More Like This, Please: 5 Historical Fiction Bookalikes You’ll Love

Elizabeth Breeden
August 13 2020
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Some people might say their favorite element of Netflix is the sheer quantity of content: you could spend all day scrolling through dramas, comedies, thrillers, action flicks, documentaries, romances, sitcoms, police procedurals—the list goes on and on, and so do the choices. Personally, my favorite is the next step, beyond all the choices, when you’ve loved a show or movie and then a magical phrase appears: “more like this.” It’s the next content already primed for you and geared up. So, here’s a “more like this” take on historical fiction reads. Sit back, relax, and click on your next favorite.

This post was originally published on GetLiterary.com.

Florence Adler Swims Forever
by Rachel Beanland

If you loved The Guest Book by Sarah Blake…

Like much of The Guest Book, Florence Adler Swims Forever is set in the 1930s along the northeastern U.S. shoreline and follows complicated family dynamics in the aftermath of tragedy. In Beanland’s novel, the titular character drowns suddenly in the first few pages while swimming off the beach in her hometown of Atlantic City. Grieving the loss, her family decides to hide Florence’s death from her sister, who is convalescing at a maternity hospital due to a risky pregnancy. This huge lie begins to unspool other family secrets, and the three generations break apart—and come together—over the course of the summer to ultimately reveal the resiliency of the human spirit. In both books, the 1930s time period looms, with the threat of Hitler’s Nazism just over the horizon in Europe.

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Florence Adler Swims Forever
Rachel Beanland

“The perfect summer read” (USA TODAY) begins with a shocking tragedy that results in three generations of the Adler family grappling with heartbreak, romance, and the weight of family secrets across the course of one summer.

“Rachel Beanland is a writer of uncommon wit and wisdom, with a sharp and empathetic eye for character. She’ll win you over in the most old fashioned of ways: She simply tells a hell of a story.” —Rebecca Makkai, Pulitzer Finalist for The Great Believers

Atlantic City, 1934. Every summer, Esther and Joseph Adler rent their house out to vacationers escaping to “America’s Playground” and move into the small apartment above their bakery. Despite the cramped quarters, this is the apartment where they raised their two daughters, Fannie and Florence, and it always feels like home.

Now Florence has returned from college, determined to spend the summer training to swim the English Channel, and Fannie, pregnant again after recently losing a baby, is on bedrest for the duration of her pregnancy. After Joseph insists they take in a mysterious young woman whom he recently helped emigrate from Nazi Germany, the apartment is bursting at the seams.

Esther only wants to keep her daughters close and safe but some matters are beyond her control: there’s Fannie’s risky pregnancy—not to mention her always-scheming husband, Isaac—and the fact that the handsome heir of a hotel notorious for its anti-Semitic policies, seems to be in love with Florence.

When tragedy strikes, Esther makes the shocking decision to hide the truth—at least until Fannie’s baby is born—and pulls the family into an elaborate web of secret-keeping and lies, bringing long-buried tensions to the surface that reveal how quickly the act of protecting those we love can turn into betrayal.

Based on a true story and told in the vein of J. Courtney Sullivan’s Saints for All Occasions and Anita Diamant’s The Boston Girl, Beanland’s family saga is a breathtaking portrait of just how far we will go to in order to protect our loved ones and an uplifting portrayal of how the human spirit can endure—and even thrive—after tragedy.

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These Ghosts Are Family
by Maisy Card

If you loved The Book of Night Women by Marlon James…

The Book of Night Women follows the story of one heroine, Lilith, born into slavery on a Jamaican sugar plantation in the 18th century.  Similarly, the characters in Maisy Card’s debut, These Ghosts Are Family, experience life on a colonial Jamaican sugar plantation and the generational trauma it leaves behind. But instead of following one arc, it follows multiple storylines, tracing generations of a Caribbean family’s diaspora across two centuries. Also, as with The Book of Night Women, Card’s novel explores themes of identity, desire, and the strength of women throughout history.

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These Ghosts Are Family
Maisy Card

Longlisted for the 2020 Center for Fiction First Novel Prize

A “rich, ambitious debut novel” (The New York Times Book Review) that reveals the ways in which a Jamaican family forms and fractures over generations, in the tradition of Homegoing by Yaa Gyasi.

*An Entertainment Weekly, Millions, and LitHub Most Anticipated Book of 2020 Pick and Buzz Magazine’s Top New Book of the New Decade*

Stanford Solomon’s shocking, thirty-year-old secret is about to change the lives of everyone around him. Stanford has done something no one could ever imagine. He is a man who faked his own death and stole the identity of his best friend. Stanford Solomon is actually Abel Paisley.

