Not a novel, but I recommend
Rejected Princesses. It is about many of the women you don't get to hear about in the history books that usually focus on white men. Better, it doesn't focus on straight white christian women as one similar book unfortunately does. If anyone else is interested in gender equality/feminism or at least in historical people you probably have never heard of, I recommend this book of short stories.
Though she's one of the least historically important in the book, I'll summarize one of the most entertaining stories, that of Julie "La Maupin" d'Aubigny of France over 3 centuries ago, a bisexual woman with an inspiring life story.
Her father being in charge of training pages under Louis XIV, he had two major contributions to her life, training her in fencing, and threatening to duel any man who came near her.
La Maupin found a loophole though, and started getting it on with her father's boss, the one guy her father couldn't challenge to a duel.
But she was too much for him, and he tried to arrange to have her settle down with some clerk. Having none of that, she ran off with a wandering swordsman.
Making a living singing, and doing dueling demonstrations, during which she quickly surpassed her new lover, while dressed as a man, one heckler yelled that she had to actually be a man. She responded by ripping her shirt open in front of everyone, removing any doubt.
Getting bored of the wandering swordsman, and of men in general, she seduced a merchant's daughter. The merchant didn't like that, and sent his daughter to a convent. La Maupin once again found a loophole, and joined the convent herself, so they could continue their passion in the house of god, before burning the place down and running off in the confusion. But she once again got bored, left her, and returned home.
Sentenced to death for these shenanigans, she used her influence with her first lover, her dad's boss, to get the king to pardon her. After which, she promptly ran off to join the opera.
Then she turned 20.
Her career grew alternately from fighting and f... passioning her way to the top.
Highlights include challenging a guy to a duel who was insulting female opera singers. When he declined in a cowardly way, she beat him up with a cane and took his stuff. When he later complained of being assaulted by a gang of thieves, she found out, called him out on it, and threw his stuff back in his face, declaring in front of everyone that she acted alone.
Another time, a 17th century MRA tried to hit on her with an old timey version of "Does the carpet match the drapes". She got into a fight with him and two of his friends, beat all of them, and stabbed him in the shoulder. Then she hooked up with him anyway just because she could.
Then another time, she attended a royal ball dressed as a man, and courted a young woman who was already being courted by three male suitors. Kissing her in front of everyone, they felt provoked and challenged her a duel. She won.
The dueling laws getting increasing harsh at the time, La Maupin didn't get off completely clean with that one, getting a second pardon from Louis XIV just because he was so entertained by what happened that he used the flimsy excuse that the dueling laws as written didn't say anything about women, only men.
She would die at the age of 37, when at the time most stories about her either described her about the way one might talk about the bride of Satan, or described completely fictional endings about her (re)joining a convent for life as a lesson in repentance, even though the truth is that La Maupin, the woman who did whatever, and whoever, she pleased, finally settled down with her husband, supposedly long after remembering that she was technically married through most of this.
I don't want this truly amazing story, or any of the others, to be forgotten, so please check out Rejected Princesses if you have the chance.