What's New in Historical Fiction

What's New in Historical Fiction

What's New in Historical Fiction is a regular panel series featuring historical novelists with new and upcoming titles.

By History Through Fiction

Date and time

Wednesday, May 15 · 10 - 11am PDT

Location

Online

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Eventbrite's fee is nonrefundable.

About this event

  • 1 hour

Please join us for What's New in Historical Fiction, a regular panel series featuring historical novelists with new and upcoming titles. Moderated by Colin Mustful, founder of History Through Fiction, this special panel includes:

Donna Russo, author of Vincent's Women
Stephanie Dray, author of Becoming Madam Secretary
Jill George, author of A Hopeless Dawn
Ezra Harker Shaw, author of The Aziola's Cry

Donna Russo is the bestselling author of ten historical novels. She is also an award-winning screenwriter, ghostwriter, and painter, whose critically acclaimed work has been praised with multiple awards and has received a starred review in Publishers Weekly. Her newest novel, Vincent's Women, is the untold story of Vincent's loves: how they shaped his life, his art, and his death. It writes against the 'myths, ' exploring the possibility that none of them are true.

Stephanie Dray is a New York Times, Wall Street Journal & USA Today bestselling author of historical women’s fiction. Her award-winning work has been translated into many languages and tops lists for the most anticipated reads of the year. Her newest novel, Becoming Madam Secretary, is a captivating and dramatic story about an American heroine Frances Perkins, a woman destined to rise in a political world dominated by men.

Jill George is a historical researcher specializing in Victorian era London and Cornwall, UK. Her writing mission is to rebalance history based on women’s successes and the men who supported them. Her newest novel, A Hopeless Dawn, is a gothic suspense historical fiction romance at its best, inspired by the haunting masterpiece painting of the same name by 19th century artist Frank Bramley.

Ezra Harker Shaw is a non-binary writer who loves all things Gothic. While earning their PhD, Harker Shaw explored the collaborative writing of Percy Byssche Shelley and Mary Shelley, a project that led them to write The Aziola’s Cry. Their debut novel, The Aziola's Cry is a story of love, tragedy, and the pursuit of literary greatness intertwined in a tumultuous journey that defies societal norms and tests the resilience of Mary Wollstonecraft Godwin and Percy Bysshe Shelley.


Organized by

At History Through Fiction, our mission is to address the gap between history and storytelling through well-researched, engaging, and diverse narratives.

Free