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Happy Tuesday y’all! This week Jana over at That Artsy Reader Girl has given us a genre freebie. What exactly does that mean? Simply put, we get to highlight a genre we enjoy reading. It can be a list of our favorites or a list of our future favorites. One of my favorite genres is historical fiction, so I’ve decided to share some of my favorite historical fiction set in the 1920s-1930s.

Favorite Historical Fiction: the 1920s-1930s

Historical fiction is a vast genre that covers thousands of years, and I tend to gravitate more toward historical fiction set in the late 1800s to the more recent past. Unsurprising, in recent years, the biggest era covered in the historical fiction genre is World War II. Instead, I wanted to highlight a different period, so this week, I am focusing on books set in the 1920s-1930s. While these books may also be set outside that time frame, most of the story is set there.

All titles link to Goodreads.

Now, let’s look at ten of my favorite historical fiction set in the 1920s-1930s!

Angel of Greenwood by Randi Pink

  • Setting: May 1921
  • Release Date: January 2021
  • Genre: Historical Fiction, YA

Seventeen-year-old Isaiah Wilson is, on the surface, a town troublemaker but is hiding that he is an avid reader and secret poet, never leaving home without his journal. A passionate follower of WEB. Du Bois, he believes that black people should rise up to claim their place as equals.

Sixteen-year-old Angel Hill is a loner, mostly disregarded by her peers as a goody-goody. Her father is dying, and her family’s financial situation is in turmoil. Also, as a loyal follower of Booker T. Washington, she believes, through education and tolerance, that black people should rise slowly and without forced conflict.

Though they’ve attended the same schools, Isaiah never noticed Angel as anything but a dorky, Bible-toting church girl. Then their English teacher offers them a job on her mobile library, a three-wheel, two-seater bike, and Angel can’t turn down the money, and Isaiah is soon eager to be in such close quarters with Angel every afternoon.

But life changes on May 31, 1921, when a vicious white mob storms the community of Greenwood, leaving the town destroyed and thousands of residents displaced. Only then Isaiah, Angel, and their peers realize who their real enemies are.

Circling the Sun by Paula McLain

  • Setting: 1920s
  • Release Date: July 2015
  • Genre: Historical Fiction

Paula McLain, author of the phenomenal New York Times bestseller The Paris Wife, now transports readers to 1920s Kenya. Circling the Sun breathes life into a fearless and captivating young woman–Beryl Markham, a record-setting aviator whose passionate love triangle with safari hunter Denys Finch Hatton and Karen Blixen, author of Out of Africa, awakens Beryl to her truest self and her fate: to fly.

The Day the Falls Stood Still by Cathy Marie Buchanan

  • Setting: 1910s-1930s
  • Release Date: August 2009
  • Genre: Historical Fiction, Romance

Steeped in the intriguing history of Niagara Falls, this epic love story is as rich, spellbinding, and majestic as the falls themselves.1915. The dawn of the hydroelectric power era in Niagara Falls. Seventeen-year-old Bess Heath has led a sheltered existence as the youngest daughter of the director of the Niagara Power Company. After graduation day at her boarding school, she is impatient to return to her picturesque family home near Niagara Falls. But when she arrives, nothing is as she had left it. Her father has lost his job at the power company, her mother is reduced to taking in sewing from the society ladies she once entertained, and Isabel, her vivacious older sister, is a shadow of her former self. She has shut herself in her bedroom, barely eating–and harboring a secret.

The night of her return, Bess meets Tom Cole by chance on a trolley platform. She finds herself inexplicably drawn to him–against her family’s strong objections. He is not from their world. Rough-hewn and fearless, he lives off what the river provides and has an uncanny ability to predict the whims of the falls. His daring river rescues render him a local hero and cast him as a threat to the power companies that seek to harness the power of the falls for themselves. As their lives become more fully entwined, Bess is forced to make a painful choice between what she wants and what is best for her family and her future.

The Light Between Oceans by M.L. Stedman

  • Setting: 1920s
  • Release Date: March 2012
  • Genre: Historical Fiction

After four harrowing years on the Western Front, Tom Sherbourne returns to Australia and takes a job as the lighthouse keeper on Janus Rock, nearly half a day’s journey from the coast. To this isolated island, where the supply boat comes once a season, Tom brings a young, bold, and loving wife, Isabel. Years later, after two miscarriages and one stillbirth, the grieving Isabel hears a baby’s cries on the wind. A boat has washed up onshore carrying a dead man and a living baby. Tom, who keeps meticulous records and whose moral principles have withstood a horrific war, wants to report the man and infant immediately. But Isabel insists the baby is a “gift from God,” and against Tom’s judgment, they claim her as their own and name her Lucy. When she is two, Tom and Isabel return to the mainland and are reminded that there are other people in the world. Their choice has devastated one of them.

