The 1920s – Books for All-Ages

Here you’ll find a list of books that are either set in the 1920s or were written during this time. This list is broken down by age but there are many books that can be enjoyed by some or all of the age groups. This list is just a sample of the thousands of books that we can access through the county-wide system. Descriptions were taken from our Literature database; Novelist (click to access from home.)

Click on Titles to be taken to the Catalog

Adult Fiction and Non-Fiction Books (Some may be suitable for teens or even children. Please ask a librarian for help with determining age suitability) 

The Color Purple By: Alice Walker – Two African American sisters, one a missionary in Africa and the other a child-wife living in the South, support each other through their correspondence, beginning in the 1920s.

The Good Earth By: Pearl S. Buck – Wang Lung, a Chinese peasant, rises from poverty to become a rich landowner with the aid of his patient wife in the 1920s.

The Great Gatsby By: F. Scott Fitzgerald – In 1925, The Great Gatsby was published and hailed as an artistic and material success for its young author, F. Scott Fitzgerald. It is considered a vastly more mature and artistically masterful treatment of Fitzgerald’s early themes, which examine the results of the Jazz Age generation’s adherence to false material values. In nine chapters, Fitzgeralds presents the rise and fall of Jay Gatsby, as related in first-person narrative by Nick Carraway.


The Hours
By: Michael Cunningham
– The spirit of Virginia Woolf permeates the lives of several American readers as evidenced in this trio of tales about the author Woolf, a New Yorker planning a party to honour a writer, and a young mother reading Woolf’s Mrs. Dalloway.

The House By: Danielle Steel – A workaholic attorney, Sarah Anderson finds her life transformed by an inheritance from an elderly client and by a magnificent mansion, built in the 1920s by a wealthy Frenchman, a legacy that leads Sarah to architect Jeff Parker.


Middlesex
By: Jeffrey Eugenides
– Calliope’s friendship with a classmate and her sense of identity are compromised by the adolescent discovery that she is a hermaphrodite, a situation with roots in her grandparent’s desperate struggle for survival in the 1920s.

New World Coming By: Nathan Miller – Miller characterizes the 1920s as a decade full of drinking, dancing, hedonism, and crime. Miller first concentrates on the writer who captured the decade’s insouciance and ennui in The Great Gatsby, periodically revisiting F. Scott Fitzgerald’s self-destructive slide, then returning to recount the period’s social and economic trends. Blacks moved north, women began voting, factories hummed, farms stagnated, stocks inflated, and speakeasies proliferated.


The Sun Also Rises By: Ernest Hemingway
– The story of a group of Americans and English on a sojourn from Paris to Paloma, evokes in poignant detail, life among the expatriates on Paris’s Left Bank, during the 1920s and conveys in brutally realistic descriptions the power and danger of bullfighting in Spain.

Tinkers By: Paul Harding – On his deathbed, surrounded by his family, George Washington Crosby’s thoughts drift back to his childhood and the father who abandoned him when he was twelve.

Teen Fiction and Non-Fiction Books (Just because it says teens doesn’t mean adults won’t like them too!)

Harlem Stomp!: a cultural history of the Harlem Renaissance By: Laban Carrick Hill – Explores the literary, artistic, and intellectual creativity of the Harlem Renaissance and discusses the lives and work of Louis Armstrong, Langston Hughes, Zora Neale Hurston, and other notable figures of the era.


How it Happened in Peach Hill
By: Marthe Jocelyn
– When fifteen-year-old Annie Grey and her “clairvoyant” mother arrive in Peach Hill, New York, in 1924, each finds a reason for wanting to finally settle down, but to reach their goals they will have to do some serious lying and Annie will have to stand up for herself.

The Kat Who Walked in Beauty: the panoramic dailies of 1920 By: George Herriman – A companion to the complete Krazy Kat Sunday series collects rare and unique dailies from the 1910s and 1920s, many of which feature unrestricted layout and pictorial content, in a volume that also includes the first stand-alone Krazy & Ignatz strips and illustrations from the Krazy Kat Jazz pantomime ballet of 1922.

Operation Red Jericho By: Joshua Mowll – The posthumous papers of Rebecca MacKenzie document her adventures, along with her brother Doug, in 1920s China as the teenaged siblings are sent to live aboard their uncle’s ship where they become involved in the dangerous activities of a mysterious secret society called the Honourable Guild of Specialists.

The Star Fisher By: Laurence Yep – Fifteen-year-old Chinese-American Joan Lee and her family find the adjustment hard when they move from Ohio to West Virginia in the 1920s.

