Book Riot highlights a selection of new historical fiction titles releasing in March 2026, covering periods from the Trojan War to the COVID-19 pandemic. The list includes stories of displacement, war, and cultural heritage across various global settings. Readers can explore themes of identity and resilience through these upcoming novels.
The March 2026 historical fiction new releases, as featured on Book Riot, offer a diverse array of narratives that transport readers through time and place. Published on March 4, 2026, the roundup begins with 'What Keeps Us' by Jeanine Boulay, set for release on March 1. The novel interconnects stories of four women tied to Green-Wood Cemetery in New York City, spanning from post-Civil War era to the COVID-19 pandemic, where archivist Rebecca guards the site's histories.
On March 3, Álvaro Enrigue's 'Now I Surrender,' translated by Natasha Wimmer, reimagines the history of the Mexico-United States borderlands and the Old West. The author, known for 'You Dreamed of Empires,' explores the people caught in these contested territories.
Tara Gereaux's 'Wild People Quiet' is set in 1940s Saskatchewan, where a woman evading her past is recognized by a Métis hired hand, forcing her to confront her identity and origins.
Hannah Lillith Assadi's 'Paradiso 17,' releasing March 17, follows a man displaced by the 1948 Nakba in Palestine, tracing his journeys to Kuwait, Italy, and the United States in search of belonging.
Lori Inglis Hall's 'The Shock of the Light' depicts WWII-era twins Tessa and Theo: Theo joins the RAF, while Tessa trains with the Special Operations Executive for espionage. Only one survives, with answers uncovered years later by a PhD student.
Kayla Hardy's 'The Quarter Queen,' out March 31, draws from the life of Voodoo priestess Marie Laveau in 19th-century New Orleans, blending historical fiction and fantasy across perspectives from the 1820s to 25 years later.
Yann Martel's 'Son of Nobody' retells the Trojan War through the 'Psoad,' a free verse epic about a goatherd named Psoas, later discovered by a Canadian academic.
Finally, 'The Traitor' by Abe Kōbō, translated by Mark Gibeau, is a postwar Japan tale of a writer and innkeeper discussing a 19th-century admiral's story, marking its first English translation.
These releases, as noted by Book Riot, build on strong historical fiction from earlier in 2026.