Historical fiction sits within the broad category of historical narrative. It is essentially a story situated within a specific historical time centred around an historical event, people or culture. The people and the places may be true, but it is written in story form and fact and fiction can both be present. Biographies and autobiographies seek to be factual interpretation and also forms of historical narratives. But much of what we introduce to children fits into the sub-category of historical fiction.
Historical fiction often focuses on a specific event in a time period and presents some of the actual events at the time through the presumed voices of people (using diary, journal, illustrative and secondary resource material) and offering a particular point of view of people living in the period.
Many forms of artistic licence can be taken in this genre including inventing new characters, using new or altered names and places and creating new events. Depending on how far these accounts vary from historical accounts, they may be classified as alternate history or historical fantasy.
Why is it important?
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjMHdX46W1QUacPQQYeny5aEzSf18iFyPPSyY6SS80NgPqyrbTMeSLohFK8kehRndMM68xylUHjNmt_p9m6a-Nr7kuNskPgmTpWY9ZX69qZKWuMT7Y-T5eSU2X_vCtF16a1NsC8tBW7UrM/s200/9780207199424.jpg)
b) It can enrich our understanding of the human condition and culture
c) It can highlight and make sense of the details of history often missed in textbook reading
d) In presenting multiple perspectives it can present complex issues in multi-dimensional ways, helping us to see things for the first time
e) It can connect children's learning right across the curriculum
In this post I offer 50 examples of excellent historical fiction from many places, peoples and times. I list some picture books first then novels for older readers (7-14 years). The novels are roughly in order of difficulty.
Picture Book Forms of Historical Narrative
The following picture books can be read to and by children 5-10 years.
'The Afghanistan Pup' by Mark Wilson (Lothian Children's Books)
'The Afghanistan Pup' is book 4 in the Children in War Quartet by fabulous author and illustrator Mark Wilson. It is the story of an abandoned pup, a young girl in Afghanistan who just wants to go to school, and an Australian Soldier. It is a story of unexpected friendship, sacrifice, and finding hope in the strangest places.
The puppy is found abandoned by a little girl, Kinah. The backdrop and setting is the war in Afghanistan. When Kinah's school is bombed the dog is alone again until an Australian soldier rescues it. You'll need to read the book to find out how these stories are woven together.
Mark Wilson uses his wonderful art and well-chosen words to tell a great story with power. His illustrative work includes newspaper clippings, and varied beautiful images that are stunning. This is a special book that children aged 7-10 will enjoy.
'My Hiroshima' by Junko Morimoto - a picture book that offers a real life account of the day the atomic bomb was dropped on Hiroshima through the eyes of a child who stayed home that day sick rather than going to school. The illustrations complement the authentic personal story of Morimoto's memory of the day the atomic bomb was dropped on her city.
'The Wedding Ghost' (1985) and 'Fair's Fair' (1981) by LeonGarfield
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjwoqqKgQPvb9aNAldalwaJTqW5uftYC7uAraeB76c8xEOhvXUzbb2RsnUFn03TLiUNLTwc93G7A6vUereruMl03JalSDvA2XXA4C6XbbTkMbkxYKq8UnrF3F3nsEVwoRqkjfCEdSMuVGo/s200/51hvY8PADaL._SL500_AA300_.jpg)
Garfield is one of the greatest exponents of historical fiction for children. As well as many wonderful novels for older children he has also written a number of picture books. Two of my favourites are 'The Wedding Ghost' (1985) illustrated by the great illustrator Charles Keeping and 'Fair's Fair' (1981) illustrated by Margaret Chamberlain and in a newer edition with Brian Hoskin as the illustrator (2001).
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEh6hgCMt8un_3dAloMWGZMRJx1KKwfuBacjQ-qjf_7_J9SkvUWjNBz3I4oLnCM2Rsk7mp8L6L_kJeeWKvyhucMbi2xhAkd63Dtd4Skw59Y6fGqvuFEu6yRmwYOe2TVle1dSQDBOvdybha4/s320/51NRDEKEDFL._SL500_AA240_-2.jpg)
'My Place' (Nadia Wheatley & Donna Rawlins) - was published in 1987 for distribution in Australia’s bicentennial year (1988) and makes a strong statement about the fact that Indigenous Australians were here for thousands of years before white settlement (there isn't space to unpack this). It is a very clever book that takes one suburban block (and the surrounding area) and tells the story of this place in reverse chronological sequence, decade by decade, from 1988 back to 1788 when the first British Fleet landed at Botany Bay. The overall meaning of the book is shaped by multiple narrative recounts of the families who have lived in this spot, 'my Place' and the changing nature of the physical landscape and built environment. See me previous post on visiting the 'real' My Place (here).