And now, nearing the end of his life, Stanford is about to meet his firstborn daughter, Irene Paisley, a home health aide who has unwittingly shown up for her first day of work to tend to the father she thought was dead.

These Ghosts Are Family revolves around the consequences of Abel’s decision and tells the story of the Paisley family from colonial Jamaica to present-day Harlem. There is Vera, whose widowhood forced her into the role of a single mother. There are two daughters and a granddaughter who have never known they are related. And there are others, like the houseboy who loved Vera, whpose lives might have taken different courses if not for Abel Paisley’s actions.

This “rich and layered story” (Kirkus Reviews) explores the ways each character wrestles with their ghosts and struggles to forge independent identities outside of the family and their trauma. The result is a “beguiling…vividly drawn, and compelling” (BookPage, starred review) portrait of a family and individuals caught in the sweep of history, slavery, migration, and the more personal dramas of infidelity, lost love, and regret.

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The Dovekeepers
by Alice Hoffman

If you loved The Red Tent by Anita Diamant… 

As with The Red Tent, where Anita Diamant follows the biblical character of Dinah mentioned fleetingly in the Book of Genesis, The Dovekeepers by Alice Hoffman explores a little-known moment in Jewish history nearly two thousand years ago. Alice Hoffman has made a name for herself penning spellbinding stories, involving  magical realism, independent women, and the power of faith. In The Dovekeepers, she traces the lives of four bold and resourceful women who live on Masada, a mountain in the Judean desert, and who face an epic siege from Roman armies. Both The Red Tent and The Dovekeepers are astonishing stories of sacrifice and survival in the desert, and tributes to the women often left out of the history books.

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The Dovekeepers
Alice Hoffman

Nearly two thousand years ago, nine hundred Jews held out for months against Roman armies on Masada, a mountain in the Judean desert. The source for the recent CBS miniseries, The Dovekeepers is a beautifully written and captivating tale of four women whose lives intersect in the desperate days of the siege.

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A Long Petal of the Sea
by Isabel Allende

If you loved The House of the Spirits by Isabel Allende…

Isabel Allende’s debut novel, The House of the Spirits, shot her to fame with its epic family saga spanning generations of a Chilean family during the country’s post-colonial and political turbulence. Allende’s most recent novel, A Long Petal of the Sea, also returns to Chilean history, but its path first begins in Europe and follows characters after the Spanish Civil War, which led hundreds of thousands of Spanish citizens to flee the country’s Fascist government. They eventually rebuild their lives in Chile, riding the waves of their new home’s instability while holding fast to their dream of returning to Spain. It’s a story of hope and the immigrant experience and, like Allende’s debut thirty-five years ago, the novel also features themes of family, fate and belonging amid revolutionary times.

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A Long Petal of the Sea
Isabel Allende

If you loved The House of the Spirits by Isabel Allende… Isabel Allende’s debut novel, The House of the Spirits, shot her to fame with its epic family saga spanning generations of a Chilean family during the country’s post-colonial and political turbulence. Allende’s most recent novel, A Long Petal of the Sea, also returns to Chilean history, but its path first begins in Europe and follows characters after the Spanish Civil War, which led hundreds of thousands of Spanish citizens to flee the country’s Fascist government. They eventually rebuild their lives in Chile, riding the waves of their new home’s instability while holding fast to their dream of returning to Spain. It’s a story of hope and the immigrant experience and, like Allende’s debut thirty-five years ago, the novel also features themes of family, fate and belonging amid revolutionary times.

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MENTIONED IN:

More Like This, Please: 5 Historical Fiction Bookalikes You’ll Love

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The Underground Railroad
by Colson Whitehead

If you loved Kindred by Octavia Butler...

In Kindred, a contemporary Black woman is suddenly and inexplicably transported through time—leaving her white husband behind in the modern day—to early 1800s Maryland, where she encounters violent racism and white supremacy, including, most troublingly, from one of her own ancestors, a white plantation owner. Just as Kindred explores the horror of slavery and sexism using a speculative fiction framework, Colson Whitehead’s brilliant, Pulitzer Prize–winning novel about an alternate antebellum American South reimagines the period through a lens of magical realism. In The Underground Railroad, the novel expands upon historical situations by reimagining the Underground Railroad as a physical train that takes the characters on a harrowing journey through the states, pre-Civil War.  Both novels upend conventional narratives by reimagining and evaluating them through fantasy and history.

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The Underground Railroad
Colson Whitehead

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