Explore Niche Nonfiction with These Recent Microhistories

The term “microhistory” is a relatively new designation that refers to nonfiction history books that focus in on a single event, person, or other specific unit of research. The idea is to stay away from the broad 101-style overviews and surveys, and the inevitable generalizations that result from that kind of approach.
Think of it as the professional author version of the rabbit-hole phenomenon online, when you get intensely interested in some random thing and suddenly half an afternoon has gone by. The bald eagle, say. Or the history of clocks. Or books bound in human skin. No, really.
The books gathered below are a sampling of popular recent microhistories published since 2019 with average reader ratings of 3.5 stars and above. We’ve also thrown in a few upcoming titles from the rest of 2022 to look forward to, for those who like to plan their reading well in advance.
Scroll over the book covers to learn more about each title, and add the ones that pique your interest to your Want to Read shelf.
Available Now
Upcoming
Do you enjoy microhistories? What are some of your favorites? Let's chat books in the comments below!
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Kristen
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May 20, 2022 04:18AM

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Yes, I guess I like them! AND this List might become a starting point to add to the ones I already planned to get my hands on.
I'm looking forward to reading The Bald Eagle.




Who is the author, or can you link to the book page?



Who is the author? I tried looking it up and I haven't found it.

Here's the real one: The Book: A Cover-to-Cover Exploration of the Most Powerful Object of Our Time by Keith Houston



Here's the real one: [book:The Book: A Cover-to-Cover Explora..."
He also wrote Shady Characters about punctuation.
