Sunday, June 14, 2026

Five dual-timeline historical fiction titles

Rachel Brittain is a writer, Day Dreamer, and Amateur Aerialist. Her short fiction has appeared in Luna Station Quarterly, Andromeda Spaceways, and others. She is a contributing editor for Book Riot, where she screams into the void about her love of books. Brittain lives in Northwest Arkansas with a rambunctious rescue pup, a snake, and a houseful of plants (most of which aren’t carnivorous).

At Book Riot she tagged "five dual-timeline historical fiction novels that bring past and present together." One entry on the list:
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.
Read about the other entries on the list.

--Marshal Zeringue