An Unofficial 'The Rest Is History' Reading List
14. Historical Fiction
January 11, 2021
Description
Books Referenced
Author: Patrick O'Brian
Context:
Discussed as naval historical fiction that Tom couldn't get through - gave up after 30 pages due to too much rope/nautical detail
Author: C.S. Forester
Context:
Mentioned as naval fiction Emma Darwin grew up on, and Tom says he wasn't interested in either
Author: Marcel Proust
Context:
Referenced in a tweet comparing giving up on O'Brian to giving up on Proust after three pages because it's just about cake
Author: Rosemary Sutcliff
Context:
Mentioned as a classic way people come to Roman Britain through fiction, described as having enduring influence
Author: Rosemary Sutcliff
Context:
Described as a fabulous novel for adults about a historical Arthur in the 5th century after the Romans left
Author: René Goscinny and Albert Uderzo
Context:
Tom mentions these comics/graphic novels as what got him particularly interested in the Romans
Author: Hilary Mantel
Context:
Discussed as the most successful/prestigious historical novels of the last ten years, with Thomas Cromwell as protagonist
Author: Robert Bolt
Context:
Mentioned as presenting opposite view to Hilary Mantel - Thomas More as hero rather than villain
Author: George R.R. Martin
Context:
Discussed as fantasy novels that take elements from Wars of the Roses but with unpredictable outcomes
Author: Maurice Druon
Context:
French series set in Hundred Years' War that partly inspired Game of Thrones
Author: Arthur Conan Doyle
Context:
Mentioned as set in Hundred Years' War from English side, featuring Sir John Chandos and the Black Prince
Author: Arthur Conan Doyle
Context:
Mentioned alongside The White Company as Hundred Years' War fiction
Author: Iain Pears
Context:
Nominated as the single best historical novel Tom has read - offers multiple perspectives on Restoration England
Author: C.J. Sansom
Context:
Mentioned as very gripping novels, though criticized for having liberal humanist sceptic protagonist
Author: Bernard Cornwell
Context:
Set in Anglo-Saxon period, criticized for protagonist Uhtred being a 21st century liberal trapped in historical setting
Author: Giuseppe Tomasi di Lampedusa
Context:
Called a brilliant book about Italian unification, conservative in nature about anxiety of change
Author: Leo Tolstoy
Context:
Described as probably the most famous historical novel, noted for being about history itself and how history works
Author: Fyodor Dostoevsky
Context:
Tom mentions being commissioned by The Economist to write about it, visiting St. Petersburg in Raskolnikov's footsteps
Author: Robert Graves
Context:
Praised as the most successful attempt to ventriloquise someone from before the invention of the novel
Author: Robert Graves
Context:
Mentioned as incredibly boring because it reads like a Byzantine account of a campaign
Author: Marguerite Yourcenar
Context:
Mentioned as an attempt to mimic Hadrian's voice, described as boring due to being so accurate
Author: Lindsey Davis
Context:
Mentioned as detective novels set in ancient Rome that revel in anachronism
Author: George MacDonald Fraser
Context:
Extensively discussed as having excellent narrative voice capturing Victorian cad, praised for ambiguous treatment of empire
Author: Charles Dickens
Context:
Argued to be the single most influential novel on how English-speaking world understands the French Revolution
Author: Walter Scott
Context:
Described as influential for establishing idea of medieval England as Saxons vs Normans
Author: Margaret Mitchell
Context:
Mentioned as having seismic influence on how people saw the antebellum South, though influence now dissolved
Author: Owen Wister
Context:
Mentioned as the first Wild West novel establishing template for Hollywood westerns
Author: Miguel de Cervantes
Context:
Discussed as the first novel in modern West, about tension between past and present
Author: Colson Whitehead
Context:
Mentioned as recent novel weaving fantastical into story of slavery to brilliant effect
Author: J.R.R. Tolkien
Context:
Mentioned as a more creative response to early medieval history than rigorous historical fiction
Author: Carlos Fuentes
Context:
Described as counterfactual novel where Philip II marries Elizabeth Tudor and Don Quixote is a character
Author: Kingsley Amis
Context:
Alternate history where England never went Protestant, about a boy about to be castrated to preserve singing voice
Author: Robert Harris
Context:
Mentioned as fantastic alternate history book, remembered reading on a bus desperate to finish
Author: Kim Stanley Robinson
Context:
Alternate history where Black Death wipes out Europeans and Muslims colonize Europe
Author: Philip K. Dick
Context:
Mentioned as example of alternate history that integrates critique of the genre
Author: George Eliot
Context:
Mentioned as example of high-status novel set around time of author's birth that counts as historical
Author: William Makepeace Thackeray
Context:
Mentioned as great historical novel set around time of author's birth
Author: Stendhal
Context:
Mentioned as 19th century writer writing about events 20-30 years previous
Author: Émile Zola
Context:
Mentioned as Zola writing about Franco-Prussian War, events 20-30 years before
Author: Walter Scott
Context:
Described as classically the first historical novel, set in Jacobite period, chosen as book to survive apocalypse
Author: Jonathan Coe
Context:
Mentioned as example of people writing historical novels set in 70s and 80s
Author: Philip Hensher
Context:
Mentioned alongside Rotter's Club as historical novel set in recent past
Author: Daniel Defoe
Context:
Mentioned as possibly the very first historical novel, written 70 years after Great Plague of London
Author: Mary Renault
Context:
Discussed as middle book in Alexander trilogy, narrated by eunuch Bagoas, with vivid castration description
Author: Mary Renault
Context:
Mentioned as first in Alexander trilogy about Alexander's childhood and youth
Author: Cormac McCarthy
Context:
Described as powerful favourite book set in 1850s US-Mexico borderlands about scalp hunters
Author: Cormac McCarthy
Context:
Mentioned in comparison to Blood Meridian's apocalyptic style
Author: William Faulkner
Context:
Mentioned as very difficult book looking back to Civil War and slavery in American South
Author: Antonia Fraser
Context:
Mentioned by Dominic as the first historical novel he remembers reading as a child