New England Historical Fiction:

Great Works That Caught Our Eye

Revolutionary Road

Set in 1955 in Connecticut, Richard Yates’s Revolutionary Road is a devastating portrayal of 1950s suburban conformity, unfulfilled potential, and the slow, agonizing collapse of a marriage. The story centers on Frank and April Wheeler, a bright, attractive couple living at 115 Revolutionary Road in a suburban enclave called Revolutionary Hill Estates. Unlike their neighbors, […]

Revolutionary Road Read More »

The Berry Pickers

This 2023 award-winning debut novel by Amanda Peters is an introspective examination of grief, family bonds, and the long-lasting trauma of Indigenous separation. The narrative spans nearly fifty years, following the aftermath of a devastating kidnapping that shatters a Mi’kmaq family from Nova Scotia. In July 1962, a Mi’kmaq family travels from Nova Scotia to Maine,

The Berry Pickers Read More »

The Lost Summers of Newport

“The Lost Summers of Newport,” a collaborative historical fiction novel by Beatriz Williams, Lauren Willig, and Karen White, weaves together three storylines spanning over a century, centered on the crumbling Sprague Hall in Newport, Rhode Island. The narrative alternates between 1899, 1957, and 2019, revealing layers of family secrets, scandal, and murder within a Gilded

The Lost Summers of Newport Read More »

The Hotel New Hampshire

John Irving’s The Hotel New Hampshire, published in 1981, is a sprawling, darkly comedic, and eccentric family saga that explores the resilience of love, the necessity of illusions, and the chaotic nature of fate. Narrated by John Berry, the novel follows the unorthodox lives of the Berry family, led by their optimistic yet delusional father,

The Hotel New Hampshire Read More »

Johnny Tremain

Esther Forbes’s Johnny Tremain is a coming‑of‑age historical novel set in the charged atmosphere of pre‑Revolutionary Boston. It follows the transformation of a proud, talented young apprentice silversmith into a committed participant in the struggle for American independence. Through Johnny’s personal trials and encounters with key historical events, Forbes blends fiction and history to illuminate

Johnny Tremain Read More »

The Beans of Egypt Maine

Carolyn Chute’s The Beans of Egypt, Maine (1985) is a raw, unflinching portrait of rural poverty. Set between 1960 and the early seventies, it follows the notorious Bean family—Reuben, Roberta, and Beal—as they struggle with violence, hunger, and societal disdain. Seen through the eyes of their neighbor Earlene Pomerleau, the story highlights Earlene’s strict, pious upbringing

The Beans of Egypt Maine Read More »