Historical Fictionistas discussion

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Recommendations? > In need of a new WWII book.

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message 1: by Madelynn (new)

Madelynn Vickers | 1 comments My favorite book is The Auschwitz Escape . I'm looking for more books to read. I loved The Boy in the Striped Pajamas and The Book Thief . Recommendations please!


message 2: by Ashley Marie (new)

Ashley Marie  | 670 comments Hi Madelynn!

I adored Code Name Verity, Prisoner of Night and Fog, Sarah's Key, Between Shades of Gray, Salt to the Sea, and The Complete Maus as far as WWII historical fiction :)


message 3: by Jasmine, Gatekeeper of Giveaways. (last edited Jun 29, 2017 06:33PM) (new)

Jasmine | 1478 comments Mod
There are so many good ones! I also really enjoyed Sarah's Key. Some others that I loved include The Nightingale, Lilac Girls, All the Light We Cannot See, The Storyteller, Torn Thread (if you are looking for YA) and The Reader. There are also the classics Night, The Diary of a Young Girl, and The Complete Maus.


message 4: by Chris (last edited Jun 29, 2017 07:03PM) (new)

Chris (cdavies1951) | 20 comments I just read a new book that I loved: Goodnight from London by Jennifer Robson by Jennifer Robson


message 5: by Eileen (new)

Eileen Iciek | 462 comments I recently read A Pledge of Silence by Flora J. Solomon by Flora Solomon. It is about American nurses captured by the Japanese in the Philippines during WWII. An amazing book! I cried at the end and its been years since that last happened.

It's had lots of great reviews and deserved every one of them.


message 8: by Jennifer (last edited Jun 30, 2017 02:55AM) (new)


message 9: by Linda (new)

Linda Bridges (lindajoyb) | 846 comments Absolutely was enthralled by A Pledge of Silence.


message 10: by Alison (new)

Alison Mussett | 2 comments I loved The Chilbury Ladies' Choir out earlier this year. Set at the beginning of WWII it follows the stories five women living in a small village in Kent who come together to sing in the village choir. It’s a cracking read and a real page turner as you get drawn into each of the characters stories. With love, loss and friendship, as the characters find out who they really are there are moments of joy and moments of sadness that bring a tear to your eye. Highly recommended. The Chilbury Ladies' Choir by Jennifer Ryan


AshleyA (MamaNeedsBooks) (mamaneedsbooks) The Girl From the Train by Irma Joubert
Dream When You're Feeling Blue by Elizabeth Berg
The Orphan's Tale by Pam Jenoff
Lilac Girls by Martha Hall Kelly
The Zookeeper's Wife A War Story by Diane Ackerman (wasn't my cup of tea but others enjoyed it)

On my bedside table TBR
Mischling by Affinity Konar
The Nightingale by Kristin Hannah


message 12: by Sarah (new)

Sarah | 82 comments I can't do links at the moment but Lilac Girls and the Nightingale were very good. Something different from everyone else's I also enjoyed the Kommandant's Girl, The Key to Rebecca, The Paris Architect, Sarah's Key, and Those Who Save Us. All good reads!


message 13: by Carrie (new)

Carrie | 59 comments I have read many of these and enjoyed them . Also recently discovered Jennifer Robson and the latest Amy Stewart


message 14: by Gary (new)

Gary Hall | 23 comments New and different is "The 5K Zone: Cold War Border Intrigue. A post-war novel dealing with the expulsion of ethnic Germans from the Czechoslovakian Sudetenland. It deals with the lives of German youngsters Trudi Kehle and Peter Ackerman as they mature and escape Russian/Czech oppression in the Sudetenland.

Based on reality and thoroughly researched by the author.


message 16: by Dem (new)

Dem | 266 comments Madelynn wrote: "My favorite book is The Auschwitz Escape . I'm looking for more books to read. I loved The Boy in the Striped Pajamas and The Book Thief . Recommendations ..."

Really enjoyed Birdsong Birdsong by Sebastian Faulks by Sebastian FaulksBirdsong
A Long Long Way
A Long Long Way by Sebastian Barry
Private Peaceful by Michael Morpurgo Private Peaceful
The One Man The One Man by Andrew Gross
Five Quarters of the Orange by Joanne Harris Five Quarters of the Orange


message 17: by Bkwmlee (last edited Jul 01, 2017 03:50PM) (new)

Bkwmlee | 13 comments I'm reading Those Who Save Us right now for book club -- it's good so far. I also recently read The Lost Letter, which is partially set during the war (Austria in 1938/1939) with a dual narrative set in the 1980s -- loved the book, gave it 5 stars!

The Chilbury Ladies' Choir was also very good -- definitely recommended.