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjWLe93XjveeBWJYUQArCjR6c2FPCWuV7pEj1GMgI-FoEmiQPHKq5YxS-Dn85CjbTTyOrElwWoyPwoaAlQPFNHNbJqBUjofLwus8p9_7CvO8wAFC2jQFNCrXzu3j2fNGZKbLKwpQGtwgWE/s200/bkSweetheartsofRhythm.jpg)
The story is told through a set of rhythmic poems that are written in the varied voices of the instruments. Jerry Pinkney's illustrations add further richness with brilliant collages.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjncJgHYdPvGNThsvqL-ks8x8m4WKQf1u1yZWEiT2EllwroBGqRPwuvuHyTb8TTyVhFO78_4boEE2oyu087Zi_RQgE4oACsyQrulNbVI3q_7-RC3yO5vzdu9hdaXyhgG393qcIMZc9ytvI/s200/8.91+Window1S.jpg)
'The Story of Rosy Dock' (1995) by Jeannie Baker
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhmtRZmsy47spJdTH2YQj_s2DREBZx792faBShWTeUeBNgjohKfGT3sg-86DUBmT6MA0ZCGS8Qw21O1w9ETAfxfUQaaI1fHppuBBKfAmQ1r_k246eNYUKzNaen6jS70afrwHVIgIhEtvpg/s200/03++RosyDockCS.jpg)
The book has been produced as a 10-minute short animated film by Film Australia (here).
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEi_Q5Vi3aVmtzpb4e3It9z5cfef7WN3DVEgaLZB5ageZ4y7EINzD0UypXt9sxWm1pRSaP03lFkZ3ZZJJU2AeNK0ET39qdUC9kLU4Je0uC0DH2JeeluQr0Wj5BiqHJtiziY3ZhFPXyhjg3E/s200/61u9Q1ROflL._SS500_.jpg)
'A Certain Music' written by Celeste Walters and illustrated by Anne Spudvilas is a fairytale in the tradition of Hans Christian Andersen. The story offers an account of Beethoven's creation of two of his most famous works, 'Fur Elise' and 'Ode to Joy'. It is set in 1821 and is the story of a young girl who is drawn to the sound of music coming from a house in the woods near Vienna. She visits the composer regularly to hear him play. Eventually the girl and her mother are invited to a concert in Vienna to see Beethoven perform ‘Für Elise’. The author Celeste Walters has previously written playscripts for children and adults, as well as novels and picture storybooks for younger readers.
Novels for Children Aged 10-14 years
The following are roughly in order of difficulty and age appropriateness, although this judgement will vary from child to child.
'Little House on the Prairie', Laura Ingalls Wilder
This series of eight books tells of the life of a family that travels from the big woods of Wisconsin to a new home on the prairie, where they build a house, meet neighboring Indians, build a well, and fight a fire. This classic story was first published in 1935 and has never lost its popularity. Written by Laura Ingalls Wilder it is based on her childhood in the northern midwest of the USA during the 1870s and 1880s. Eight books were completed from 1932 to 1943.
'Anne of Green Gables' by L.M. Montgomery
This 1908 novel by Canadian author Lucy Maud Montgomery recounts the adventures of Anne Shirley an 11-year-old orphan girl, mistakenly sent to Matthew and Marilla Cuthbert. This middle-aged brother and sister had wanted to adopt a boy to help on the farm in Prince Edward Island. The novel tells the tale of how Anne builds her life with the Cuthberts, as well as he experience of school and the town. Due to the popularity of the books Montgomery wrote a series of eight further sequels and referenced Anne in two other collections.
'When Hitler Stole Pink Rabbit', by Judith Kerr
Anna was only 9 years old in 1933 when Adolf Hitler emerged in the Germany of her youth. But as a Jewish girl she was soon to find that her world had changed when her father went missing. With a leader filled with hatred for an entire race of people, and determined to see them eliminated Germany is transformed. Anna's father is a well-known Jewish writer, and someone warns him, just in time that he might soon lose his passport. Her father leaves by night for Switzerland and Anna, her brother and mother are left behind in Berlin. He sends for his family to meet him in Switzerland and they escape just a day before the German elections. Hitler sweeps to power all Jewish property is seized in Berlin and they are now refugees in Switzerland, with no way back. This wonderful story tells the story of the horror of Germany in the reign of Hitler through the eyes of a little girl.
