10 books for fans of The Ship of Brides
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The Girl You Left Behind
The Girl You Left Behind • Book 1
by Jojo Moyes
★ 4.03 Goodreads (180.9K ratings) -
The Things We Cannot Say
by Kelly Rimmer
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Rimmer weaves together a Polish woman's wartime survival story with her granddaughter's modern family struggles, including caring for an autistic child. The parallel narratives explore how family secrets across generations can both wound and ultimately heal.
★ 4.54 Goodreads (284.0K ratings) -
A Land Remembered
by Patrick D. Smith
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Smith chronicles three generations of a Florida family's rise from poverty to wealth, capturing the state's transformation from untamed wilderness to developed paradise across a century.
★ 4.48 Goodreads (14.8K ratings) -
Homegoing
by Yaa Gyasi
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Two family branches—one sold into slavery, one complicit in selling—unfold across three centuries from 18th-century Ghana to contemporary America.
★ 4.47 Goodreads (410.6K ratings) -
Beneath a Scarlet Sky
by Mark T. Sullivan
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Teenager Pino Lella guides Jews over the Alps then becomes a Nazi general's driver, spying for the Italian resistance. Based on true events, this forgotten hero's story reveals the extraordinary courage of ordinary people.
★ 4.43 Goodreads (396.0K ratings) -
Gates of Fire
by Steven Pressfield
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George Guidall's epic narration matches Pressfield's visceral recreation of ancient warfare and the warrior culture that made such sacrifice possible.
★ 4.40 Goodreads (44.4K ratings) -
Genghis: Birth of an Empire
Conqueror • Book 1
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Abandoned as a child after his father's murder, Temujin endures steppe brutality to become Genghis Khan. Iggulden focuses on the personal betrayals and survival instincts that shaped history's greatest conqueror.
★ 4.39 Goodreads (38.2K ratings) -
The Lies They Told
by Ellen Marie Wiseman
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A young immigrant mother in 1930s rural Virginia faces America's rising eugenics movement, where class and origin determine who deserves forced sterilization. Wiseman illuminates this horrific period when pseudoscience justified systematic oppression.
★ 4.34 Goodreads (21.4K ratings) -
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