Also loved All the Light We Cannot See, which I read at the beginning of the year for another book club -- it's one of my favorite reads this year!


message 18: by Kelly B (new)

Kelly B (kellybey) I just started The Women in the Castle, and it's pretty good. A slightly different take on WW II as the main characters are German women.


message 19: by Tom (new)

Tom Stanton | 2 comments Suite Francaise by Nemirovsky


message 20: by Elinor (new)

Elinor Alison wrote: "I loved The Chilbury Ladies' Choir out earlier this year. Set at the beginning of WWII it follows the stories five women living in a small village in Kent who come together to sing ..."

I keep seeing this title everywhere. I just HAVE to read it! But what should I do about the pile of 20 books on my night table? That's a rhetorical question that I keep asking myself.


message 21: by Patrick (last edited Aug 03, 2017 11:32AM) (new)

Patrick  (volmann) | 4 comments A Spy at the Heart of the Third Reich: The Extraordinary Story of Fritz Kolbe, America's Most Important Spy in World War II
Lucas DeLattre - Highly recommend the audio......available on YouTube via Chrome


message 22: by [deleted user] (last edited Aug 03, 2017 01:21PM) (new)

If you like stories about brave women serving in WW2, I would suggest We Band of Angels The Untold Story of American Nurses Trapped on Bataan by the Japanese by Elizabeth M. Norman We Band of Angels: The Untold Story of American Nurses Trapped on Bataan by the Japanese. A good book about raw courage and dedication to duty to others.

Another interesting book is Night Witches The Amazing Story of Russia's Women Pilots in WWII by Bruce Myles Night Witches: The Amazing Story of Russia's Women Pilots in WWII, about the exploit of Soviet female combat pilots.


message 23: by Pat (new)

Pat Camalliere | 24 comments The Winds of War and also War and Remembrance, both epics by Herman Wouk, and on my top 10 lifetime favorites.


message 24: by Laura (new)

Laura | 20 comments Fiction: The Alice Network by Kate Quinn. Nonfiction that reads like a novel: Operation Mincemeat


message 25: by Miss M (new)

Miss M | 21 comments Jasmine wrote: "Peter is that book fiction? My husband is in the Navy and it seems like the only books I can get him to read are ones about the Navy."

I recently finished Crossing the Line: A Bluejacket's Odyssey in World War II, memoir of a young naval recruit. It was excellent and I would highly recommend for your husband (though non-fiction.)


message 26: by Louise (new)

Louise Marley (lmarley) | 2 comments If you enjoy historical fantasy, a WWII novel that just came out is AT THE TABLE OF WOLVES, by Kay Kenyon, a pre-war spy thriller with a touch of the fantastic. Great read.


message 27: by Randi (new)

Randi Samuelson-Brown | 4 comments I LOVE Atonement by Ian McEwan...


message 28: by Jasmine, Gatekeeper of Giveaways. (new)

Jasmine | 1478 comments Mod
Miss M wrote: "Jasmine wrote: "Peter is that book fiction? My husband is in the Navy and it seems like the only books I can get him to read are ones about the Navy."

I recently finished [book:Crossing the Line: ..."


Thanks. I'll pass that one on too!


message 29: by Jenna (new)

Jenna Wilson (jewilson84) I'm new to this group and was thrilled to find people whom love historical fictions as much as myself .
I have enjoyed most HF's but Sarah's Key and The Nightingale are my ultimate Favourites books.
Some of these recommended WWII books I haven't heard of yet and I cannot wait to stick my nose in every single one
Thank you .


message 30: by Victoria (new)

Victoria | 1 comments Not sure if this has been mentioned yet but I have just finished reading The Alice Network by Kate Quinn. I loved everything about it!


message 31: by Margaret (new)

Margaret Crampton (cramptonmargaret) | 8159 comments I'm currently enjoying A Man without breath


message 32: by C.P. (last edited Oct 12, 2017 04:51PM) (new)


message 33: by Sarah (new)

Sarah Bowe (sarahsbookstack) The Nightingale is freaking amazing!!


message 34: by Kathy (new)

Kathy | 3076 comments The Violin of Auschwitz (you'll also find it listed as The Auschwitz Violin)
The Narrow Road to the Deep North
Once We Were Brothers
HHhH


message 35: by Zoe (new)

Zoe Radley | 735 comments You could also try Charlotte Binghams House of Flowers duo there are two in the series but it is kind of twee I enjoyed it but it does depend on taste. Also Noel Barber’s Tanamera and a farewell to France are just marvellous


message 36: by Erin (new)

Erin **Coffee and Book Addict** (coffeebookaddict) | 7 comments I am currently reading The Book Thief. It is so good so far.


message 37: by Kathy (new)

Kathy | 3076 comments Erin wrote: "I am currently reading The Book Thief. It is so good so far."
Loved that book!


message 38: by Gary (new)

Gary Hall | 23 comments I would add "The 5K Zone: Cold War Border Intrigue." A post-war novel (1944 - 1958) which creates a coming of age/spy novel based on the reality of the Sudetenland/Czechoslovakia/West German expulsion crisis. Yours truly the author.


message 39: by Miriam (last edited Oct 13, 2017 09:00PM) (new)

Miriam Vamosh | 4 comments Kathy wrote: "Erin wrote: "I am currently reading The Book Thief. It is so good so far."
Loved that book!"

