both deathly cold and famine, before escaping into the wilderness, is one of the most immersive historical novels you’re ever likely to read.
This is a transportive novel that is light on plot. Instead, it simply places us in the mind of a girl in the 17th century who has fled her colonialist settlement in the dark of night. We follow her as she battles the cold and her own hunger, as she marvels at the natural world, and as she muses on her relationship to her land, her people, and her faith.
Through flashbacks, we learn about her life in London, the people she served, and what happened to cause her to flee. Groff’s language stuns and immerses; it is harsh and poetic. This is a truly immersive and transportive tale of survival, fear, grief, and god. A difficult read but a sincerely stunning one.
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The Wolf Den by Elodie Harper

When we think of Pompeii, most of us think of its destruction by the eruption of Mount Vesuvius, but here in The Wolf Den, Elodie Harper presents us with the Pompeii that was. The Wolf Den tells the story of a brothel and a woman named Amara, sold after the death of her beloved father. This is a story of one woman’s survival; Amara uses her own wits, wiles, and strengths to live against the odds.
The Wolf Den is a staggeringly successful piece of historical fiction that explores the unique strengths of a woman, rather than painting her as strong by the archetypal male standards and frameworks.
This is a book that puts the spotlight on sex workers, reminding us of their strengths, their tenacity, their fight. It’s also a novel about friendship, as Amara makes friends for different purposes, as cynical means of survival and also as bonds to keep herself and others alive and proud. The beginning of an epic trilogy, The Wolf Den is one of the most refreshingly unique and spirited historical fiction books out there.
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The Court Dancer by Kyung-sook Shin
Translated from the Korean by Anton Hur

Based on a true story — set in the final years of 19th century Korea as China, Russia, and Japan are threatening the nation trapped between them — The Court Dancer is a love story. This is the romantic tale of a man and a woman from two different worlds, colliding in a moment of beauty.
And while that is true, this is also the tale of a woman born without a family, adopted into the courts of the Joseon Dynasty, romanced by a French diplomat, and whisked away across the waves to foreign shores. All the while, she is trying to find the time to understand who she is, what she is, and what she wants out of a life that has never really been hers.
Written by one of South Korea’s most beloved and celebrated authors, The Court Dancer is a story about the commodification of cultures, their art, and even their own people. It is about the ways in which colonists and powerful men wilfully forget the humanity of those they treat like toys and property.
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Mary and the Birth of Frankenstein
Translated from the Dutch by Laura Watkinson

Mary and the Birth of Frankenstein is a dedication to the life and the genius of Mary Shelley by Dutch author Anne Eekhout, set across two different summers during the teenage years of the Frankenstein author’s life. The first of these summers is 1812, when Mary was only fourteen. The second is 1816, the infamous summer spent at Lake Geneva with her husband and their friend Lord Byron.
That summer of 1816 led to the creation of Frankenstein, as the group challenged one another to write horror stories and read them by the fire. We spend time with Mary as she deals with the loss of her first-born child and the fear that her newborn son William might share the same fate.
The summer of 1812 was spent in Dundee, where Mary bonded with a grief-stricken girl of her own age. The two became fast friends, and that friendship eventually blossomed into something far more romantic and intense. We read about this summer in a series of journal entries from the young Mary herself.
Mary and the Birth of Frankenstein is a gorgeous piece of gothic historical fiction about a young woman dealing with loss, learning about herself, falling in love, and so much more, all before she ever wrote her masterpiece.
The Empusium by Olga Tokarczuk
Translated from the Polish by Antonia Lloyd-Jones

Set in 1913, Nobel Prize-winner Olga Tokarczuk’s brilliantly feminist tale of historical horror, The Empusium, follows a young Polish man named Wojnicz, who is suffering with tuberculosis and so has arrived at a treatment centre up in the mountains of Germany. During his stay, he talks with the other men, many of whom often enjoy discussing how women are inferior in both body and mind.
But early in the novel, the wife of the centre’s owner is found dead, presumably by suicide. Her death leads to a series of strange events, and compounds the conversations being had by the men there. These men also imbibe a strange concoction that does strange things to their minds. The story becomes more unhinged as the absence of women is felt so strongly. Another work of genius by Tokarczuk.
The Book Thief by Markus Zusak

Written by Australian author Markus Zusak, The Book Thief is his most successful and celebrated novel. If you haven’t read this novel, you might have seen its very good film adaptation, starring the charismatic Geoffrey Rush and Emily Watson. Narrated by Death itself, The Book Thief follows the life of a young German girl named Liesel.
Similar to Hans Fallada’s Alone in Berlin, this is a novel about ordinary German civilians looking on helplessly as their country becomes corrupted by the spread of fascism. The novel begins with Liesel losing her brother and being adopted by a kindly couple: Hans and Rosa, before befriending a local boy named Rudy.
The book’s name comes from Liesel’s small act of rebellion as she saves a book from a bonfire as the Nazis engage in their infamous book-burning. This is a dense and engrossing novel full of heart; a strikingly human piece of historical fiction.
Buy a copy of The Book Thief here!
The Corset by Laura Purcell

