Favorite Historical Fiction?

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Lifer
Nov 26, 2018
8,946
37,969
RTP, NC. USA
Cryptonomicon - N. Stephenson
Musashi - Eiji Yoshikawa
Taiko - Eiji Yoshikawa
The Complete Compleat Enchanter - L. Sprague de Camp (More of fictional mythology base on number of European mythologies)
 
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sparker69

Part of the Furniture Now
Feb 25, 2022
646
2,775
Montreal, Quebec, Canada
'You astonish me. I had no notion of it. Another language, sir? But I dare say it is much the same thing – a putain, as they say in French.'
'Oh no, nothing of the kind – not like at all. A far finer language. More learned, more literary. Much nearer the Latin. And by the by, I believe the word is patois, sir, if you will allow me.'
Just don't mix up "poutine" and "putain", like I did, talking to an old French Canadian couple while I was learning French years back! It's not the same thing! :ROFLMAO:
 

BCF

Part of the Furniture Now
Dec 23, 2022
667
10,262
Pennsylvania
The novels, short stories and poetry of Wendell Berry about his fictional community of Port William, Kentucky. Beautiful writing about tobacco farming families spanning from the Civil War through the 20th century.
 
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Lifer
Dec 24, 2014
2,099
14,352
Tucson Az
Don't really read a lot of historic fiction unless you count alternative history like Harry Turtledoves Southern Victory series.
 
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LotusEater

Lifer
Apr 16, 2021
4,113
56,234
Kansas City Missouri
May not really be historical fiction but I enjoy Caleb Carr historical thrillers like “The Alienist”. A lot of period detail and some fictionalization of real historical figures. E.g., Theodore Roosevelt

 
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brian64

Lifer
Jan 31, 2011
9,637
14,759
Flash forward 20 years and the title of this thread will be "Have You Ever Read a Book?"
20 years? That's by far the best case scenario...you're much more optimistic than me.

More likely one big Mad Max theme park for however many are still around. Hope I'm wrong.
 
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Zack Miller

Part of the Furniture Now
Dec 13, 2020
643
1,948
Fort Worth, Texas
My favorites are the works of Leon Uris and James Michener.
I like the early Michener—Tales of the South Pacific, Return to Paradise, Sayonara, The Bridges at Toko-Ri. His later work got too pendulous. I believe he employed subordinates to do much of the work.

Still, the first two works mentioned above place him among other greats of South Sea Literature like London, Nordhoff and Hall, Melville, Maugha, et al