Nicole's Reviews > The Summer Garden

The Summer Garden by Paullina Simons
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it was amazing
Read 3 times. Last read March 28, 2017 to April 3, 2017.

THIS! BOOK! I am so in love with this series and these characters that it seems impossible that my love for them could continue to grow. And yet...
Every time I reread their story my love grows deeper and deeper. This book and this series deserves 100+++++ stars from me. I will be rereading/reliving it until the end of time. I will never grow bored of my beloved Tatiana and Alexander. Ever. They live on forever in my heart and soul.

*First read: March 14-24, 2014
*Second read: August, 2014
*Third read: Sept. 10-Oct. 11, 2015
*Fourth read: July 26-Aug 12, 2016
*Fifth read: March 28-April 3, 2017 (audio)

Fourth read notes: As usual, every time I reread a Paullina Simons novel, I find new meaning and new favorite quotes. This time I was so emotionally devastated by the things that occur with their son. That section of the book hit me so hard this time around. I think it's because I'm in a different place in my life than I was my first read.

CODA IS LITERARY PERFECTION. I'm sorry but there is absolutely no better way that Paullina Simons could have ended this book. I could live happily in that chapter til the end of time. It's so beautifully and brilliantly written. PERFECTION!!!

Fifth read notes: my heart is so full right now. I loved the audiobook. It's going to get a lot of use. Every time I reread these books different parts stick out for me and I pick up something new. I'm already looking forward to my next reread.

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Quotes Nicole Liked

Paullina Simons
“I love you. I'm blind for you, wild for you. Sick with you. I told you that our first night together when I asked you to marry me, I am telling you now. Everything that's happened to us, everything, is because I crossed the street for you. I worship you. You know that through and through...”
Paullina Simons, The Summer Garden

Paullina Simons
“Alexander, you broke my heart. But for carrying me on your back, for pulling my dying sled, for giving me your last bread, for the body you destroyed for me, for the son you have given me, for the twenty-nine days we lived like Red Birds of Paradise, for all our Naples sands and Napa wines, for all the days you have been my first and last breath, for Orbeli- I will forgive you. ”
Paullina Simons, The Summer Garden

Paullina Simons
“....and when Tatiana lifted her glistening eyes to him, Alexander was looking down at her with his I’ll-get-on-the-bus-for-you-anytime face.”
Paullina Simons, The Summer Garden

Paullina Simons
“Here I am, your one man circus freak show, having bled out for mother Russia, having desperately tried to get to you, now on top of you with this scourge marks, and you, who used to love me, who was sympathized, internalized, normalized everything, you are not allowed to turn away from me....this is what I am going to look like until the day I die. I can't get any peace from you ever unless you find away to make peace with this. Make peace with me. Or let me go for good.”
Paullina Simons, The Summer Garden

Paullina Simons
“I have maybe a half-hour before the next surgery. Want to go and get a cup of coffee?”
What I want is to meander eight kilometres down the canals with you from Kirov to your Fifth Soviet door. I want to get on the tram with you, the bus with you, sit in the Italian Gardens with you. That is what I want. I will take the cup of coffee in your hospital cafeteria.”
Paullina Simons, The Summer Garden

Paullina Simons
“Alexander speaks. “Anthony, I’m going to tell you something. In 1941, when I met your mother, she had turned seventeen and was working at the Kirov factory, the largest weapons production facility in the Soviet Union. Do you know what she wore? A ratty brown cardigan that belonged to her grandmother. It was tattered and patched and two sizes too big for her. Even though it was June, she wore her much larger sister’s black skirt that was scratchy wool. The skirt came down to her shins. Her too-big thick black cotton stockings bunched up around her brown work boots. Her hands were covered in black grime she couldn’t scrub off. She smelled of gasoline and nitrocellulose because she had been making bombs and flamethrowers all day. And still I came every day to walk her home.”
Paullina Simons, The Summer Garden

Paullina Simons
“He was breathing heavily. “I honestly don’t understand what’s wrong with you,” he said. “You’re telling me to pack my bags, to leave our house, knowing you’re going to have a baby?”
“And this surprises you why? Have you seen what’s been happening in our house?”
“Stop talking to me like this in our bed, Tatiana. My white flag is up,” said Alexander. “I have no more.”
“My white flag is up, too, Shura,” she said. “You know when mine went up? June 22, 1941.”
Paullina Simons, The Summer Garden