Laura Purcell is an incredible British author who brings so much life to the genres of gothic, horror, and historical fiction, and The Corset remains her sharpest work. A dual narrative split between a young wannabe scientist from a middle-class family and an incarcerated girl who believes she has magically murdered several people, The Corset is a dizzying and exquisite historical novel.
The narrative of this book shifts back and forth between the interviews and life events of one woman, and the biographical flashbacks of the other, as she explains how she ended up in prison with the label of “murderess”. The question of whether or not anything supernatural at all is going on is such an alluring one. The Corset is a true page-turner and one of the best historical fiction books of today.
Enticing, mysterious, enigmatic, and engrossing, The Corset is a novel that encompasses many different genres, and it does so with flourish and expertise.
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The Whispering Muse by Laura Purcell

Laura Purcell has been writing excellent gothic, horror, and historical novels for a while, but her fifth foray into the genre — The Whispering Muse — might be her masterpiece. Set in a West End theatre during the 19th century, The Whispering Muse follows a young woman named Jenny who has been hired as the dresser for the theatre’s lead actress.
But Jenny has been hired under the condition that she keep a close eye on Lilith, whom the wife of the theatre’s owner believes cannot be trusted. As she gets closer to both the owner’s wife and the talented actress Lilith, Jenny finds that her loyalties are torn.
Making things more difficult is the rumour that Lilith is in possession of a cursed item, and has made a deal with tragic muse Melpomene in order to secure success as an actress. The Whispering Muse is a daring and dark novel, even amongst other great gothic novels. It plays with the reader and the characters in ways only a gothic novel can.
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The Underground Railroad by Colson Whitehead

Colson Whitehead’s masterpiece The Underground Railroad won the Pulitzer Prize, the National Book Award, and the Arthur C. Clarke Award. This is an amazing piece of American historical fiction that reimagines the titular Underground Railroad as an actual underground network of train lines.
We follow Cora, a slave in the 19th century American South, who escapes her Georgia plantation with the help of fellow slave Caesar. The pair hunt for the Underground Railroad and encounter both friends and enemies along the way. They commit desperate deeds to ensure their survival.
This is an incredible work of American historical fiction that has since cemented Colson Whitehead as one of the great American writers of the 21st century.
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Regeneration by Pat Barker

Arguably best known for her feminist retelling of the Trojan War, The Silence of the Girls (below), Pat Barker also penned an illuminating trilogy of books about World War 2: the Regeneration trilogy. Written in the early 1990s, this trilogy of historical novels consists of Regeneration, The Eye in the Door, and The Ghost Road.
Inspired by the lived experiences of her own grandfather, a World War I soldier, Regeneration explores the effects of war on the minds of those soldiers that live through it. Regeneration also features fictionalised versions of real-life WWI poets Siegfried Sassoon and Wilfred Own.
Set in Craiglockhart War Hospital in Edinburgh, this is an anti-war novel that follows psychiatrist Dr. W.H.R. Rivers, as well as the aforementioned Sassoon and Owen, as soldiers in the hospital are being treated for PTSD (what we once called shell shock). Regeneration and its sequels remain some of the best historical fiction books of all time.
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The Silence of the Girls by Pat Barker

Pat Barker’s harsh but illuminating feminist historical novel retells the story of Homer’s classic The Iliad from the perspectives of ordinary people, rather than heroes. The Silence of the Girls retells the story of the Trojan War from the perspective of Briseis — queen turned captive turned prize for Achilles as one of many spoils of the war.
Pat Barker has a knack for taking eras and stories that typically focus on the masculine and the heroic, and putting the focus instead on the tragedy of it all. She did it with Regeneration and World War I (above), and she’s done it again with The Silence of the Girls.
This is one of the most powerful classic retellings you’re ever likely to read; a novel that highlights the darkest, most desperate, most deplorable acts of warfare. A feminist piece of historical fiction of the highest calibre.
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The Leviathan by Rosie Andrews

Set in 1643, during the English Civil War, The Leviathan is a creeping, gothic piece of historical fiction that will have you gripping the pages like the wheel of an out-of-control car.
Our narrator protagonist, Thomas Treadwater, is a young man who has returned from the war to his father’s rural farm. His younger sister is rather out of sorts because she believes that their new servant has been seducing and manipulating their ageing father.
On occasion, chapters shift forward to Thomas as an old man, married and comfortable, but haunted by something in his house. Something which he must periodically feed and watch over.
The Leviathan is Laura Purcell meets Stuart Turton with a glorious and delightful campness and atmosphere reminiscent of Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein. One of the most fun and thrilling historical novels you will ever get your hands on, and one that you’ll definitely tear through at pace.
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Homegoing by Yaa Gyasi