Vixen By: Jillian Larkin – In 1923 Chicago, seventeen-year-old Gloria Carmody rebels against her upcoming society wedding by visiting a speakeasy, while her Pennsylvania cousin, Clara, hides similar tastes and her best friend, Lorraine, makes plans of her own.

The Voice that Challenged a Nation By: Russell Freedman – An account of the life of a talented and determined artist who left her mark on musical and social history is drawn from Anderson’s own writings and other contemporary accounts.

White Lilacs By: Carolyn Meyer – In 1921 in Dillon, Texas, twelve-year-old Rose Lee sees trouble threatening her Black community when the Whites decide to take the land there for a park and forcibly relocate the Black families to an ugly stretch of territory outside the town.

WitnessBy: Karen Hesse – A series of poems express the views of various people in a small Vermont town, including a young black girl and a young Jewish girl, during the early 1920s when the Ku Klux Klan is trying to infiltrate the town.

Children’s Fiction and Non-Fiction Books (Adults can like these too!)

The 1920s: Luck By: Dorothy Hoobler – In 1927 the Dixons move from rural Georgia to Chicago, where African Americans have more opportunities, and there Lorraine meets a famous movie actress and her little brother Marcus finds that his artistic talents are useful.

Dave at Night By: Gail Carson Levine – When orphaned Dave is sent to the Hebrew Home for Boys where he is treated cruelly, he sneaks out at night and is welcomed into the music- and culture-filled world of the Harlem Renaissance.

Egyptology: search for the tomb of Osiris, being the journal of Miss Emily Sands, November 1926 By: Emily Sands – Presents information on ancient Egypt in the form of a journal of a young woman who went missing on a trip to search for the tomb of the god Osiris in 1926.

Henry and the Kite Dragon By: Bruce Edward Hall – In New York City in the 1920s, the children from Chinatown go after the children from Little Italy for throwing rocks at the beautiful kites Grandfather Chin makes, not realizing that they have a reason for doing so.

The Little Match Girl By: Jerry Pinkney – An American child of the 1920s who sells matches is visited by some visions which bring some beauty to her brief, tragic life.

An Old-fashioned ABC Book By: Elizabeth Allen Ashton – An alphabet book celebrating the art of Jessie Willcox Smith, whose popular illustrations were featured on the covers of “Good Housekeeping” throughout the 1920s and 1930s.

This Land is your Land By: Woody Guthrie – This well-known folk song is accompanied by a tribute from folksinger Pete Seeger, the musical notation, and a biographical scrapbook with photographs.

Uncle Jed’s Barbershop By: Margaree King Mitchell – Despite serious obstacles and setbacks Sarah Jean’s Uncle Jed, the only Black barber in the county, pursues his dream of saving enough money to open his own barbershop.

Young Fu of the Upper Yangtze By: Elizabeth Foreman Lewis – In the 1920’s a Chinese youth from the country comes to Chungking with his mother where the bustling city offers adventure and his apprenticeship to a coppersmith brings good fortune.

1920s – History and SPL Programs

The Decade of the 1920s is our first destination
in our Journey back in time!

Check out our 1920s Board on Pinterest to be taken back to the Roaring Twenties! 

The 1920s were an age of dramatic social and political change. For the first time, more Americans lived in cities than on farms. The nation’s total wealth more than doubled between 1920 and 1929, and this economic growth swept many Americans into an affluent but unfamiliar “consumer society.” People from coast to coast bought the same goods (thanks to nationwide advertising and the spread of chain stores), listened to the same music, did the same dances and even used the same slang! Many Americans were uncomfortable with this new, urban, sometimes racy “mass culture”; in fact, for many–even most–people in the United States, the 1920s brought more conflict than celebration. However, for a small handful of young people in the nation’s big cities, the 1920s were roaring indeed. Source.

Read More About:

The “New Woman”

The Birth of Mass Culture

The Jazz Age

Prohibition

The “Cultural Civil War”

Source Citation: The Roaring Twenties. (2012). The History Channel website. Retrieved 2:48, May 30, 2012, from http://www.history.com/topics/roaring-twenties.

 

Join us this week for these “Between the Decades” Programs.

Summer Reading 2012 Starts Today! – This Program runs from June 4th to August 10th – This year’s Summer Reading Program is so HUGE that it spans the whole of time and space. Look for programs about the mystery of night, history through the years, and our little corner of the world. The library will offer reading incentive programs for All Ages. Visit the Summer Reading Page for more information on how to participate.

