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Resources share the relationship genre to History
- Paris red, a novel, Maureen Gibbon
- Into the hands of the soldiers, freedom and chaos in Egypt and the Middle East, David D. Kirkpatrick
- The home that was our country, a memoir of Syria, Alia Malek
- What is the Stanley Cup?, by Gail Herman ; illustrated by Gregory Copeland
- Four funerals and maybe a wedding, Rhys Bowen
- American folk art, William C. Ketchum, Jr
- Killing the SS, the hunt for the worst war criminals in history, Bill O'Reilly and Martin Dugard
- Inseparable, the original Siamese twins and their rendezvous with American history, Yunte Huang
- Tesla, inventor of the modern, Richard Munson
- The King's Curse, Philippa Gregory
- Fidel Castro, Cuban revolutionary leader, by Jill C. Wheeler ; content consultant, Aviva Chomsky
- Gutenberg's apprentice, a novel, Alix Christie
- American dialogue, the founders and us, Joseph J. Ellis
- Who gives a hoot?, by Jacqueline Kelly ; with illustrations by Jennifer L. Meyer
- Agatha Christie, a mysterious life, Laura Thompson
- The last bookaneer, Matthew Pearl
- The radium girls, the dark story of America's shining women, Kate Moore
- United States Army, by Kenny Abdo
- The end of memory, a natural history of aging and Alzheimer's, Jay Ingram
- Scarface and the untouchable, Al Capone, Eliot Ness, and the battle for Chicago, Max Allan Collins, A. Brad Schwartz
- Ninjas and samurai, a nonfiction companion to Magic tree house #5 : Night of the ninjas, by Mary Pope Osborne and Natalie Pope Boyce ; illustrated by Sal Murdocca
- Tulip fever., Worldview Entertainment, Paramount Pictures Corporation present ; a Ruby Films production ; directed by Justin Chadwick ; screenplay by Deborah Moggach and Tom Stoppard ; produced by Alison Owen, Widescreen/
- On the field with ... Tom Brady, Matt Christopher ; text by Sam Page
- Bone rattler, a mystery of colonial America, Eliot Pattison
- No turning back, life, loss, and hope in wartime Syria, Rania Abouzeid
- Valiant ambition, George Washington, Benedict Arnold, and the fate of the American Revolution, Nathaniel Philbrick
- Samurai rising, the epic life of Minamoto Yoshitsune, Pamela S. Turner ; illustrated by Gareth Hinds
- Bad blood, secrets and lies in a Silicon Valley startup, John Carreyrou
- World gone by, Dennis Lehane
- D-Day girls, the spies who armed the resistance, sabotaged the Nazis, and helped win World War II, by Sarah Rose
- The crown., Left Bank Pictures ; Sony Pictures Television ; created by Peter Morgan, Season1/, Widescreen
- The warmth of other suns, the epic story of America's great migration, Isabel Wilkerson
- United States Marine Corps, Kenny Abdo
- Boston Tea Party sparks revolution, by Whitney Sanderson
- Living through the Civil War, Yvette LaPierre
- Wolf on a string, a novel, Benjamin Black
- Fault Lines, A History of the United States Since 1974, Kevin M. Kruse and Julian E. Zelizer
- Puritan pedigrees, the deep roots of the great migration to New England, by Robert Charles Anderson
- Indianapolis, the true story of the worst sea disaster in U.S. naval history and the fifty-year fight to exonerate an innocent man, Lynn Vincent and Sara Vladic
- Last Hope Island, Britain, occupied Europe, and the brotherhood that helped turn the tide of war, Lynne Olson
- Industrial revolution, by Veronica B. Wilkins
- Pioneers in women's sports, by Brian Hall
- The morning they came for us, dispatches from Syria, Janine di Giovanni
- The girls in the picture, Melanie Benjamin
- Hockey Hall of Fame book of players, edited by Steve Cameron
- Quarterback, inside the most important position in the National Football League, John Feinstein
- Fever, 1793, Laurie Halse Anderson
- The American plate, a culinary history in 100 bites, Libby H. O'Connell
- Medicine, from Hippocrates to Jonas Salk, Jessie Alkire
- The first conspiracy, the secret plot to kill George Washington, Brad Meltzer and Josh Mensch