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Historical Fiction Club

76 members • Free

25 contributions to Historical Fiction Club
Guess the HF from its 1 star review...
Even well-loved, super-popular, award-winning books have their serious haters! 😂 This is historical fiction. All guesses are encouraged (no googling, though!). This is meant to be fun. Don't be dismayed if you disagree with the review. Any spelling, grammar, and punctuation errors are copied directly from the review. I’ll post the correct answer tomorrow (3rd July 2026). ⭐ Honestly, wtf? I mean, we all know the blind person trope (Daredevil, etc) and the lovable Nazi trope (Hiroshima Mon Amour) and the mystical object searched for by evil Nazis trope (Indiana Jones), so why throw all of these together? The book was readable but no more so than a pulp fiction thriller. Honestly, I don't see this as being Pulitzer quality. The characters were ok, the narration interesting, but a masterpiece? The best US fiction in 2015? Perhaps not. And please don't accuse me of being too harsh - All Quiet on the Western Front, The Winds of War, The Caine Mutiny and The Sympathizer are all better war stories than this one. Might as well give Bob Dylan a Nobel for Literature while you are at it...oh damn, they did! Still not happy with this one. Sorry, but I just cannot appreciate it. I think it was a terrible choice for the Pulitzer, every bit as bad as The Sense of an Ending by Julian Barnes was for the Booker Prize in 2011. In retrospect, [Author's] 2021 bestseller [Book title] was far, far better than this one, but still suffered from being predictable and having paperthin character development. As for the TV adaptation (1) the author got what he asked for because he was begging for it all through this miserable book and (2) 27% Rotten Tomatoes rating. Nuf said. ⭐ What do you think? What's the book? (In this case, if you can think of only the title, but not the author, that's ok!)
Guess the HF from its 1 star review...
3 likes • 12d
I’m guessing All the Light We Cannot See. I’m actually surprised how many I have read of these. There were parts I liked of Doerr’s book but both tv series and book left me wanting, but the prose is pretty, so I wouldn’t give it quite so low of a rating but probably not a top 5 for me. I think writer’s can sometimes lose the plot with hyperbolic language.
Guess the book from its 1 star review...
Even well-loved, super-popular, award-winning books have their serious haters! 😂 This is historical fiction. All guesses are encouraged (no googling, though!). This is meant to be fun. Don't be dismayed if you disagree with the review. Any spelling, grammar, and punctuation errors are copied directly from the review. I’ll post the correct answer tomorrow (25th June 2026). ⭐ There was so much potential in this story and all of it was unfortunately ruined by poor writing and quick cleanup and just...uuuugggghhhhhh. I kinda want to throw this book in the trash. I really enjoyed [Character 1]’s and [Character 2]’s stories, but [Character 3]’s was so ridiculous. [Character 3]’s character was immature, clueless, and terribly underdeveloped. Actually, I hated [Character 3] throughout the book but by the end, I wished she’d jumped off the bridge instead of [Character 2]. • [Character 3] can’t remember the emergency number in England to help her sick husband, but instead of asking her new English friend who’s right in front of her face, she instead decides to run back to the hotel, thereby wasting precious time. • [Character 3] applies to Cambridge Univ online one night and the next day begins making plans on how to divorce her husband, quit her job at the family business, secure student housing, etc. She’s an American. Does Cambridge accept foreign graduate students that quickly? PROBABLY NOT. • She blabbers on throughout the entire book about being a historian then ends up choosing a grad degree in British Literature - a subject that is NEVER mentioned in the book but once, and only as an aside. • And maybe because she chose to be a Brit Lit major, this is why she feels like it’s appropriate to fling the vial back into the Thames and keep certain things to herself...BECAUSE HISTORIANS CANNOT DO THAT. EDITED TO ADD: [Character 1], the 18th-century feminist apothecarist, keeps a ledger of the names of all the women who’ve come to her for assistance in taking out the men who’ve wronged them. And I’m okay with that. Except when she knows the end is near and the police are closing in on her...so she decides to leave the ledger OUT to be discovered? Claiming that not acknowledging the women publicly erases them from history, but not considering that those women could all be hanged if their crimes are discovered???? That’s cowardice, not feminism.
Guess the book from its 1 star review...
2 likes • 19d
The Lost Apothecary. I gave it 5 stars, but neither of my daughters could get past the first couple of chapters. I also think she has a few details wrong. Funny how there can be the characters POV, the narrator POV, an author POV, and even (and perhaps most important) the readers POV.
Call it Support Saturday?
I'd love to have a few comments on WIPs, recently launched. I'd especially like to support some indies!
0 likes • 25d
yes, I mean some people might be on the cusp.
Is your new favourite author waiting for you to find them?! 🔎
Check out the Author Directory under the Classroom tab at the top of the page. You'll find links to author members' websites, books, social media accounts, Substack newsletters etc. And when you read one of their books you get to say you read them before they were famous and won all those prizes! 😉 (Authors: you earn a spot in the directory once you reach Level 3, Book Cat.)
Is your new favourite author waiting for you to find them?! 🔎
2 likes • 25d
Has anyone published in the last 6 months or so? Indie? Would love to support.
What are you reading this weekend? Other plans?
I’m reading American Spy by Lauren Wilkinson. In other plans, I’m having coffee with the local writers I recently did a 30 day writing sprint with. AND my daughter comes home from Paris 🎉 (My son comes home from the UK on Friday. It’ll be so good to have them both home again!🥰) Photo is my daughter wearing Winnie the Pooh ears at Paris Disneyland.
What are you reading this weekend? Other plans?
4 likes • 25d
Just finished Lessons in Chemistry by Bonnie Garmus. I found the novel a bit convenient and flirting with almost a flavor of magical realism (savant daughter, talking dog). Somehow liked the TV series better. But still a very fun read with cleaver themes woven in.
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Marcy Wood
4
86points to level up
@marcy-wood-7081
Marcy S. Wood, MA. Her historical fiction The Notorious Murder of Ellar Day releases 2026

Active 3d ago
Joined Mar 22, 2026