The Lindbergh Nanny by Mariah Fredricks

  • Setting: 1932
  • Release Date: November 2022
  • Genre: Historical Fiction, Mystery

When the most famous toddler in America, Charles Lindbergh, Jr., is kidnapped from his family home in New Jersey in 1932, the case makes international headlines. Already celebrated for his flight across the Atlantic, his father, Charles Sr., is the country’s golden boy, with his wealthy, lovely wife, Anne Morrow Lindbergh, by his side. But there’s someone else in their household—Betty Gow, a formerly obscure young woman, now known around the world by another name: the Lindbergh Nanny.

A Scottish immigrant deciphering the rules of her new homeland and its East Coast elite, Betty finds Colonel Lindbergh eccentric and often odd, Mrs. Lindbergh kind yet nervous, and Charlie simply a darling. Far from home and bruised from a love affair gone horribly wrong, Betty finds comfort in caring for the child and warms to the attentions of handsome sailor Henrik, sometimes known as Red. Then, Charlie disappears.

Suddenly a suspect in the eyes of both the media and the public, Betty must find the truth about what really happened that night in order to clear her own name—and to find justice for the child she loves.

Palisades Park by Alan Brennert

  • Setting: 1930s-1970s
  • Release Date: January 2013
  • Genre: Historical Fiction

Growing up in the 1930s, there is no more magical place than Palisades Amusement Park in New Jersey—especially for seven-year-old Antoinette, who horrifies her mother by insisting on the unladylike nickname Toni, and her brother, Jack. Toni helps her parents, Eddie and Adele Stopka, at the stand where they sell homemade French fries amid the roar of the Cyclone roller coaster. There is also the lure of the world’s biggest salt-water pool, complete with divers whose astonishing stunts inspire Toni, despite her mother’s insistence that girls can’t be high divers.

But a family of dreamers doesn’t always share the same dreams, and then the world intrudes: There’s the Great Depression and Pearl Harbor, which hits home in ways that will split the family apart, and perils like fire and race riots in the park. Both Eddie and Jack face the dangers of war, while Adele has ambitions of her own—and Toni is determined to take on a very different kind of danger in impossible feats as a high diver. Yet they are all drawn back to each other—and to Palisades Park—until the park closes forever in 1971.

The Pearl Thief by Elizabeth Wein

  • Setting: 1920s
  • Release Date: May 2017
  • Genre: Historical Fiction, YA, Mystery

When fifteen-year-old Julia Beaufort-Stuart wakes up in the hospital, she knows the lazy summer break she’d imagined won’t be exactly what she anticipated. And once she returns to her grandfather’s estate, a bit banged up but alive, she begins to realize that her injury might not have been an accident. One of her family’s employees is missing, and he disappeared on the very same day she landed in the hospital.

Desperate to figure out what happened, she befriends Euan McEwen, the Scottish Traveler boy who found her when she was injured, and his standoffish sister, Ellen. As Julie grows closer to this family, she witnesses firsthand some of the prejudices they’ve grown used to-a stark contrast to her own upbringing-and finds herself exploring thrilling new experiences that have nothing to do with a missing-person investigation.

Her memory of that day returns to her in pieces, and when a body is discovered, her new friends are caught in the crosshairs of long-held biases about Travelers. Julie must get to the bottom of the mystery in order to keep them from being framed for the crime.

River, Cross My Heart by Breena Clarke

  • Setting: 1925
  • Release Date: July 1999
  • Genre: Historical Fiction

When five-year-old Clara Bynum drowns in the Potomac River under a seemingly haunted rock outcropping known locally as the Three Sisters, the community must reconcile themselves to the bitter tragedy.
Clarke powerful charts the fallout from Clara’s death on the people she has left behind: her parents, Alice and Willie Bynum, torn between the old world of their rural North Carolina home and the new world of the city; the friends and relatives of the Bynum family in the Georgetown neighborhood they now call home; and, most especially, Clara’s sister, ten-year-old Johnnie Mae, who is thrust into adolescence and must come to terms with the terrible and confused emotions stirred by her sister’s death.

A Touch of Stardust by Kate Alcott

  • Setting: 1930s
  • Release Date: January 2015
  • Genre: Historical Fiction

When Julie Crawford leaves Fort Wayne, Indiana, for Hollywood, she never imagines she’ll cross paths with Carole Lombard, the dazzling actress from Julie’s provincial Midwestern hometown. Although the young woman has dreams of becoming a screenwriter, the only job Julie’s able to find is one in the studio publicity office of the notoriously demanding producer David O. Selznick —who is busy burning through directors, writers, and money as he begins filming Gone with the Wind.    

