891
Resources share the relationship genre to History
- A line in the river, Khartoum, city of memory, Jamal Mahjoub
- Pandemic 1918, eyewitness accounts from the greatest medical holocaust in modern history, Catharine Arnold
- The incarnations, Susan Barker
- Massacre on the Merrimack, Hannah Duston's captivity and revenge in Colonial America, Jay Atkinson
- King Zeno, Nathaniel Rich
- Making the monster, the science behind Mary Shelley's Frankenstein, Kathryn Harkup
- Pandora's boy, Lindsey Davis
- The Chief, the life and turbulent times of Chief Justice John Roberts, Joan Biskupic
- The food explorer, the true adventures of the globe-trotting botanist who transformed what America eats, Daniel Stone
- In the presence of evil / Tania Bayard
- Sawbones, the horrifying, hilarious road to modern medicine, written by Dr. Sydnee McElroy and Justin McElroy ; illustrated by Teylor Smirl
- Write to me, letters from Japanese American children to the Librarian they left behind, Cynthia Grady ; illustrated by Amiko Hirao
- Billy Martin, baseball's flawed genius, Bill Pennington
- Queen Victoria, twenty-four days that changed her life, Lucy Worsley
- Operation chaos, the Vietnam deserters who fought the CIA, the brainwashers, and themselves, Matthew Sweet
- The expanding blaze, how the American Revolution ignited the world, 1775-1848, Jonathan Israel
- The House of Eliott, directors, Graeme Harper [and four others] ; [creators, Jean Marsh, Eileen Atkins]., Series 2,, Fullscreen
- Frank and Al, FDR, Al Smith, and the unlikely alliance that created the modern Democratic Party, Terry Golway
- A prisoner in Malta, Phillip DePoy
- The wreckage of Eden, Norman Lock
- Marie Curie, Demi
- The new inheritors, Kent Wascom
- North of Havana, the untold story of dirty politics, secret diplomacy, and the trial of the Cuban Five, Martin Garbus
- Life in code, a personal history of technology, Ellen Ullman
- Terra Nullius, Claire G. Coleman
- When death becomes life, notes from a transplant surgeon, Joshua D. Mezrich
- Who were the Tuskegee Airmen?, by Sherri L. Smith ; illustrated by Jake Murray
- Flood of fire, a novel, Amitav Ghosh
- The one device, the secret history of the iPhone, Brian Merchant
- The locomotive of war, money, empire, power, and guilt, Peter Clarke
- Sister saints, Mormon women since the end of polygamy, Colleen McDannell
- Isabel Feeney, Star Reporter, by Beth Fantaskey
- Free from all danger, a Richard Nottingham mystery, Chris Nickson
- Where is our solar system?, by Stephanie Sabol ; illustrated by Ted Hammond
- Sylvia's Bookshop, the story of Paris's beloved bookstore and its founder (as told by the bookstore itself!), Robert Burleigh ; illustrated by Katy Wu
- The kingdom of this world, Alejo Carpentier ; translated from the Spanish by Pablo Medina
- 1,000 facts about ancient Egypt, Nancy Honovich ; foreword by Dr. Jennifer Houser Wegner
- Once a wolf, the science behind our dogs' astonishing genetic evolution, Bryan Sykes
- The lion in the living room, how house cats tamed us and took over the world, Abigail Tucker
- The circus, a visual history, Pascal Jacob ; preface by Marius Kwint ; translated from the French by Augusta Dörr
- If you were a kid at the first Thanksgiving, by Melissa Sarno ; illustrated by Lluis Farre
- Road trip, roadside America from Custard's Last Stand to the Wigwam Restaurant, Richard Longstreth
- Cities, the first 6,000 years, Monica L. Smith
- The clockmaker's daughter, a novel, Kate Morton
- Great expectations, retold from the Charles Dickens original by Deanna McFadden ; illustrated by Eric Freeberg
- Drive, the definitive history of driving, editor-in chief, Giles Chapman ; contributors, Andrew Noakes, Chris Rees, Martin Gurdon, Richard Truett, Sam Skelton, Richard Bremner, Peter Nunn, Simon Heptinstall, Alexandra Black
- Alice on the island, a Pearl Harbor survival story, by Mayumi Shimose Poe ; illustrated by Matt Forsyth
- Slaughterhouse-five, or, the children's crusade, a duty-dance with death, by Kurt Vonnegut, a fourth-generation German-American now living in easy circumstances on Cape Cod (and smoking too much), who, as an American infantry scout hors de combat, as a prisoner of war, witnessed the fire-bombing of Dresden, Germany, "the Florence of the Elbe, " a long time ago, and survived to tell the tale. This is a novel somewhat in the telegraphic schizophrenic manner of tales of the planet Tralfamadore, where the flying saucers come from. Peace
- Hadrian's Wall, Adrian Goldsworthy
- The wealth of a nation, a history of trade politics in America, C. Donald Johnson