Read Across the 20th Century with These New Novels

Posted by Cybil on August 25, 2021


Looking to read about the Roaring Twenties, the Spanish flu pandemic, World War II, or the grunge era? These new historical fiction books will take you on a tour of the past century, with plenty of page-turning drama! To help you find a setting that suits your reading mood, we broke down these books by the dominant decade they are set in, from 1900 to the 1990s. 

Here you'll find newer historical fiction (all published since 2018), from housewives fighting vampires in the 1990s and a Booker Prize–winning debut about a hardscrabble Scottish childhood in the 1980s to a rock 'n' roll tale set in the 1970s and back through the decades! 

Scroll over the book covers to learn more about each novel, and be sure to add the books that pique your interest to your Want to Read shelf!
 

1990s

 
 

1980s

 

1970s

 

1960s

 

1950s

 

1940s

     

1930s

1920s

1910s


1900s



It's your turn! Let us know which are your favorite books set during the 20th century in the comments below.

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Comments Showing 1-26 of 26 (26 new)

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message 1: by Cendaquenta (new)

Cendaquenta Currently I'm reading Great Circle and greatly enjoying it. There are two storylines, one covers most of the first half of the 20th century from 1909 up till 1950, and follows a woman, named Marian Graves, who sets out to circumnavigate the globe by plane, from north to south. The other storyline is set in the mid-2010s and follows the actor cast to play Marian in a biopic.

It's a big book and very much literary fiction, there's a lot of back and forth between timelines and perspectives, but if you like that sort of story I definitely recommend it. (Though I'm only a third of the way through, so take the rec with a pinch of salt.)


message 2: by Hazel Bee (new)

Hazel Bee Another great list


message 3: by [deleted user] (new)

I am surprised Ellen Marie Wisemans novel set during Spanish pandemic isnt featured on here...


message 4: by Will (new)

Will The best books in this collection were “This Tender Land” by William Kent Krueger, “Where the Crawdads Sing” by Delia Owens and “Summer of 69’” by Elin Hilderbrand.


message 5: by Victor (new)

Victor Bonifacio Great post! Eager to read more books from this list.


message 6: by Sharon (new)

Sharon Ryder Roberts "A guide to slaying Vampires" is one i can not wait to read, so i can test that knowledge on the Vampires that plague my life constantly. (Yeah, they all work in hospitals and come at you in the middle of the night - taking so much blood from you! Lol


message 7: by Gisele (new)

Gisele Great suggestions, thanks. Is there a list for previous centuries?


message 8: by Laura (new)

Laura "New" novels? Hardly. But that's okay it's a good list.


message 9: by May (new)

May This was such a great list of books! I added so many to my "want to read" list!


message 10: by John (new)

John Fetzer The 1940s has so many possibilities. Two I would add are "Manhattan Beach" and "All the Light We Cannot See".


message 11: by Leo (new)

Leo What a fun concept. Might do my own little challenge one day. Reading a book sett in different decades, taking a lot inspiration from this list


message 12: by ♥Xeni♥ (new)

♥Xeni♥ I've read Amberlough Amberlough (The Amberlough Dossier, #1) by Lara Elena Donnelly this month, and it's a perfectly crazy and somewhat dark embodiment of the Weimer Republic in a fantasy-imagined world before war breaks out. A revolution takes place in the next book, and shows the dark sides of war. It's a very interesting fictional take on this time period.


message 13: by MundiNova (new)

MundiNova So glad to see Utopia Avenue on this list! The way Mitchell captured 1966/67 London was magical. His descriptions of the band's fictional songs made them come to life. I don't know how he did it, but it was like emotionally feeling them as you read. Brilliant.


message 14: by Cosmic (new)

Cosmic Butterfly Such a great list of books!! I've added so many to my "want to read" list.


message 15: by Toni (new)

Toni This section, while helpful and interesting, shouldn’t be the landing page for Goodreads. What you’re now calling the ‘Community page’ should be what we see first, because that’s what we are, a community of readers. (In my opinion, thanks.)


message 16: by Ellen (new)

Ellen I'm recommending A Fierce Radiance, by Lauren Belfer, a novel set in the 1940's. It is an engaging novel and the protagonist is a female photojournalist, but what really made this novel stand out for me is that it tells, in a fictionalized way, about the development (not the discovery) of antibiotics and the race by the US government and industry to scale up production in time to save the lives of American soldiers during WWII.


message 17: by Jacinthe (new)

Jacinthe Paille In 2019 I discovered Canadian author Genevieve Graham, and I so far have read three of her great books: Tides of Honour, Come from Away and one of her latest, The Forgotten Home Child. Ms Graham focuses on little known Canadian events and writes compelling historical fiction around them, like for example the Halifax fire (Tides) and the British Home Children (Forgotten). Check them out!


message 18: by Alison Rose (last edited Aug 28, 2021 08:58PM) (new)

Alison Rose Some great books here, but I'm confused as to why they're called "new" when some of them came out in 2018.


message 19: by Marie (new)

Marie Interesting list of what some would classify as "historical fiction".. Thanks for the title suggestions.


message 20: by marjorie (new)

marjorie lecker Suggesting Deafening by Frances Itani https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/3...
inspired by the experiences of her deaf grandmother. The is the story of a little girl growing up on the shores of the Bay of Quinte in southern Ontario in the early years of the 20th century, who is struck deaf by scarlet fever at the age of five.


message 21: by Madison (new)

Madison Riethman Helene Wecker’s The Golem and the Djinni series is a triumph in early 1900s historical fiction! The two books span the first few decades of the century in New York, and includes a fabulous selection of perspectives diverse in age, culture, and experience.


message 22: by Ashley (new)

Ashley Shea That cover for Vera was enough to sell me!


message 23: by Terry (new)

Terry Jordan Great list of reading material! I also loved the input of others. Thank you all for helping me add to my want to read wish list! I just finished The Exiles by Kline. It's about women and the penal colonies of Australia. Pretty good!


message 24: by Anthony (new)

Anthony English Interesting distribution of authors: 84% female, 16% male.


message 25: by Jessica (new)

Jessica I absolutely loved What The Wind Knows. It’s a beautiful and unique story with an unexpected, heart touching ending that left me full of emotions. The book summary doesn’t do it justice. Stringy recommend. Glad to see it on the list.


message 26: by Monica (new)

Monica Excellent list! I've read more than a few of the books on the list. I really enjoyed Crawdads, A Long Petal of the Sea, The Henna Artist, The Stationary Shop, The Vanishing Half, Daisy Jones, and Opal & Nev (which I thought was similar but better). Finally, The book woman of Troublesome Creek was my favorite and one few others seem to have heard of which is the same thing I can say about the "blue people" depicted in the book.


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