Although tensions run high on the set, Julie finds she can step onto the back lot, take in the smell of smoky gunpowder and the soft rustle of hoop skirts, and feel the magical world of Gone with the Wind come to life. Julie’s access to real-life magic comes when Carole Lombard hires her as an assistant and invites her into the glamorous world Carole shares with Clark Gable—who is about to move into movie history as the dashing Rhett Butler. 

Carole Lombard, happily profane and uninhibited, makes no secret of her relationship with Gable, which poses something of a problem for the studio as Gable is technically still married—and the last thing the film needs is more negative publicity. Julie is there to fend off the overly curious reporters, hoping to prevent details about the affair from slipping out. But she can barely keep up with her blonde employer, let alone control what comes out of Carole’s mouth, and–as their friendship grows – soon finds she doesn’t want to. Carole, both wise and funny, becomes Julie’s model for breaking free of the past.

In the ever-widening scope of this story, Julie is given a front-row seat to not one but two of the greatest love affairs of all time: the undeniable on-screen chemistry between Scarlett and Rhett and off-screen, the deepening love between Carole and Clark. Yet beneath the shiny façade, things in Hollywood are never quite what they seem, and Julie must learn to balance career aspirations and her own budding romance with outsized personalities and the overheated drama on set.

Water for Elephants by Sara Gruen

  • Setting: 1930s
  • Release Date: May 2006
  • Genre: Historical Fiction, Romance

When Jacob Jankowski, recently orphaned and suddenly adrift, jumps onto a passing train, he enters a world of freaks, drifters, and misfits, a second-rate circus struggling to survive during the Great Depression, making one-night stands in town after endless town. A veterinary student who almost earned his degree, Jacob is put in charge of caring for the circus menagerie. It is there that he meets Marlena, the beautiful young star of the equestrian act, who is married to August, the charismatic but twisted animal trainer. He also meets Rosie, an elephant who seems untrainable until he discovers a way to reach her.

That is my ten favorite historical fiction novels set in the 1920s and 1930s. Have you read any of these? Have I missed any of your favorites set in those two decades?

Favorite Historical Fiction: the 1920s-1930s

Looking for some more books to read? Check out my other bookish listsbook reviews, and monthly reading wrap-ups.


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26 thoughts on “Favorite Historical Fiction: the 1920s-1930s

  1. I don’t tend to read a lot of historical fiction, but after reading a cozy mystery series set in the 30s (by Julianna Deering I think), I did discover that I really enjoy reading stories set in this era. Now I just need to find some more good ones! Thanks a bunch for visiting my website today. 🙂

  2. I have not read any of these, I like this time period. I want to read water for elephants

  3. These all sound so interesting! I love reading about this period in time – I read The Monsters We Defy by Leslye Penelope, and it was such a good book set in this time period as well.

  4. This is such an interesting time period. I haven’t read most of these, just Water for Elephants. Have you read Rules of Civility? I loved that one.

  5. I’ve only read 2 of these (The Light Between Oceans & Water For Elephants) but I love HF so I should definitely add some others to my list.

  6. Great topic. I’ve heard of a couple of these but not read any of them. interesting to go for the ’20’s and ’30’s.

  7. I do enjoy historical fiction although it’s been a hot minute since I picked one up (for no particular reason) so I haven’t read any of these. I did have Light Between Oceans and Water for Elephants on my shelf many years ago but never ended up reading them because I didn’t know if I could handle the angst. 😂 Still not sure if I could nowadays either, haha! Great post.

  8. This is a great topic and it gives me ideas for future freebies. I will have to look into some of these books.

  9. I read Water for Elephants years ago. Some of the others on the list sound interesting and I may have to check them out. Good list!

  10. What a fun time period to focus on! I have a read a few of these and need to add several more to my TBR. I haven’t read too many novels set in these decades. Sounds like a fascinating historical time! Thanks for stopping by my TTT earlier 🙂

  11. I’m not much of a fan of historical fiction but these covers looks good.

    Thank you for visiting me earlier. Have a lovely day.

  12. I loved Circling the Sun and Water for Elephants, too. I also really enjoyed the whole series for which The Pearl Thief is part of. Thanks for this wonderful list. Sorry I am getting back to you so late. The week got away from me. -Anne@HeadfullofBooks

  13. Such a great time period for a setting. Water for Elephants is still one of my favorites. It might need a reread soon. I still need to read The Light Between Oceans! Great choice this week.

  14. I have only heard of Water for Elephants in this list; and I do enjoy historical fiction (a lot) though I tend to lean towards WWII fiction and regency historical romances. But your list is so very appealing and I am going to add a few of these to my TBR..
    Here is my TTT

  15. I have read a few of these but not all of them. I love Historical Fiction. Thanks for the reminder about The Light Between Oceans. It has been on my TBR for over ten years and I really do want to read it.

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