Dual-Timeline Historical Fiction Novels

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Rommie Analytics

There’s something special about the way a dual-timeline historical fiction novel connects people and stories throughout the past and present. From multi-generational tales that cover the lives of an entire family tree to novels that feature characters connected through the ages, dual- and multi-timeline novels are able to depict history in a way single timeline narratives simply can’t. These stories, which sometimes involve mysteries or secrets that need to be uncovered from decades or centuries past, create a compelling sense of tension by switching not only between character perspectives but entire settings.

These five new dual-timeline historical novels travel all the way back to Tudor England, where a single vision could change the course of a young woman’s life—but also place her in unimaginable danger—to the twentieth-century United States, where many reckon with the choices and experiences of past generations that are still rippling down through the years today.

The Lost Book of Elizabeth Barton book cover

The Lost Book of Elizabeth Barton by Jennifer N. Brown

Tudor Era England and Present Day England

A scholar delving into the life of Reformation Era prophetess Elizabeth Barton jumps at the chance to join an elite consortium in England among a handful of fellow researchers—including her ex. Even better, the consortium takes place in an aging manor right next to the ruins of the priory where Barton once lived. But as the timeline jumps between Alison in the present day and Elizabeth in the 16th century, it becomes clear that the secret agendas taking place around these women could very well lead to their doom.

Keeper of Lost Children book cover

Keeper of Lost Children by Sadeqa Johnson

Post-WWII Germany and 1960s United States

The wife of an American soldier in post-war Germany notices a strange sight: a group of mixed-race children following behind a nun like little ducklings. Desperate to conceive a child of her own, she decides to find out more about their story. The story of the children winds back to lonely Black soldiers in occupied Germany and forward through the decades to a girl named Sophia who discovers a secret about her past that upends everything she thought she knew about herself and her family.

Fishbone Cinderella book cover

Fishbone Cinderella by Elizabeth Lim

1940s Hong Kong and 1960s San Francisco

A girl in 1940s Hong Kong toils in her family’s shoe factory under the demands of a distant father and an unfeeling stepmother. She learns through years of hardship that sometimes the best way to survive is to disappear. Decades later, Marigold is shocked to witness her mother vanish right before her eyes. The discovery shatters their relationship. Years later, as her mother’s condition begins to deteriorate, Marigold begins looking into her family’s history. It’s only when she uncovers the secrets her family has been hiding for generations that she begins to understand why her mother has worked so hard to forget the past.

cover of The Seven Daughters of Dupree

The Seven Daughters of Dupree by Nikesha Elise Williams

1917, 1934, 1980s, and 1995 United States

In this multi-generational saga, seven generations of women in the Dupree family navigate love, loss, and generational trauma even as the ties that bind them prove to be the strongest force of all. When fourteen-year-old Tati begins asking questions about the identity of her father in 1995, she’s met with secrets and silence. Her mother and grandmother don’t talk about the past. They won’t talk about who Tati’s father is or why Gladys left Alabama in the 1950s. As the narrative weaves back through generations of women, it becomes clear why the Dupree women keep their secrets close and their family even closer.

Everything Lost Returns

Everything Lost Returns by Sarah Domet

1910s and 1960s

Two things connect Nona Dixon and Opal Doucet: Halley’s Comet and the Earthshine Soap Company. Nona owes the Earthshine Soap Company everything after they made her their first Earthshine Girl, thereby launching her acting career. But when a series of anonymous women file a class-action lawsuit against the company for including harmful ingredients in their soap, Nona begins looking into the company’s current owner, a woman named Bertie Tuttle, who has a complicated history. Decades before, Opal began working for Earthshine to help make ends meet. The working conditions are decidedly unsafe, but even as she helps a fellow employee plan a strike, she has to weigh the cost of her own freedom against the lives of the women being affected by the soap company’s practices.

Want more dual-timeline and multi-generational tales? Try these recommendations on for size:

8 Engrossing Books with Multiple Timelines

Intergenerational Family Sagas

10 Great Intergenerational Stories

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