Somme Mud, by Private Edward Lynch, Editor Will Davies
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEijHhtYhbuPiuoJG-4cSa0-IlXU3Cq26BXZOBo1pvdmhWUNLuCLy5AX_q5r9kMScAcvclE6GF-ajha2z8RFigny2bMBNwjAJ1_XtKhdaq2A6D8oHNU2Veg1B7cStDLdls24t2wr_lX1how/s200/9781741664522.jpg)
'Samurai Kids Series' (Walker Books)
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEi-19Y1o9XTqeoUuEWcp8v7aO5c6IMFitTIaCQTG-rJk6lWBbqzt8XUnrm5D-CMjIDgAAdb5xKPW6H4vddP5gjfAZu8_qUE4xQYFRKe6l86i550WJKZ86woIYzyEoY3flIu71hQYKiNKVY/s320/sf-White%252BCrane%252BCover%255B2%255D.jpg)
'White Crane' (2008) Walker Books
'Owl Ninja' (2008) Walker Books
'Shaolin Tiger' (2009) Walker Books
'Monkey Fist' (2009) Walker Books
'Fire Lizard' (2010) Walker Books
'Golden Bat'(2010) Walker Books
'Red Fox' (2012) Walker Books
Number the Stars (1989) by Lois Lowry
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhm5mbdmaOU8eajdvE9WdiROYaNuzfG_s-LCbSFJf9yPBQdVAuneyOVscLBPIN88WBfQR3PIWSisU2N7rKjMwn5kgwIGRlgiOuzT7Acvuz5ATvSqxA88b8xGe2aUblL53_ONgned8p7zNY/s320/ING0440403278.jpg)
This is a moving and compelling book that engages the reader from the start and in the process offers an insight into the lives of many innocent Jewish families in World War II and the lengths that some went to in order to survive. Suitable for children 11+.
Island of the Blue Dolphins (1960) by Scott O'Dell
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgMNUD31ZeMKzoMx1OUgfSyLTP9t7YtBX0nEEk0j2aplxmNPgSyyl2IY0YIuThB-biS0DtHaMj6_co2IXW5bWS9LswRbutlYX756tmD1hkph_NK3GnhUu-NN0gFC_V60XPQnhsdBUslwvc-/s320/51f8te9SbwL._SY344_BO1%252C204%252C203%252C200_.jpg)
This wonderful novel was O'Dell's first book and won the Newbery Medal in 1961. It is an excellent book for 10-14 year olds.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEidddGoxT3KmHDy9WhvATGVa6be04R46eB9YMdpcJhTZXQgYkat8Fe2FSseH2e-1yix5BbUDu_C-WcXI_fft-CD7P7QeBdF37-zNCmYgcuh05RkC0uzgOaReJHSq86CfpYokv30w3x5BdM/s200/n16718.jpg)
Crew won the 1991 Children’s Book Council Australia award for Older Readers for the book. Suitable for readers aged 12+ years.
'Slave Girl: The Diary of Clotee, Virginia, USA 1859' by Patricia McKissack - This book was originally published as "A Picture of Freedom" tells the story of a young slave girl who longs for freedom just before the Civil War. The year is 1859 and Clotee and has only known life as a slave mostly as an orphan) on the Belmont Plantation in Virginia. But she has learnt how to read and write in secret. She keeps a diary and hides it in a hollowed tree.
When a tutor comes to the plantation to teach the son of her master she discovers that he is an abolitionist and he offers her the chance for her inner longing, freedom.
Claudette Colvin: Twice Toward Justice written by Phillip Hoose
This book is based on extensive interviews with Claudette Colvin and many others. It tells the story of a teenager who on March 2nd 1955 was sick of the daily injustices of Jim Crow segregation and refused to give her seat to a white woman on a segregated bus in Montgomery, Alabama. The protest led to further injustice for the young women who is eventually brave and determined enough to challenge segregation as a key plaintiff in a legal case that became known as Browder v. Gayle. Suitable for readers 12+.
The Machine-Gunners (1975) by Robert Westall
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhRxgN7MxFpvzDD6q0QeO0l5ZFJNB_mHScO0l3xqVV7CEXjYLw0bFXdn2GVjFMEnWD5Zo-NUzThcHcdWXH7rT0Y5yjpT5jZG0KLFGjsg96YsdUJz5I17UlXTodmAQrGSbuIiNvfW3mapZg/s200/2004041700360201.jpg)
This has to be one of the best books for boys that I've read. Not surprisingly it won the highest British honour for children's literature, the Carnegie Medal in 1975. Any boy aged 10-16 will love this book.