#Dear Photo SewickleyThis Program runs all summer long! – Take a Picture of a Picture of the Past – Take a picture of a picture of the past. This summer we’re going to be sharing our memories of Sewickley and surrounding areas through old photographs. The contest will run from Monday, June 4th to Monday, August 6th. Photos can be submitted via Twitter, Instagram, or email. All photos will be posted to our Pinterest Board, and the person who submitted the picture that gets the most likes and repins (combined) will win a night out for 4 at the Dependable Drive-In in Moon Township. Get more information at dearphotosewickley.com. Please register.

Decades Documentaries – The Roaring Twenties (1920s) – Tuesday, June 5 @ 2PM – Just the Facts: Emergence of Modern America: The Roaring Twenties. No Registration is Required. 30 min. Not Rated.

Prohibition Woes? Learn How to Become a Home Brewer! – Thursday, June 7 @ 7PM – Have you ever considered brewing your own been? Even though in 2012 you can legally buy it from a store, beer brewing in the comfort of your own home and with ingredients of your choosing, can be a wonderful hobby. Greg Kamerdze, a self-taught home brewer, will go over the necessary equipment, ingredients for various types of beers, and the process of brewing, bottling, and even kegging your own beer. Please register.

Decades Movies: Brighton Beach Memoirs (1930s) – Friday, June 8 @ 2PM – New York, the 1930s…and a young man’s mind is on the Yankees and sex (not necessarily in that order), as well as trying to deal with his argumentative family. Personal, telling, and touching, Neil Simon’s acclaimed comic memoir stars Blythe Danner, Bob Dishy, Judith Ivey and Jonathan Silverman. (1986, 110min, PG-13) No Registration is Required. The 1920s movie was shown on June 1st. Don’t worry, we’ll catch up in two weeks.

 

 

Roads? Where we’re going, we don’t need roads!

Think you’ve seen it all? Think again. Outside those doors, we might see anything.
We could find new worlds, terrifying monsters, impossible things. And if you come with me…
nothing will ever be the same again! – Doctor Who


A Journey…

 

Starting on Monday, June 4th, SPL will be traveling “Back in Time.” We’ll journey all the way back to 1920 and each week, we’ll make our way forward to the 2000s. Remember poodle skirts, bell bottoms, and hammer pants? Even if you weren’t alive when they were popular, if you come with us, you’ll feel like you were there.

Here’s how it works

  • Mondays: we’ll post a brief history of that week’s decade and a list of the “Between the Decades” Programs.
  • Tuesdays: we’ll post a list of books for all-ages that were either written in or are set in that decade.
  • Wednesdays: we’ll post a list of movies/TV Shows/documentaries that are about or set in that decade.
  • Thursdays: we’ll post a list of music from that decade (we welcome guest blogger, Bridget Clark.)
  • Fridays: we’ll share some of the public book reviews from our Online Summer Reading Program.

Two more things before we go

You don’t have to wait until Monday to go back in time! This Friday, June 1, @ 2PM, we’ll be showing our 1920s Feature Film, The Great Gatsby. Stop in to enjoy some popcorn and A/C

<<AND>>

Registration has already begun for our Online Summer Reading Program. This online program allows Adults to share, rate, and review some of the books they are reading this summer. Each book you log also makes you eligible to win one of our weekly prizes ($40 gift cards to local businesses) or a Grand Prize of a Kindle Fire!

 

Top Rated Books of the Summer…6/6-6/21

Our Adult Summer Reading Participants have been super busy reading and writing reviews for their favorite books. So far, we have 105 Adults signed up and they have read a total of 211 books! Here is a list of the books that they’ve rated as deserving 5 stars*****. If you click the titles, you’ll be taken to the catalog where you can place a hold on the book, if you’d like.

