504 Results in the "Historical Fiction" category
Biography & Memoir (434)
Books Like (8)
Business & Finance (26)
Children’s Fiction (203)
Dystopian (16)
Education & Learning (9)
Fantasy (1214)
fashion (1)
Fiction (3996)
Health & Wellness (21)
Horror (159)
Literary Fiction (788)
Non-Fiction (1302)
Novel (229)
Others (106)
Philosophy (128)
Poetry (208)
Politics & History (131)
Posts (65)
Psychology (46)
Religion & Spirituality (1)
Romance Novel (535)
Science & Technology (82)
Science Fiction (220)
Self-Help & Personal Development (99)
Thriller / Mystery (858)
Travel & Adventure (2)
True Crime (55)
view (96)
Young Adult (284)
-
Chapter
Imagine Me Carrying You
The chapter opens with the protagonist returning from a weekend getaway to learn about her mother's involvement in a fatal car accident. While staying at a friend's mansion to avoid her mother's scrutiny, she receives a call from her father, who reveals that her mother hit and killed a young woman during a heavy rainstorm on the Ibadan Expressway. The family of the deceased has chosen not to involve the police, and her mother, though financially compensating them, is emotionally shattered. The protagonist…-
27.7 K • Ongoing
-
-
Chapter
ILLUSTRATED BOOKS {8}
The chapter from "The Library" titled **ILLUSTRATED BOOKS** centers on the evolution of book illustration in England, particularly modern English book-illustration, situating its beginnings in the latter part of the 18th century with Bewick's work in wood engraving and Stothard's illustrative compositions. Despite earlier forms of book illustrations, such as engravings to complement literary works, it argues that the true flourish of imaginative book illustration began with these artists, notably…-
7.7 K • Ongoing
-
-
Chapter
III After the Nap
The chapter opens with the cihuacoatl, Tilipotonqui, navigating the chaotic aftermath of political decisions made by Emperor Moctezuma, particularly regarding the arrival of the Caxtilteca (Spanish conquistadors). The empire is beset by crises: venison shortages due to Otomí warriors disrupting hunts, a Texcoca civil war affecting lake trade, and the resurgence of the Quetzalcoatl cult. Beneath these surface issues pulses a deeper tension—Moctezuma’s waning trust in Tilipotonqui and rumors of…-
12.9 K • Ongoing
-
-
-
Chapter
II. Moctezuma’s Nap
The chapter opens with the ritual precision of Moctezuma’s afternoon nap—an act of imperial discipline that momentarily suspends the entire machinery of the Aztec empire. The silence demanded by his sleep is profound, yet its cessation, marked by the ringing of a silver bell, sends ripples through Tenochtitlan like a stone dropped in water. This carefully orchestrated pause becomes a metaphor for the fragile calm before historical upheaval, as the emperor’s rest coincides with the Spaniards’ uneasy…-
12.9 K • Ongoing
-
-
Chapter
II
I'm ready to read and summarize the chapter. Please provide the text of the chapter you would like me to…-
95.9 K • Ongoing
-
-
Chapter
I. Before the Nap
The chapter opens with a charged diplomatic lunch between Cortés's conquistadors and Aztec nobility in the palace of Axayacatl, where cultural tensions surface immediately. Captain Jazmín Caldera's visceral disgust at sharing a meal with blood-smeared priests underscores the Spaniards' alienation in this sophisticated yet alien world. Cortés, ever the strategist, tests boundaries by boasting of his Tlaxcalan allies—a gambit that backfires when Princess Atotoxtli extracts the truth from Caldera about…-
12.9 K • Ongoing
-
-
How Ulysses Stole the Luck of Troy opens in a moment of uneasy calm. The siege stretches on, but without real progress. Hector’s burial has closed a brutal chapter, yet the Greeks remain stalled outside Troy’s walls. Lacking skill in siegecraft, they wait—restless, frustrated, and vulnerable to Trojan reinforcements. Inside the city, the Trojans place their faith in the Palladium, a sacred relic said to protect Troy as long as it remains within their walls. The image, resting in Pallas Athene’s…
-
55.8 K • Ongoing
-
-
How Ulysses Invented the Device of the Horse of Tree brings to light a critical turning point in the long and arduous Trojan War. The Greeks, weary from years of failed assaults, stood at a crossroads as their hopes for a victorious siege began to fade. Helen remained in Troy, not through her own will, but due to Trojan pride and their refusal to return her. Now the wife of Deiphobus, her fate continued to stir the conflict's flames. Ulysses, known for his sharp intellect, realized that brute strength…
-
55.8 K • Ongoing
-
-
How People Lived in the Time of Ulysses offers a glimpse into an era where myth and reality blended seamlessly, and daily life revolved around order, valor, and ritual. Greece was not yet a unified nation but a cluster of small, independent kingdoms, each governed by its own monarch. These rulers lived in heavily guarded cities, built with immense stone walls so grand that later ages imagined them crafted by giants. At the core stood palaces, functioning as the center of governance and social life. Their…
-
55.8 K • Ongoing
-
- Previous 1 … 10 11 12 … 51 Next