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Tatiana and Alexander
Paullina Simons
Harper
, 2004 - 640 pages
average customer review:
based on 15 reviews
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highly recommended
Great!
Another great book by Paulinna Simons! She never disappoints. If you have read others, read this one!
Excellent! You have to read all three though.
I read this series in order. First is "The Bronze Horseman", second is this book "
Tatiana
&
Alexander
", and third is "The Summer Garden." They are all very long books. All three are exceptional!!! I laughed, I cried, I loved the couple like they were my personal friends. You really need to read them in order or else the sequels will bring up lots of questions/confusion. The Bronze Horseman is obviously open-ended leading to the sequel. You could read the second one, Tatiana & Alexander and stop there because it isn't obvious that there's a sequel. But I recommend the last one, The Summer Garden, because it is soooo good. I don't know when I got into a series more. Highly, highly recommended!!!!
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Stellar Sequel
Simons is launching herself up the charts of my favorite authors. I just finished reading this sequel to The Bronze Horseman (which you undoubtedly have to read prior to this incredible second installment) and I cannot believe how seamlessly Simons continues their story. My love for both
Tatiana
and
Alexander's characters
is so immense. Simons envelops you in these characters, and you not only accept it but will it even more. Her descriptions are so real, you feel as if you are experiencing all these things with Tatiana and Alexander, yet cannot imagine the endurance with which they have met all of their trials. Tatiana is an incredibly strong woman, and I admire her fortitude. Alexander likewise is maybe stronger, but in a different way. Both of them, through their love for each other, become only stronger. This is an incredible love story, war story, filled with grief and anguish, but most of all, hope.
On another note, it is extremely hard to find this book in the US. If you don't want to order it from the UK, you'll pretty much have to order it from Amazon.
Happy reading!
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love is in the air
WOW, In 2001, I read the first book in this series (only I didn't know it was the first in a series until recently). I was incredibly moved by the love stoty in The Bronze Horseman and absolutely loved the characters. I was disappointed when it ended. For years, I checked to see if a sequel was out and after a while, forgot to check. A few months ago I discovered that
Tatiana
and
Alexander
was available and when it arrived in the mail, it was like a "bronze" gift. This book has a different writing syle but still filled me with more insight and stories of these two strong and resilient characters. It's one of those books that my family knows to "leave me alone when I'm reading" or else!
Can't wait to read the final book in the series.
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a very good historical epic in the traditional style
In this melodramatic, epic sequel to "The Bronze Horseman", Paullina Simons follows
Tatiana
and
Alexander after
their parting when Alexander is presumed dead, and pregnant Tatiana escapes to America via Finland and Sweden. Love and war are the two main motifs here and the story focuses more on Alexander, than on Tatiana (who was the central character in "The Bronze Horseman"), although the action goes back and forth between these two protagonists. Additionally, the time and space constraints do not apply (as opposed to "The Bronze Horseman" where the rules of chronology applied, here the narration is non-linear) - the action jumps freely between the past, when Alexander is a boy and a teenager, and present, when he struggles during the war as a prisoner and soldier, and between Alexander's journey from Russia to Germany, and Tatiana's life in the New York City with their baby son, Anthony.
The novel begins in Boston, in the 1930s, when Alexander's parents, the Barringtons, make the crucial decision to emigrate to the Soviet Union and renounce the American citizenship. This was already mentioned in "The Bronze Horseman", but here Alexander's family life and childhood in the Soviet Union are described in grisly detail. The disappointment with Communism and subsequent deterioration of the family shape Alexander into the tough, secretive man, living only for himself, desperate to survive, running away into the steppe and finally to Leningrad, where he becomes an officer in the Red Army - until he meets Tatiana and the love for her turns his life upside down. Alexander survives Soviet prison and interrogations, the work with the prisoners' battalion, the escape with the soldiers under his command through ruined Poland, running away from the ruthless, deathly Stalinist system, and the prisoners' camp in Germany, although he is starving, wounded and physically at the end of his capability. On his way, he meets Tatiana's long lost twin brother, only to lose him again, and tests the friendship and the military fidelity and discipline.
Tatiana in America holds to the strange, unexplainable belief, that in Europe torn apart by the war she can find her husband, although everyone believes him dead. All her efforts are directed only towards this goal, To reunite with Alexander, she overcomes unbelievable obstacles and, of course, they are finally reunited and move to Arizona (I hope this is not a spoiler, since it is the ending to be expected in such novel, isn't it?)... So that their story can be continued in the last part of the trilogy, "The Summer Garden", which I cannot wait to read.
Surely, the ending in Arizona is a little absurd (although, who knows, maybe it was possible then), as well as all the coincidences that bring Tatiana and Alexander together. When the novel is read as a romance, it is pretty old-fashioned (rare nowadays in the tradition of "Gone With the Wind", "Doctor Zhivago" or "The Blue Bicycle"), and no doubt, delivers its promise and is a material for a great movie. For me, the highest value of "Tatiana and Alexander" is in the fabularized background and descriptions of the reality of the Soviet life in the hardest period of the 1930s, the spies and moles, the interrogation methods. Paullina Simons was born in Leningrad, in the dissident family. Her parents and grandparents, heavily stricken by the Communist regime and the war, escaped to the US in 1973, when Paullina was 10, so probably she has some first-hand information about the times, which she faithfully portraited in her novels.
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