Historical fiction is a genre that sets fictional stories and characters within authentic historical settings. These narratives blend invented elements… The post Historical Fiction appeared first on She Reads Everything.
Monthly Features – January 2026
Your Best Year Yet by Linda Kneidinger I received a copy of this book from the author in exchange for my honest opinion. Synopsis: What if one small challenge each week could unlock your best self? If you’ve ever felt stuck in a loop of habits that don’t serve you—or like you’re drifting through life […]
In an era when countless historical atrocities remain buried beneath layers of institutional silence, Women of a Promiscuous Nature by Donna Everhart excavates one of America’s most disturbing yet largely forgotten chapters. This meticulously researched novel exposes the American Plan, a government-sanctioned program that imprisoned thousands of women based solely on suspicion of immoral behavior […]
A Rose of the Ghetto by Israel Zangwill was published in 1893. It later appears in the short story collection The King of Schnorrers. This post may contain affiliate links that earn us a commission at no extra cost to you. A Rose of the Ghetto by Israel Zangwill A Rose of the Ghetto by […]
Vigil by George Saunders
In the opening moments of Vigil by George Saunders, we plummet alongside Jill “Doll” Blaine as she reconstitutes mid-fall, her beige skirt and pale pink blouse materializing atom by atom, her favorite black pumps clicking into existence just before she crashes headfirst into an asphalt driveway. This spectacular entrance sets the stage for what becomes […]
Same Moon Same Stars
A beautifully poignant novel about a sixteen-year-old’s experience as a military kid who must confront—and heal—tragedy in her family Merci is an Army kid, with both parents serving active-duty military. Because her mother is often deployed longer, Merci and her dad spend more time together and develop a close relationship by kayaking, connecting over art, […]
A genre-bending reimagining of Dante’s Divine Comedy, confronting modern audiences with modern sins Nine Rooms in the House is a quietly unsettling work of literary fiction that resists easy classification. Part short story collection and part novel, Dave Ellis offers a narrative that explores what it means to live a meaningful life when meaning itself […]
We Who Have No Gods by Liza Anderson
Between power and powerlessness lies a knife’s edge—and Vic Wood walks it with bloody determination In the shadowed halls where magic breathes and death whispers, Liza Anderson constructs a world that feels simultaneously ancient and achingly immediate. We Who Have No Gods by Liza Anderson marks the opening of The Acheron Order series with the […]
Synopsis: Survival requires sacrifice. But what if the price is an entire world? Their home is cold and dying, choked by the toxins of their own progress. Now, an advanced alien species looks toward the Third Planet—Earth—with hope and fear. They see a fertile paradise, but one that is hostile, hot, and dominated by massive, […]
The Blueberry Society by Zeebo
A whirlwind of humor, chaos, and nostalgia, spun into a collection as sweet and surprising as freshly picked blueberries Zeebo’s The Blueberry Society is a kaleidoscopic collection of memoir-esque vignettes masquerading as short stories, each one circling back to the ways that love—and the mess it leaves in its wake—weaves through a life. Told in […]