Meet the Other Phone. Only the apps you allow.

Meet the Other Phone.
Only the apps you allow.

Buy now

Please or to access all these features

What we're reading

Find your new favourite book or recommend one on our Book forum.

Looking for recommendations of fiction set in 18th and 19th century

83 replies

EluneBePraised · 30/08/2022 21:57

Hi can anyone recommend books set in the 1700s/1800s? I've read several in the last few years, authors include:

Sarah Perry
Jane Harris
Stacey Halls
Georgette Heyer

I've also read Mermaid and Mrs Hancock, Longbourn and Wakenhyrst. Does anyone have any other suggestions? Thanks!

OP posts:
EmmaH2022 · 04/09/2022 20:38

Devo1818 · 04/09/2022 20:36

Emma Donahue

Oh I read The Sealed Letter...that was great.

woodhill · 04/09/2022 20:42

Thomas Hardy but they can be depressing

woodhill · 04/09/2022 20:43

Matildatoldsuchdreadfullies · 03/09/2022 20:15

Susan Howatch, Penmarric (19th century Cornwall) and Cashelmara (19th century Ireland).

Very good books

AgnestaVipers · 05/09/2022 12:36

@EmmaH2022 , re Affinity

I did find it sexy. I am a lesbian. I guess it appealed at the time. 😁

newbiename · 05/09/2022 12:44

Sarah Waters. Fingersmith, Affinity, Tipping the Velvet.

tunnocksreturns2019 · 05/09/2022 12:46

NannyR · 31/08/2022 09:20

I can second this suggestion, it's a brilliant book, very well written.

Me too

tunnocksreturns2019 · 05/09/2022 12:48

woodhill · 04/09/2022 20:42

Thomas Hardy but they can be depressing

Far from the Madding Crowd has a happy ending unlike most! I do love Thomas Hardy though

Hyacinth2 · 05/09/2022 12:53

Yes agree Burial Rites was very good

elQuintoConyo · 05/09/2022 13:18

Ann Radcliffe original gothic

And Nothanger Abbey.

AgnestaVipers · 05/09/2022 16:00

Here's a good one. It's part historical, part contemporary.

IMPASSIONED CLAY
BY STEVIE DAVIES ‧ RELEASE DATE: NOV. 15, 2000

A striking seventh novel from British scholar and critic Davies (Four Dreamers and Emily, 1997, etc.) examines the revolutionary passion of two women separated by 400 years.

When Olivia’s mother dies, the teenaged girl and her father acquiesce in the dead woman’s wish to be buried in the yard of Pinfold, the home that’s been in the family for generations. While digging a grave for the devout Quaker, the two come upon the remains of a 17th-century woman. More startling, and of particular interest to the archaeologists brought in, is the artifact she’s buried with: a scold’s bridle, a gruesome device of torture once used to silence troublesome women and heretics. For the stoic Olivia, fascination with the dead woman first serves as a distraction from the death of her mother, then turns into a more generalized obsession when she goes off to college and becomes a historian. Her unorthodox teaching methods and overt masculinity manner win her few friends, though the independent Olivia cares less about her contemporaries than about her mission to find the identity of the woman she unearthed all those years ago. When the skull of the woman identifies her as one Hannah Jones, Olivia begins searching in earnest. As historian/detective, she painstakingly uncovers documents that illuminate Hannah’s extraordinary life as one of England’s earliest Quaker proselytizers. With her “yoke-fellow” (wife and religious helpmate) Isabel Clarke, Hannah roamed the countryside as a religious and social anarchist, frequently tortured and imprisoned, until finally she was executed and buried in shame with the bridle. Using “found” documents, Davies builds an exacting portrait of the turbulent time and instills a quiet majesty in her subjects. Fierce, bewitching Hannah, humble Isabel, even misanthropic Olivia—all lend a compelling dignity to this little gem.

Historically fascinating and emotionally gripping: another success for Davies.

frozenorangejuice · 05/09/2022 16:07

tinselvestsparklepants · 30/08/2022 22:07

The Crimson Petal and the White (Michel Faber)
Music and Silence (Rose Tremain)

Both beautifully written.

The Crimson Petal and the White is brilliant and has one of the best openings of any book I’ve ever read.

EmmaH2022 · 05/09/2022 16:21

frozenorangejuice · 05/09/2022 16:07

The Crimson Petal and the White is brilliant and has one of the best openings of any book I’ve ever read.

I love love love that book
also the TV adaptation!

Framboisery · 10/09/2022 16:50

Miss Austen by Gill Hornby

Alias Grace by Margaret Atwood ( can't remember exactly when that was set but am sure it fits the time period).

The Last Runaway by Tracy Chevalier.

LydiaGwilt · 10/09/2022 17:07

I second the suggestion of 'Jonathan Strange and Mr Norrell' , and there's also a really good BBC adaption for those that love it.
Also 'No Name' by Wilkie Collins - not as well known as some of his novels, but equally gripping and like The Woman in White, has a strong heroine.

Saucery · 10/09/2022 17:09

The Ambrose Parry books (Marisa Haetzman and Christopher Brookmyre) are excellent. Set in 19th C Edinburgh, full of medical/surgical history, thrillers.

LydiaGwilt · 10/09/2022 17:09

And if you like ghost stories, the Collected Stories of M J James are terrifying.

LydiaGwilt · 10/09/2022 17:10

M R James

CordeliaShirley · 10/09/2022 19:42

Googled in search of a sort of historical novel timeline and found this en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_historical_fiction_by_time_period

ilovesushi · 10/09/2022 21:23

Are you up for reading anything written in that period? I love everything written by Frances (Fanny) Burney - Evelina, Cecilia, Camilla are her most famous novels and heroines. All set and written in late 1700s. Incredible insight into being a young woman at that time. Evelina her first novel is lovely about a young innocent country girl moving to London and being thrust headfirst into the decadent society - balls, powdered wigs, big dresses, false friends, crossed wires. One of her books makes me incredibly stressed, maybe Camilla, as the young woman is short of cash and gets deeper and deeper into money troubles. They are pretty chunky books and I find them pure escapism.

Sausagenbacon · 11/09/2022 06:34

Yes to MR James. And Norah Lofts is the Queen of HR.
Also The Observations by Jane Harris is vg

DameHelena · 12/09/2022 15:55

Love Golden Hill.
Also A Room Made of Leaves, Kate Grenville
The Fair Botanists, Sara Sheridan
The Good People, Hannah Kent
Under a Pole Star, Stef Penney (some of it takes place in the 20th c, but much in the 19th).

My top recommendation though is The Essex Serpent.

EluneBePraised · 13/09/2022 15:55

Thanks for the recommendations, especially the ghost stories, they'll be perfect next month! Agree the Essex Serpent was wonderful, more in that vein would be ideal.

OP posts:
80sMum · 13/09/2022 15:58

BigFatLiar · 01/09/2022 18:22

The woman in white - Wilkie Collins

That would get my vote too!

DameHelena · 13/09/2022 16:48

EluneBePraised · 13/09/2022 15:55

Thanks for the recommendations, especially the ghost stories, they'll be perfect next month! Agree the Essex Serpent was wonderful, more in that vein would be ideal.

I'm still looking...! I really don't think I've read anything as good since, and it was a good few years ago now.

EmmaH2022 · 13/09/2022 18:06

I found the Essex Serpent so, so disappointing. It wasn't just the hype, I'm an Essex girl and so wanted a lovely story.