New historical fiction

For November's new fiction, I've gathered together some of the most highly-anticipated tales set in history. This list has something for everybody: family drama, an international detective case, war and peace, and high court shenanigans. All in the service of a great month to read.
What's that? You're refraining from reading novels this month because you'll be writing a novel instead? Go, you! Here's your library's guide to NaNoWriMo.
1. This House is Mine by Dorte Hansen

2. Desolation Flats by Andrew Hunt

3. The Gun Room by Georgina Harding

A young English photographer’s life is forever altered by bearing witness, particularly to the aftermath of a U.S. raid on a village during the Vietnam War. There, he captures an image of an American soldier that becomes a powerful war photograph, intentionally symbolizing the agony of war and unintentionally exposing how photojournalism is also wounding. - Booklist Reviews
Reserve4. The Spy by Paulo Coelho

The fictional memoir of a woman who paid the ultimate price for daring to defy convention in a time and a place where a war was raging, and justice was consequently distorted. Coelho uses Mata Hari’s story to illustrate how an individual’s fate can be caught up in the effort by the powers-that-be to distract the public from the horrific realities of their circumstances. - Booklist Reviews
Reserve5. Victoria by Daisy Goodwin

See more of Jennifer's fiction suggestions