Best of
Historical

1942

Look to the Mountain


LeGrand Cannon Jr. - 1942
    The book's history testifies to the continuing appeal of the novel. It is an enthralling epic of the men and women who settled the New England wilderness.

The Speeches Of Adolf Hitler, April 1922 August 1939: An English Translation Of Representative Passages


Adolf Hitler - 1942
    

The Lieutenant's Lady


Bess Streeter Aldrich - 1942
    In the wake of the Civil War, land seekers were pouring into the West and displacing the Indian tribes. Although Omaha was beginning to put on social airs, Nebraska was still a raw territory.Not one to take shelter and spend her days sewing and serving tea, Linnie traveled up the Missouri to deliver a "Dear John" message to her cousin's fiancé, a handsome lieutenant--and in a wink became the wife of this stranger. They came to love and trust each other, and their survival on the frontier required nothing less, and a good deal more, from them than that. Their harrowing story is based on the diary of an actual army wife who recorded the daily weather-internal and external.The Lieutenant's Lady, which appeared on best-seller lists in 1942, is part of a series of stories and novels by Bess Streeter Aldrich to be reprinted by the University of Nebraska Press.

The Day Must Dawn


Agnes Sligh Turnbull - 1942
    Against this historical background is told the story of the Murrays and their neighbors, of Violet the daughter, who suddenly realized that she was in love with her foster brother, Hugh, and of how Hugh felt he must play a man's part before he declared his love for her. Authentic pictures of frontier life, of the crudeness of the houses and the furnishings, of the superstitions, old wives tales, religious quirks, and of the essential faith in liberty and democracy. Good substantial historical fiction, by author of The Rolling Years.

The Brittle Glass


Norah Lofts - 1942
    

None But the Brave


Rosamond Van Der Zee Marshall - 1942
    To regain the city, the Duke of Alva laid siege to it in 1573. The siege was lifted for a month in April, but when the Duke returned in May, the city was nearly out of food, but no relief came until early October when the rebels regained the city. Against this background of war, starvation and espionage, the story of Lord John of Texel and Nele van Doon unfolded, as they supported the espionage of the Sea Beggars, and worked to keep the city from falling.