When I read "The Book Thief" I could not help being reminded of the book "thief" from those days in our family -- my own mother-in-law, Vera, as she was known then. Vera was 12 years old when the Nazis came to her home city of Budapest. The Nazis pressed all the children of that age into service, carrying coal, for example. Another job they forced the children to do was to help then clear out the homes of Jews who had been taken away. She was in an apartment house following the orders of a Nazi officer to take all the books that had been removed from the apartments of the Jews and throw them down below to be burned. As she did so, she came across the third book in Pearl Buck's trilogy "The Good Earth." So this 12-year-old girl simply stopped working, approached the Nazi officer and asked him if she could keep the book, because she hadn't read it yet. He said yes. My mother-in-law Vera's formal schooling stopped when the Nazis invaded Budapest. When the war was over, at age 16, she married and she and her husband came to newborn Israel and made their lives there. She was a lifelong reader and learner, self-taught in history, art and music. Vera died one month ago at age 87, mother of two sons, with four granddaughters and four great-grandchildren. She was a powerful influence in all of our lives; I created one of the characters in my own historical novel, "The Scroll," based on her inimitable personality. May her memory be a blessing. www.miriamfeinbergvamosh.com


message 40: by Alexandra (new)

Alexandra Cameron I loved ‘all the light we cannot see’ and ‘alone in berlin’


message 41: by solitaryfossil (new)

solitaryfossil I really liked The Painted Bird, by Jerzy Kosinski. Not an easy, feel-good read, but excellent.


message 42: by Jasmine, Gatekeeper of Giveaways. (new)

Jasmine | 1478 comments Mod
Ronnie wrote: "I really liked The Painted Bird, by Jerzy Kosinski. Not an easy, feel-good read, but excellent."

I feel like if a WWII book is a feel-good read I missed out on something. There should be some hope, but I always expect it to be a hard read.


message 43: by Bob (new)

Bob | 3 comments a few thoughts: read W.E.B. Griffin - two series center on WW II
the Corps and Brotherhood of Arms

also once an Eagle by Anton Myers (sp?)


message 44: by Erin (new)

Erin **Coffee and Book Addict** (coffeebookaddict) | 7 comments Any of these set in Hawaii? Looking for a pearl harbor type historical fiction book.


message 45: by Rachel (last edited Oct 17, 2017 10:08AM) (new)

Rachel Sinclair | 20 comments It's not fiction, but I am really enjoying Operation Mincemeat: How a Dead Man and a Bizarre Plan Fooled the Nazis and Assured an Allied Victory - story of WWII operation to convince Germany that D-Day would target Italy not France.

On the other hand, one wonders how much of it is, ahem, exaggerated, so perhaps it could be called fiction after all?


message 46: by Angie (new)

Angie Mendoza | 1 comments I have not seen this book mentioned yet and I am so surprised! It is amazing and makes the top of my all time favorite books list. As well as it is based on a true story.

Beneath a Scarlet Sky
By: Mark T. Sullivan


message 47: by Jennifer (new)

Jennifer | 2957 comments Erin wrote: "Any of these set in Hawaii? Looking for a pearl harbor type historical fiction book."

Under the Blood-Red Sun
I haven’t read it, but my daughter did last year.
It’s YA fiction, if you’re not opposed to the genre.
I don’t know much more than that it takes place in Hawaii, after Pear Harbor, & there is an element with the main character and the Japanese Internment camps.
Hope that helps!


message 48: by Miss M (new)

Miss M | 21 comments Rachel wrote: "It's not fiction, but I am really enjoying Operation Mincemeat: How a Dead Man and a Bizarre Plan Fooled the Nazis and Assured an Allied Victory - story of WWII operation to convince..."

Not sure about the exaggeration but there are several other books plus a movie on the subject, so the basics are true!
The Man Who Never Was


message 49: by Anne (new)

Anne (gloucester) | 25 comments I remember thoroughly enjoying Herman Wouk's THE WINDS OF WAR and sequel, title of which escapes me.


message 50: by Eileen (new)

Eileen Iciek | 462 comments Anne wrote: "I remember thoroughly enjoying Herman Wouk's THE WINDS OF WAR and sequel, title of which escapes me."

War & Remembrance War and Remembrance (The Henry Family, #2) by Herman Wouk


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