Tituba of Salem Village has 272 pages.
Tituba, an enslaved woman of African descent, was accused of witchcraft in February 1692 during the Salem witch trials in colonial Massachusetts. Her accusations were part of a larger wave of hysteria that swept through Salem Village, where numerous individuals were accused of practicing witchcraft. Tituba's confession and the sensational details she provided fueled the panic, leading to the trials and executions of many others.
The people were mainly women and young girls. There weren't that many famous people in that time in Salem Village. Maybe the book Tituba might say more about the hangings of accused and proven guilty witches.
Salem Falls has 434 pages.
The Village by the Sea has 144 pages.
A Village Affair has 231 pages.
The Sky Village has 400 pages.
"It Takes a Village" by Hillary Rodham Clinton has 352 pages.
Tituba was one of the main accusers of the Salem witch trials. She was a slave, from Barbados, who had been blamed for witchcraft, so to spare herself named, along with many girls of the village, numerous people to be witches.
The Vile Village has 256 pages.
individualistic
vulnerable
Mon village à l'heure allemande has 307 pages.