Al Capone Does My Shirts By Gennifer Choldenko
Al Capone Shines My Shoes By Gennifer Choldenko
American Evita By Christopher Anderson
Angela’s Ashes By Frank Mccourt
Around My French Table By Dorie Greenspan
As You Like It By Shakespeare
This Body Of Death By Elizabeth George
Broke By Glenn Beck
Brother, I’m Dying By Edwide Danticat
Buffy The Vampire Slayer Omnibus Volume 1 By Scott Allie
Cold Sassy Tree By Olive Ann Burns
The Confession By John Grisham
Crazy Love By Francis Chan
Embassytown By China Mieville
Fall Of Giants By Ken Follett
The Girl With The Dragon Tattoo By Stieg Larsson
The Glass Castle By Jeanette Walls
God Is Not Great By Christopher Hitchens
A Great Deliverance By Elizabeth George
Hellboy: Conqueror Worm By Mike Mignola
The Help By Kathryn Stockett
I Hope They Serve Beer In Hell By Tucker Max
If You Ask Me And (Of Course You Won’t) By Betty White
The Improper Life of Bezellia Grove By Susan Gregg Gilmore
Inkdeath By Cornelia Funke
Inkspell By Cornelia Funke
The Kind Diet By Alicia Silverstone
Last Song By Nicholas Sparks
The Lies We Told By Diane Chamberlain
Mists Of Avalon By Marion Zimmer Bradley
Moloka’i By Alan Brennert
Mossflower By Brian Jacques
The Murderer’s Daughters By Randy Susan Meyers
My Bread By Jim Lahey
Naked Now By Richard Rohr
Never Let Me Go By Kazuo Ishigurd
No Passengers Beyond This Point By Gennifer Choldenko
North And South By John Jakes
On Rue Tatin: Living And Cooking In A French Town By Susan Hermann Loomis
One Day By David Nichollos
Open By Andre Agassi
Oryx And Crake By Margaret Atwood
Pearl In The Sand By Tessa Afshar
Play Dead By Harlen Coben
Possum Living: How To Live Well Without A Job And With (Almost) No Money By Dolly Freed
The Postcard Killers By James Patterson
A Promise To Remember By Kathryn Cushman
The Prostitute’s Ball By Stephen Cannell
The Remains Of The Day By Kazuo Ishiguro
A River In The Sky By Elizabeth Peters
Safe Haven By Nicholas Sparks
Scorecasting By Tobias Moskowitz
Size 14 Is Not Fat Either By Mag Cabot
South Of Broad By Pat Conroy
Sputnik Sweetheart By Haruki Murakami
Strangers At The Feast By Jennifer Vanderbes
The Taste Of Home of Home Cookbook
Too Good To Be True By Kristen Higgins
True Grit By Charles Portis
The 12th Planet By Zecharia Sitchin
Twilight By Stephanie Meyers
Unbroken: A World War II Story Of Survival, Resilience, And Redemption By Laura Hillenbrand
Undead And Unreturnable By MaryJanice Davidson
Water For Elephants By Sara Gruen
Winter Solstice By Rosamunde Pilcher
Winter’s Bone By Daniel Woodrell
With The Old Breed By Eugene B. Sledge
You Are Your Own Gym By Mark Lauren

 

Sewickley’s Favorite Books – Summer 2009

The Following books were rated 5 stars by the participants in the Adult Summer Reading Program. Click on the Book Jackets to read more about the books and even reserve them!