The Watsons Go to Birmingham - 1963 by Christopher Paul Curtis
This is a wonderful work of historical fiction written by Christopher Paul Curtis in 1995. It was republished in 1997. It tells the story of an African-American family living in the town of Flint, Michigan that goes to their grandmother’s home in Birmingham, Alabama. This middle-class black family move to Grandma's because she's strict and they hope she will sort him out over summer. But they happen to be in Birmingham when Grandma’s church is blown up, the 16th Street Baptist Church.
The book was Curtis’ first novel, and was named as a Newbery Honour book and won the Coretta Scott King Award. Curtis is also the author of the Newbery Award winner Bud, Not Buddy.
It was released as a film in 2013 HERE
'Roll of Thunder, Hear My Cry' (1976) by Mildred Taylor
This book won the 1977 Newbery Medal Award, tells the story of a poor African American family living in Mississippi during the Great Depression. This novel is set in the Depression-era in Mississippi and centres on the lives of the Logans, an African-American family Logan family. The Logans are fortunate compared to many African-Americans and own their own land when many black and white Americans are working as sharecroppers on plantations owned by others. It is a time when racially-motivated crimes are common. The 'Berry Burnings' mentioned the first chapter and the act of tarring and feathering Mr Tatum were incidents that were sadly not uncommon as 'nightmen' took the law into their own hands at the expense of African-Americans. It is a novel that traces the life of young Cassie Logan as she learns the hard realities of life for African-Americans. This is a moving and confronting novel.
The book has a sequel, Let the Circle Be Unbroken, which was released in 1981. It also has a prequel written in 1975, Song of the Trees and a related prior book The Land that tells the story of the Logan grandfather who purchased the land that is central to this novel. It is suitable for readers aged 11-14 years.
'The Children of the Wind Series' by Kirsty Murray
The 'Children of the Wind' series is a sweeping Irish-Australian saga made up of Bridie's story, Patrick's story, Colm's story and Maeve's story. These four inter-linked novels, begin with the 1850s and move right up to the present.
'Bridie's Fire' is a heart-warming story of courage and resilience and is the first book in the series. The series starts in the 1840s and ends in present-day Australia. The quartet tells the stories of four young people brave children, Bridie, Billy, Colm and Maeve, who are born fifty years apart. The central character in each book becomes a mentor to the child in the next.
We enter Bridie's world in the 1840s. Her world is torn apart when her parents and baby brother die in in the potato famine, the 'Great Hunger'. She leaves Ireland, for a life in goldrush Australia on the other side of the ocean.
As Bridie looks up at the swirling stars, it seems that the whole world is opening up to her. She didn't feel like just an orphan girl at sea. She had money in her pocket, a swag full of food and a good companion. She was to be a new Bridie and nothing could stop her now.
The book was named as a 'Children's Book Council' Notable Book in 2004. The four inter-linked novels are suitable for children aged 10-14 years.
To Brave the Seas: A Boy at War' by David McRobbie (Allen & Unwin)
This is another gripping tale from one of my favourite authors of historical fiction. It is the story of a teenager who ends up as a deck boy on navy ships, learning the ropes, fitting in with the crew, and facing wartime action in World War II.
The boys had been trained for emergencies. They had to know how to launch a lifeboat and to know where the life jackets were stored. But they were hardly prepared for the horrors before them. What an exploding torpedo do? And how will the ship and its crew behave when it sinks under you. No-one was able to prepare them for the blackness of night, or the horror of battle.
It is 1940, war rages and there is nothing to keep Adam Chisholm aged 15 years at home. So he joins Britain's Merchant Navy. His first ship takes him on a stormy Atlantic convoy where he faces seasickness, submarines, and shipwreck. In his remarkable sea journeys, Adam meets enemies face to face, and makes friends—some for a lifetime. The book includes a seven-page glossary of nautical terms and features WWII memorabilia throughout.
This is a very readable book that will keep readers aged 12+ engaged. It is beautifully written as with all of McRobbie's books. It tells the story of war time battles that shows how men of honour and courage experience war. The book describes life at sea with great detail. This feature of McRobbie's books invites the reader to 'become' part of the action and adventure. A great read.
Playing Beatie Bow (1982) by Ruth Park
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjfwd8P-sAL4BrOEUfkpeI29dxcLLBe0YZl6xG3znDTvEZj_XzDH1zM7NlWYBq9uwtVwX0jjulRD0EtzoIdMp-y2Xlg5SO-pKBJnSRHYFgL0PWxfVVzng0GjFmsR6oMidCSZK6CFDPfNLs/s320/9780140314601.jpg)
This is a book faithful to its time and setting but is best classified as historical fantasy. It won the Children's Book Council Australia Award for Book of Year in 1981. Suitable for readers 12-16 year olds.
The book has been adapted for film (details here).
