Ultimate Popsugar Reading Challenge discussion
2018 Challenge Prompts - Regular
>
6. A novel based on a real person
message 1:
by
Sara
(new)
Nov 02, 2017 05:27AM

reply
|
flag





Burial Rites would also qualify. I read it this year, and it's excellent.

Mrs Queen Takes the Train
Alice I Have Been
Abraham Lincoln Vampire Fighter
I know there are others I've loved I'll list as they come to me



The Painted Kiss based on the artist Gustav Klimt
Lincoln in the Bardo
Lydia Cassat Reading the Morning Paper based on the artist Mary Cassat
The Secret Chord about the biblical King David

The Lion in Winter
Audacity
Feast of Sorrow: A Novel of Ancient Rome

Highly recommend The Paris Wife which is indeed about and from POV of Heminway's first wife. I read it for 2017 challenge and really liked it.

The Diving Bell and the Butterfly
Hope: A Memoir of Survival
Somebody's Husband, Somebody's Son: The Story of the Yorkshire Ripper
The Spy
What Is the What
The Happiest Refugee: A Memoir
The Diary of a Young Girl
Any titles by:
Lisa Genova
Helen Garner
Henry Marsh
On my TBR list:
An Astronaut's Guide to Life on Earth: What Going to Space Taught Me about Ingenuity, Determination, and Being Prepared for Anything
Coming Clean
Billy
Diana: Her True Story in Her Own Words
Catching a Serial Killer: My hunt for murderer Christopher Halliwell
Hillbilly Elegy: A Memoir of a Family and Culture in Crisis
Born to Run: A Hidden Tribe, Superathletes, and the Greatest Race the World Has Never Seen
The Girl with Seven Names: A North Korean Defector’s Story
The Spiral Staircase: My Climb Out of Darkness

If you are German, try Die Bruderschaft der Runen by Michael Peinkofer: the sleuth in this historical adventure story is none other than Sir Walter Scott.

Also - Girl with a Pearl Earring - novel about the artist Vermeer and the female who sat for this painting

https://www.goodreads.com/shelf/show/...
I also found this one about historical fiction featuring real people:
https://www.goodreads.com/list/show/2...
I just checked a couple of them, and they seem to be correct in having real people featured as characters in the books, but as I always say with listopia lists, check for yourself before you just assume they include a real person. Those lists aren't always the most reliable.



There are also a lot of mystery novels with various famous authors. Oscar Wilde, Dorothy Parker and Jane Austen.

And America's First Daughter is based on Thomas Jefferson's daughter Patsy.

I love this category. I don't usually read books like this, but there are so many books that I am interested in that fit here!
Remarkable Creatures (Mary Anning, as mentioned above! I've been interested in her ever since I read the picture book Stone Girl, Bone Girl: The Story of Mary Anning to my kids)
Circling the Sun (about aviator Beryl Markham)
The Paris Wife (Hadley Richardson Hemingay)
The Dream Lover: A Novel of George Sand
and a whole host of Philippa Gregory books (she's very hit or miss with me - I've LOVED some, but dnf'ed others, so I'm hesitant to try another ... but The Lady of the Rivers is just so PRETTY!)
Remarkable Creatures (Mary Anning, as mentioned above! I've been interested in her ever since I read the picture book Stone Girl, Bone Girl: The Story of Mary Anning to my kids)
Circling the Sun (about aviator Beryl Markham)
The Paris Wife (Hadley Richardson Hemingay)
The Dream Lover: A Novel of George Sand
and a whole host of Philippa Gregory books (she's very hit or miss with me - I've LOVED some, but dnf'ed others, so I'm hesitant to try another ... but The Lady of the Rivers is just so PRETTY!)

Margaret the First
La Reine Margot
The Lodger - one of the earliest novels based on Jack the Ripper

(It's a biographical novel about Michelangelo. Bonus: I'm going to Florence in March.)



Yes, novels are fiction and the books you mentioned seem to be nonfiction.

Yes, novels are fiction and the books you mentioned seem to be nonfiction."
Thank you! I will dig a little deeper then :)


"novel - NOUN
A fictitious prose narrative of book length, typically representing character and action with some degree of realism."
A novel is fiction. A story "based on" true events is still considered fiction.
Erik Larson, for example, writes books that read like novels but are entirely true. That is narrative non-fiction and is not a novel.

I can't decide if I'm excited or terrified by the thought of "True Blood" being based on true events ;-)



I have read some reviews where the reviewer has called a novel "nonfiction" because it was based on true events (and in these cases there have been no doubt that it is fictional otherwise). And IIRC, one claimed to be an English teacher... Scary. OTOH, others seem to think that if the novel is historical fiction, even the basic historical facts (not just minor details) can be changed because it is fiction...

As Patrick Rothfus puts it in his 5 star review: "The primary character is Lizzy Borden. Genre-wise it's somewhere between urban fantasy, historical fiction, mystery, and Lovecraftian horror."
Books mentioned in this topic
Dracula (other topics)White Houses (other topics)
The Summer I Met Jack (other topics)
The Hours (other topics)
The Midnight Assassin: Panic, Scandal, and the Hunt for America's First Serial Killer (other topics)
More...
Authors mentioned in this topic
Amy Bloom (other topics)Lisa Wingate (other topics)
Vladimir Nabokov (other topics)
Lyudmila Ulitskaya (other topics)
Peter FitzSimons (other topics)
More...