When Are You Reading? Challenge 2026 Sign-Up

The When Are You Reading Challenge is back for 2026, once again hosted by Sam at Taking on a World of Words. It involves reading a book set in each of twelve time periods. Determining what year a book belongs in is the decision of the participant. On the whole, the rule is to choose a year where the largest part of the action occurs or the most important event.

I’ve managed to complete the challenge for the past few years, including in 2025. Not surprising perhaps given the amount of historical fiction I read but that doesn’t mean it’s always easy to match every time period.

A provisional list for the 2026 challenge is below. I’ve deliberately tried to include books that have been in my TBR pile for a long time. Some of them even appeared in a similar post last year! Links from the title will take you to the book description on Goodreads or, once I’ve read them, to my review.

If you love historical fiction but often find yourself sticking to one or two favourite time periods, or you’re keen to read more historical fiction in 2026, why not sign up?


Pre-1200:           Agrippa by Robert Harris

1200-1499:        The Pretender by Jo Harkin

1500-1699:        Act of Oblivion by Robert Harris

1700-1799:        The Ballad of Lord Edward and Citizen Small by Neil Jordan

1800-1899:        Washington Black by Esi Edugyan

1900-1919:         The Heart Stone by Judith Barrow

1920-1939:        Shrines of Gaiety by Kate Atkinson

1940-1959:        A Private Man by Stephanie Sy-Quia

1960-1979:        Lessons in Chemistry by Bonnie Garmus

1980-1999:       The Midnight Hour by Eve Chase

2000-Present:  A Legacy of Spies by John le Carré

The Future:       The Memory of Animals by Claire Fuller

Book Review – Small Acts of Resistance by Anita Frank

About the Book

May 1915. When his aircraft crashes in Northern France, British airman Henry finds himself stranded behind enemy lines. His survival depends on the courage and compassion of a local family who risk everything by hiding him in their farmhouse.

With her village already suffering under Occupation, Marie knows sheltering Henry will put her in family in grave danger, and that peril only increases when two German officers are unexpectedly billeted with them. Forced to live cheek by jowl with their occupiers, it takes all their cunning to keep their deadly secret.

As the shadow of war spreads, loves blooms, offering a glimmer of hope amidst the darkness.

But before long love is put to the test as everyone’s loyalty is called into question. The ramifications of the choices they must now make will be felt long after the war is over.

Format: Hardcover (480 pages) Publisher: HQ
Publication date: 20th November 2025 Genre: Historical Fiction

Find Small Acts of Resistance on Goodreads

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My Review

A French village under German occupation whose inhabitants endure nightly curfews, confiscation of possessions, rationing, deportation to labour camps and brutal punishment if found harbouring British soldiers and airmen. If you didn’t know when the book was set you’d probably imagine it was World War Two. But it’s not, it’s World War One. This is one of the most remarkable aspects of the book because many of the experiences of French people living near the frontline in World War One were not so different from those living in occupied France a few decades later.

My favourite character was Claudette, Marie’s grandmother. She’s a woman of resilience, courage and determination. Her ‘small acts of resistance’ include hiding the family’s valuables in a place the Germans are unlikely to look, or want to look. Her greatest act of resistance though is her decision to shelter Henry, even when that gets increasingly difficult.

Acts of resistance feature in other ways. On a daily basis, Marie has to withstand the prejudice of some in the village because of the circumstances of her birth. And increasingly she finds herself wanting to resist the path she has been persuaded to take in her personal life. It’s especially problematic because, were she to think again, it would dash the hopes of someone she cares for deeply.

Despite the author’s best efforts, I struggled to warm to Henry. Whilst admiring his stoicism in enduring his confinement, I felt he often needlessly put the family at risk. His belief that it was better for him to avoid capture than try to make it back to territory held by the British felt like self-justification of inaction. However, the author cleverly introduces a character to provide an opposing viewpoint.

I would have liked the first half of the book to move more quickly and I found some things rather too convenient, such as the fact Henry and one of the German officers billeted with the family just happen to speak fluent French. Other things seemed a little implausible, such as the family’s ability to pass off Henry as a cousin in a small village where everybody must know one another and even the Germans must surely have wondered why a man of his age hadn’t been conscripted into the French army or sent to a German labour camp.

However, as the story progressed and depicted the brutal realities of life under occupation, I found myself more and more gripped. I thought the author explored very well the difficult decisions people have to make in wartime and how those decisions could come back to haunt them. And that there are life or death moments when you have to decide what’s right and what’s wrong.

I liked that the love story didn’t progress along obvious lines and, although I eventually guessed the direction it was going to go, I still found myself a little tearful at the end of the book. Perhaps that just goes to prove I’m more of a soppy old romantic than I like to think.

Small Acts of Resistance is a well-crafted, sweeping story that reveals the consequences of war and the difficult moral decisions people on all sides are forced to make.

My thanks to HQ for my review copy via NetGalley.

In three words: Emotional, dramatic, moving
Try something similar: Daughters of War by Dinah Jefferies

About the Author

Anita Frank was born in Shropshire and studied English and American History at the University of East Anglia. She lives in Gloucestershire with her husband and three children and is now a full-time carer for her disabled son. Her debut novel The Lost Ones was shortlisted for the Goldsboro Books Glass Bell Award and the Historical Writers’ Association Debut Crown Award, and The Return was shortlisted for the Romantic Novelists’ Association Historical Novel Award. Her novel The Good Liars was an instant Sunday Times bestseller. Small Acts of Resistance is her fourth novel. (Photo: Amazon author page)

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