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Book Review: Becoming Madam Secretary | Stephanie Dray
Stephanie Dray writes the most powerful historical fiction books (or perhaps they are better categorized as narrative non-fiction) about real women from history. Often the women she chooses are ones that history books…
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Historical Fiction Review: I Am Rome | Santiago Posteguillo
Not for those looking for a light or quick read, I Am Rome is an epic historical thriller centered around a young Julius Caesar. At over 600 pages in text, this book is…
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Book Review: Big Lies in a Small Town | Diane Chamberlain
Two women born at different times are linked through history by a mysterious will. A perfect blend of two stories separated by decades in a small North Carolina town. About the Book |…
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Book Review: When We Left Cuba | Chanel Cleeton
Chanel Cleeton’s Next Year in Havana, was a powerful historical fiction novel about a woman named Elisa Perez forced to flee Cuba with her family in 1958, and her granddaughter traveling to Cuba…
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Book Review: Next Year in Havana | Chanel Cleeton
A mesmerizing and poignant story of family, love, and loss spanning two timelines in Miami and Havana. Chanel Cleeton’s Next Year in Havana, is a gripping story of a Cuban-American woman who travels…
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Book Review: The Witch of Willow Hall | Hester Fox
Haunting, romantic, and atmospheric—Hester Fox’s The Witch of Willow Hall is a deeply engaging gothic historical fiction novel that explores the notion of how we choose to become who we are. Set in…