To consider that American author Yaa Gyasi’s Homegoing is a debut novel is simply mind-blowing. This is an extraordinary debut work of fiction, the kind you so rarely see. Homegoing is an enormous epic novel which spans continents and decades, generations of lives and the entire history of the United States.
Homegoing begins with two sisters, and the threads which lead on from their lives. These are lives that they had next to no control over, and yet shaped not only what they would become, but what the generations that followed would be. From Ghana to the US, this incredible novel by an extraordinary Black writer is one-of-a-kind, and a real masterpiece of American historical fiction.
Briefly, A Delicious Life by Nell Stevens

Nell Stevens’ debut novel, Briefly, A Delicious Life, is one of the most sensual, sexy, and satisfying historical novels you’re ever likely to read. Similar to Maggie O’Farrell’s Hamnet (above), this novel places a celebrated male artist at the centre but focuses its attention instead on those sorely overlooked people who surrounded him.
Here, that artist is Chopin, who has contracted consumption and has come to Mallorca for rest and recovery. With him is French author George Sand, with whom Chopin has been having a love affair. Our narrator, however, is the ghost of a young girl who died five hundred years earlier, haunts their new home, and quickly becomes smitten with the beautiful George Sand.
She haunts the Charterhouse and admires Sand from the shadows, digging into her memories and learning more about her — the masculine clothes she wears and the male name she has adopted. Briefly, A Delicious Life is a beautiful historical novel that revels in pleasure: sexual desire, feminine sensuality, delicious food, beautiful scenery.
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The North Water by Ian McGuire

The often overlooked The North Water is a brutal piece of historical fiction; a must-read for fans of Jack London’s novel The Sea Wolf. Set aboard a British whaling vessel called the Volunteer, this is a simple novel about brutality, depravity, and the ways in which the harshness of nature and humanity can be hard to tell apart.
Aboard this ship, disgraced and broke ex-army surgeon Patrick Sumner must face the inhuman terror of harpooner Henry Drax, a brute who delights in bloodshed. The North Water isn’t for everyone; echoing the brutal tone and style of Cormac McCarthy, this is a novel of intensity and aggression. A one-of-a-kind historical novel.
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The Key in the Lock by Beth Underdown

The Key in the Lock is an exciting and relatively unique piece of historical fiction, in that it is a drama which doubles as a compelling murder mystery story.
The Key in the Lock is a narrative that is split chronologically. We follow both the adult Ivy, who lost her son in the Great War, and the child Ivy of the late Victorian period, emotionally scarred by a dreadful fire. The mystery of the novel surrounds the fire itself, the boy who died in that fire, and the reasons behind it.
As a child, Ivy was the daughter of the village doctor. When the fire broke out, she and her father were called to the big house, and became tangled in the web of lies surrounding the cause of the blaze.
As an adult, Ivy has not only lost her son, but her husband is also incredibly sick, and as we flit back to the past we see how she and her husband’s relationship initially began. The Key in the Lock is a shining example of both historical British fiction and the legacy genre of murder mystery novels.
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Atonement by Ian McEwan

Not only is Atonement the greatest literary achievement of Ian McEwan’s career, it also received a staggering and beautiful film adaptation from director Joe Wright. Wright is known for his adaptations of literary works, which also include Pride and Prejudice and Anna Karenina, but his talents shone brightest with Atonement.
McEwan’s historical novel moves from pre-war England, into World War II, and ending in 1999. Our narrator-protagonist is Briony, who is writing the novel at age 77. We spend time in her pre-war childhood and learn about her relationships, the lies she tells, and the mistakes she must live with.
We also watch her grow up through World War II, and see how the actions of her childhood continue to reverberate throughout her life, and the lives of those around her. An intimate, sensitive, and provocative novel, Atonement remains one of the very best historical fiction books ever written.
The Pull of the Stars by Emma Donoghue

The Pull of the Stars made a huge splash upon its release, rightly so, and is now unquestionably Emma Donoghue’s most successful novel. The Canada-based Irish author penned a story of love in a time of war and disease. Set in a Dublin hospital during World War I, as the Spanish Flu slowly ravages the British Isles, Julia Power is a nurse who must help young mothers and comfort those stricken by this strange new illness.
Over the course of just three days, Nurse Power meets two women — one on the lam and the other a new volunteer — and their stories tangle together into a kind of melody that sings louder and louder as The Pull of the Stars progresses. A unique book amongst war-based narratives, this is a claustrophobic and intimate tale that ranks highly amongst even the very best historical fiction books.
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Haven by Emma Donoghue

Following the massive success of The Pull of the Stars (above), Donoghue dug even further back in time to the 7th century. Haven is a historical novel that tells the story of the founding of Skellig Michael, an isolated island off the coast of Ireland. Today, Skellig Michael is perhaps best known for its use in The Last Jedi as the place where Luke Skywalker retreated into hiding.
In the 7th century, however — as Donoghue tells it in Haven — the island was discovered by a priest and two monks after the priest experienced a prophetic dream. Haven is the story of that dream and the subsequent jou