'Chocolate Cake with Mr Hitler' by Emma Craigie
In this strange world, there is chocolate cake for tea every day with Uncle Leader, but Helga eventually notices that all is not as it once was. As the days pass and the rumbling storms that bring no rain draw closer, her underground world becomes increasingly tense. She hears tears and shouting behind closed doors. There is a slow realisation, perhaps her perfect childhood is not all that it seemed.
'To Kill a Mocking Bird' by Harper Lee
The unforgettable novel of a childhood in a sleepy Southern town and the crisis of conscience that rocked it, To Kill A Mockingbird became both an instant bestseller and a critical success when it was first published in 1960. It went on to win the Pulitzer Prize in 1961 and was later made into an Academy Award-winning film, also a classic.
This is a compassionate and moving story that explored the roots of human behaviour. It is based loosely on Lee's observations of her family and neighbors, as well as an event that occurred near her hometown in 1936, when she was 10 years old.
The narrator's father lawyer Atticus Fiunch serves as a moral hero for many readers.
The main themes of the book concern racial injustice and the destruction of innocence. It deals with the themes of class, courage, compassion, and gender roles in the American Deep South.
'The Book Thief' by Markus Zusak
Set during World War II in Germany, the novel tells the story of Liesel Meminger, a foster girl living outside of Munich. Liesel scratches out a meager existence for herself by stealing when she encounters something she can’t resist–books. With the help of her accordion-playing foster father, she learns to read and shares her stolen books with her neighbors during bombing raids as well as with the Jewish man hidden in her basement before he is marched to Dachau. This is a wonderfully crafted story of great power that shows how books can transform us and 'feed the soul'.
'I Am David' by Anne Holm
The book tells the story of a young boy who, with the help of a prison guard, escapes from a concentration camp in an unnamed Eastern European country (many suggest it was Bulgaria). He escapes to Denmark and along the way meets many people who teach him about life outside the camp. His first twelve years of life have been spent in the horror of war time incarceration. He escapes to a world he knows nothing about and struggles to cope in his strange new world. His basic resources include a compass, some bread and some vague advice to seek refuge in Denmark. This is a wonderful story that addresses the themes of freedom and the power of hope.
'Emilio' by Sophie Masson (Allen & Unwin)
This is the fourth book in the popular 'Through My Eyes' series of adolescent fiction. It is a moving novel about one child's life in the middle of the drug war in Mexico. This of course is a different kind of war. Not a war fought over territory in the traditional sense but one that centres on control of places and the trafficking of drugs.
The central character, Emilio Garcia Lopez, starts out on an ordinary school day. That evening a knock on the door changes everything. The arrival of his police-officer cousin Juanita, flanked by a tall man in the uniform of the Federal Police, turns his normal day into the beginning of a long nightmare. Unidentified criminals, who appear to know a great deal about her and have mistaken her for a wealthy businesswoman, have kidnapped Emilio's mother in broad daylight from a hotel carpark. This is a dark novel that is engaging and challenging. Suitable for mature readers aged 13+.
'The Slave Dancer' by Paula Fox
This book tells the story of a boy called Jessie Bollier who witnessed first-hand
the savagery of the African slave trade. The book not only includes an
historical account, but it also touches upon the emotional conflicts
felt by those involved in transporting the slaves from Africa to other
parts of the world. The book received the Newbery Medal in 1974.
And there are lots more....There are many other stories about war and persecution like 'The Endless Steppe: Growing Up in Siberia' by Esther Hautzig. Or, 'Good Night, Mr. Tom' by Michelle Magorian that deals with WWII in London and its consequences for children's lives. Not to mention life, drama and conflict in the 1930s in the Lake district of England in the 'Swallows and Amazons series' by English author Arthur Ransome.
Then there is historical fantasy like 'Mary Poppins' by P.L. Travers, or 'Merryll of the Stones' by Brian Caswell.
Allan Garner has also written a number of fine examples set in Cheshire and often stimulated by local history and legend, including 'The Weirdstone of Brisingamen' (1960), 'The Owl Service' (1967) and 'The Stone Book Quartet' (1978).
Stories set at key times in special places, like 'Emil and the Detectives' set in Berlin in the year 1929 by Erich Kästner or Rosemary Sutcliff's brilliant novel 'The Eagle of the Ninth' set in Roman Britain a book that has sold over one million copies.
'Best Children's Historical Fiction' - Then of course, you can consult good lists. This list published on the 'Good Reads' site in 2008 but is still a great one. As the books reflect the votes of readers, they might not match your own top list but it contains 562 books so is a comprehensive list.
No comments:
Post a Comment