Accidental Mother, by Rowan Coleman

Alexandria, by Lindsey Davis

All Around the Town, by Mary Higgins Clark

Angels and Demons, by Dan Brown

The Appeal, by John Grisham

Arctic Drift, by Clive Cussler

Beach Music, by Pat Conroy

Big Four, by Agatha Christie

Blood Work, by Michael Connelly

Blow Out, by Catherine Coulter

A Bold Fresh Piece of Humanity, by Bill O’Reilly

Book Thief, by Marcus Zusak

A Case of Need, by Michael Crichton

The Cat Who Went Up the Creek, by Lilian Jackson Braun

Chasing Smoke, by Bill Cameron

Columbine, by Dave Cullen

The Count of Monte Cristo, by Alexandre Dumas

The Cradle Will Fall, by Mary Higgins Clark

Crazy Love, by Leslie Morgan Steiner

Cross Country, by James Patterson

A Cry in the Night, by Mary Higgins Clark

Cutting for Stone, by A. Verghese

Danse Macabre, by Laurell K. Hamilton

Dark Summer, by Iris Johansen

A Day Late and a Dollar Short, by Terry McMillan

Dear and Glorious Physician, by Taylor Caldwell

Death in Hyde Park, by Robin Paige

Domestic Affairs, by Eileen Goudge

Dying for Revenge, by Eric J. Dickey

The Edge, by Catherine Coulter

Executive Privilege, by Phillip Margolin

Fahrenheit 451, by Ray Bradbury

The Faithful Spy, by Alex Berenson

Farewell To Arms, by Ernest Hemingway

Fatally Flaky, by Diane Mott Davidson

Fault Line, by Barry Eisler

Fearless Fourteen, by Janet Evanovich

Fidelity, by Thomas Perry

Finding Nouf, by Zoe Ferraris

Finger Lickin Fifteen, by Janet Evanovich

Fire and Ice, by J.A. Jance

First Family, by David Baldacci

Fortune Hunter, by Diane Farr

Foul Play, by Janet Evanovich

Francesca’s Party, by Patricia Scanlan

Gifts of the Heart, by Bettie Youngs

A Good Woman, by Danielle Steel

The Gospel of Wealth and Other Timely Essays, by Andrew Carnegie

The Grand Finale, by Janet Evanovich

The Great Books, by Bruce Meyer

Grow Organic, by Doug Oster and Jessica Walliser

Growing Up Again, by Mary Tyler Moore

Handle with Care, by Jodi Piccoult

Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince, by JK Rowling

The Help, by Kathryn Stockett

The Hobbit, by J.R.R. Tolkien

The Horse Boy, by Rupert Isaacson

In Her Defense, by Stephen Horn

Interpreter of Maladies, by Jhumpa Lahiri

It Only Takes a Momenti by Mary Jane Clark

The Judgement of Paris, by Ross King

Junk Beautiful: Room-by-Room Makeovers with Junkmarket Style, by Sue Whitney & Ki Nassauer

Kaffe Knits Again, by Kaffe Fassett

Keeping Faith, by Jodi Picoult

King’s Oak, by Anne Rivers Seddons

The Kite Runner, by Khaled Hoseini

The Last Hurrah, by Edwin O’Connor

The Last Lecture, by Randy Pausch

Les Miserables, by Victor Hugo

Light in the Forest, by Conrad Richter

Lights Out Tonight, by Mary Jane Clark

Loitering with Intent, by Stuart Woods

London Bridges, by James Patterson

Long Lost, by Harlan Coben

Look Again, by Lisa Scottoline

Love, Medicine, and Miracles, by Bernie Siegel

Mason Dixon Knitting Outside the Lines, by Kay Gardiner

Meltdown, by Thomas E. Woods, Jr.

The Memory Collector, by Meg Gardiner

The Middle Place, by Kelly Corrigan

Midnight in Sicily, by Peter Robb

Mists of Avalon, by Marion Zimmer Bradley

My Sister’s Keeper, by Jodi Picoult

The Namesake, by Jhumpa Lahiri

The Necklace, by Guy de Maupassant

Nineteen Minutes, by Jodi Picoult

Off Season, by Ann Rivers Siddons

One Day at a Time, by Danielle Steel

The Outliers, by Malcolm Gladwell

Perfectly Imperfect, by Lee Woodruff

Porch Stories, by Jewel Parker Rhodes

Real Sex, by Lauren Winner

Running Hot, by Jayne Krentz

Same Kind of Different as Me, by Ron Hall

The Scarecrow, by Michael Connelly

The School of Essential Ingredients, by Erica Buermister

Secret Life of Bees, by Sue Monk Kidd

Shadow Music, by Julie Garwood

Sharpe’s Tiger, by Bernard Cornwell

The Silent Speaker, by Rex Stout

Soul Stories, by Gary Zukav

Still Alice, by Lisa Genova

Still Watchi, by Mary Higgins Clark Summer at Tiffany, by Marjorie Hart
Suzanne’s Diary for Nicholas, by James Patterson Sweetheart, by Chelsea Cain
Sweetness at the Bottom of the Pie, by Alan Bradley Swimsuit, by James Patterson
Tail Spin, by Catherine Coulter Sidney Crosby: Taking the Game by Storm, by Gare Joyce
TeaTime for theTraditionally Built, by Alexander McCall Smith Team of Rivals, by Doris Kearns Goodwin
To Have and Have Not, by Ernest Hemingway To the Death, by Patrick Robinson
Today, I am a Ma’amValerie Harper Total ControlDavid Baldacci
Trunk Music, by Michael Connelly Under Enemy Colors, by S. Thomas Russell
The Undomestic Goddess, by Sophie Kinsella Walk Away the Pounds: The Breakthrough Six-week Program that Helps you Burn the Fat, Tone Muscle, and Feel Great without Dieting, by Leslie Sansone
Warlock: a novel of Ancient Egypt, by Wilbur Smith Wedding Ring, by Emilie Richards
Weep No More My Lady, by Mary Higgins Clark While My Pretty One Sleeps, by Mary Higgins Clark
The Whole World Over, by Julia Glass Wicked Prey, by John Sandford