Category
page 1Novels set in the 1790s

A Tale of Two Cities
1859 novel by Charles Dickens

The Scarlet Pimpernel
novel by Emma Orczy

Ninety-three
Ninety-Three (Quatrevingt-treize) is the last novel by the French writer Victor Hugo. Published in 1874, three years after the bloody upheaval of the Paris Commune that resulted out of popular reaction to Napoleon III's failure to win the Franco-Prussian War, the novel concerns the Revolt in the Vendée and Chouannerie – the counter-revolutionary uprisings in 1793 during the French Revolution. It is divided into three parts, but not chronologically; each part tells a different story, offering a different view of historical general events. The action mainly takes place in Brittany and in Paris.

Billy Budd, Sailor
novella by Herman Melville

Bug-Jargal
Bug-Jargal is a novel by the French writer Victor Hugo. First published in 1826, it is a reworked version of an earlier short story of the same name published in the Hugo brothers' magazine Le Conservateur littéraire in 1820. The novel follows a friendship between the enslaved African prince of the title and a French military officer named Leopold D'Auverney during the tumultuous early years of the Haitian Revolution.

The Kingdom of this World
1949 novel by Alejo Carpentier

Adam Bede
1859 novel by George Eliot

Scaramouche
novel by Rafael Sabatini

The Antiquary
1816 novel by Walter Scott

The Last Letters of Jacopo Ortis
book by Ugo Foscolo
The Knight of Sainte-Hermine
1869 novel by Alexandre Dumas

Glenarvon
Glenarvon was Lady Caroline Lamb's first novel. It created a sensation when published on 9 May 1816. Set in the Irish Rebellion of 1798, the book satirized the Whig Holland House circle, while casting a sceptical eye on left-wing politics. Its rakish title character, Lord Glenarvon, is an unflattering depiction of her ex-lover, Lord Byron. In 1866, it was reprinted under the title, The Fatal Passion.

The Blue Flower
1995 novel by Penelope Fitzgerald
The Armour of Light
2023 novel by Ken Follett