Skip to main content
Joan by Katherine J. Chen
Mary B by Katherine J. Chen
Horse by Geraldine Brooks
The Secret Chord by Geraldine Brooks
Her Hidden Genius by Marie Benedict
The Personal Librarian by Marie Benedict
The Sweetness of Water by Nathan Harris,

Just in time for the last lazy days of summer listening, I give you four authors and seven — seven! — historical fiction titles that will spirit you away in your own private time machine.

This story appears through BookTrib’s partnership with AudioFile. It first appeared on AudioFile’s website.

Joan by Katherine J. Chen

Joan by Katherine J. Chen

In Joan, author Katherine J. Chen and narrator Hannah Morrish create an indelible and affecting new portrait of Joan of Arc, the French teenager who led the Dauphin’s army to victories before being burned at the stake as a heretic. Morrish, who won an Earphones Award for her performance, gives Joan a fierce and tellingly unsophisticated voice that feels revelatory, as does the French Dauphin’s naiveté and ambition. Listen even though you know her fate.


Mary B by Katherine J. Chen

Mary B by Katherine J. Chen

Chen’s 2018 novel, Mary B, gives narrator Marisa Calin the perfect role as Mary Bennet, the middle and least lovely of the Bennet sisters in Jane Austen’s Pride and Prejudice. While Calin’s jewel-like English accent places Mary clearly in Britain’s all-important class structure, the narrator tellingly shifts her tone between Mary’s bright public and emotional private voices. Calin also develops Mary’s voice as she ages, helping to create a moving and plausible tale of the character we overlooked. Janeites rejoice.


Horse by Geraldine Brooks

Horse by Geraldine Brooks

Pulitzer Prize-winning author Geraldine Brooks is known for novels that reveal history’s truths in unexpected ways. In Horse, narrated by five talented actors, who won Earphone Awards for their performances, she explores slavery and American race relations through the story of a famous 19th-century thoroughbred named Lexington.

The action takes place in the 1850s, 1950 and 2019. We meet James Fouhey as the enslaved groom Jarret, equally devoted to Lexington and freedom. Graham Halstead offers a revealing performance as Lexington’s portraitist. Lisa Flanagan creates a vibrant depiction of a 1950 gallery owner. Michael Obiora as a Nigerian-American art historian and Katherine Littrell as a Smithsonian scientist round out the story with affecting portraits of modern people in a gripping and age-old tale.

 


The Secret Chord by Geraldine Brooks

The Secret Chord by Geraldine Brooks

Paul Boehmer’s Earphones Award performance of Brooks’s 2015 novel The Secret Chord transports listeners to 1000 BCE. As told by the courtier Natan, we witness the transfixing rise and Lear-like fall of the Old Testament’s King David. Boehmer gives listeners pitch-perfect Hebrew pronunciations, believable walk-on characters, and an unforgettable portrait of a remarkable and terrible man.


Her Hidden Genius by Marie Benedict

Her Hidden Genius by Marie Benedict

Nicola Barber won an Earphones Award for her performance of English biophysicist Rosalind Franklin in Her Hidden Genius by Marie Benedict. Franklin’s history-making 1940s and ’50s research into the structure of DNA and RNA underpinned the work of such scientists as Watson and Crick, men who didn’t credit her at the time. Barber brings sensibility to the first-person story and switches effortlessly between American, French and upper-class British accents to shape this fascinating story of an unsung heroine.


The Personal Librarian by Marie Benedict

The Personal Librarian by Marie Benedict

Robin Miles’s narrative gifts are on full display in The Personal Librarian, Benedict’s fascinating 2021 exploration of the life of Belle da Costa Greene, the daughter of Harvard’s first Black graduate, who passed as a white woman of Portuguese heritage while employed as J.P. Morgan’s personal librarian. Miles creates memorable portraits of the Morgan family and the members of their glittering, narrow social circle. And her portrait of da Costa Greene is nuanced and insightful, revealing the brains and daring that underpinned her success.


The Sweetness of Water by Nathan Harris,

The Sweetness of Water by Nathan Harris,

My final suggestion this month is The Sweetness of Water by Nathan Harris, a first novel so affecting that I’m already anticipating his next book. An Audie Award Finalist and Oprah’s Book Club pick, the novel takes us to a small Georgia town in the Civil War Reconstruction era. William DeMeritt rises beautifully to the challenge of voicing an entire town — male, female, young, old, Black and white — as its members try to figure out how to make peace in a world changed and unchanged by war and emancipation.


Aurelia C. Scott

Author and audiobook fanatic, Aurelia often falls asleep at night with earbuds still attached. She can also be found at www.aureliacscott.com.

Leave a Reply