November 2024
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    I liked reading Pachinko, Ibis Trilogy, The Mercies, A fine balance, Half of a yellow sun, Saxon Chronicles.

    Would love to read more about countries beyond USA, UK.

    A good prose and that’s it.

    by teahousenerd

    5 Comments

    1. Icy-Appearance347 on

      R.F. Kuang has novels on the Opium Wars as well as *Babel* set in Oxford where translation is a magical skill. The prose was good, though at least *Babel* occasionally felt like a history lesson at times.

    2. No_Tomorrow7180 on

      Emma Donoghue and Hannah Kent both write fiction in historical settings. They lean more towards literary fiction than straight up historical fiction, in my opinion, but they cover all sorts of settings.

    3. BobbittheHobbit111 on

      Guy Gavriel Kay has a lot of great historical fiction(it’s technically alt world with a very small splash of fantasy, but is based on our worlds history)

      Recommend either Lion’s of Al-Rassan which takes place in Spain near the end of the moorish occupation or Under Heaven which takes place during the Tang Dynasty; though I love all of his works.

    4. DistractedByCookies on

      James Clavell has a variety set in Asia: Shogun (Japan, 1600s), Tai-Pan (Hong Kong, 1840 and on), King Rat (WWII, but Japanese PoW camp so a bit different), Noble House (follow up to Tai-Pan), Gai-Jin (part 3 of the Asian Saga)

      They’re all chonky books but very good.

    5. illegal_fiction on

      Most Isabel Allende books — e.g. Daughter of Fortune

      In the Time of the Butterflies

      Twentieth Wife

      Homegoing

      Edited: formatting

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