Paullina Simons
“Only one bear eats from this honey pot, Tatia”
Paullina Simons, The Summer Garden

Paullina Simons
“I want amnesia! I want a fucking lobotomy. Could I please never think again? Look what’s happened to us, us, Tania. Don’t you remember how we used to be? Just look what’s happened.”
Paullina Simons, The Summer Garden

Paullina Simons
“Shura,” she whispered. “I’m going to have a baby.”
At first she didn’t think Alexander heard her, he was mute so long. “You what?” he said in horror.
“I’m going to have a baby,” she mouthed, her shoulders quaking, her swollen lips quivering.”
Paullina Simons, The Summer Garden

Paullina Simons
“Do you see the Field of Mars, where I walked next to my bride in her white wedding dress, with red sandals in her hands, when we were kids?”

“I see it well.”

“We spent all our days afraid it was too good to be true, Tatiana,” said Alexander. “We were always afraid all we had was a borrowed five minutes from now.”

Her hands went on his face. “That’s all any of us ever has, my love,” she said. “And it all flies by.”

“Yes,” he said, looking at her, at the desert, covered coral and yellow with golden eye and globe mallow. “But what a five minutes it’s been.”
Paullina Simons, The Summer Garden

Paullina Simons
“Come on,” he said quietly, bending to her and lifting her whole into his arms. He carried her inside. After setting her down next to the sink, he crushed five trays of ice into it and filled it with cold water. Tatiana thought he was going to tell her to put her face into it, and was about to meekly impotently protest—when Alexander submerged his own head into the ice.”
Paullina Simons, The Summer Garden

Paullina Simons
“Tatiasha, my wife, I got cookies from you and Janie, anxious medical advice from Gordon Pasha (tell him you gave me a gallon of silver nitrate), some sharp sticks from Harry (nearly cried). I’m saddling up, I’m good to go. From you I got a letter that I could tell you wrote very late at night. It was filled with the sorts of things a wife of twenty-seven years should not write to her far-away and desperate husband, though this husband was glad and grateful to read and re-read them. Tom Richter saw the care package you sent with the preacher cookies and said, “Wow, man. You must still be doing something right.” I leveled a long look at him and said, “It’s good to know nothing’s changed in the army in twenty years.” Imagine what he might have said had he been privy to the fervent sentiments in your letter. No, I have not eaten any poison berries, or poison mushrooms, or poison anything. The U.S. Army feeds its men. Have you seen a C-ration? Franks and beans, beefsteak, crackers, fruit, cheese, peanut butter, coffee, cocoa, sacks of sugar(!). It’s enough to make a Soviet blockade girl cry. We’re going out on a little scoping mission early tomorrow morning. I’ll call when I come back. I tried to call you today, but the phone lines were jammed. It’s unbelievable. No wonder Ant only called once a year. I would’ve liked to hear your voice though: you know, one word from you before battle, that sort of thing . . . Preacher cookies, by the way, BIG success among war-weary soldiers. Say hi to the kids. Stop teaching Janie back flip dives. Do you remember what you’re supposed to do now? Kiss the palm of your hand and press it against your heart.   Alexander   P.S. I’m getting off the boat at Coconut Grove. It’s six and you’re not on the dock. I finish up, and start walking home, thinking you’re tied up making dinner, and then I see you and Ant hurrying down the promenade. He is running and you’re running after him. You’re wearing a yellow dress. He jumps on me, and you stop shyly, and I say to you, come on, tadpole, show me what you got, and you laugh and run and jump into my arms. Such a good memory. I love you, babe.”
Paullina Simons, The Summer Garden

Paullina Simons
“Oh, but to get through this night. Why won’t sleep come? What’s bothering me here in the dark? It’s not the badgers, it’s not the snakes. What’s bothering me? Something darker is worrying a hole inside me—look how my legs are trembling. Stop moving, Tatiana. That’s how the carnivores find you, by the flash of life on your body, they find you and eat you while you sleep. Like venomous spiders, they’ll bite you first to lull you into sleep—you won’t even feel it—and then they will gnaw your flesh until nothing remains. But even the animals eating her alive was not the thing that worried the sick hole in Tatiana’s stomach as she lay in the leaves with her face hidden from the forest, with her arms over her head, in case anything decided to fall on her. She should’ve made herself a shelter but it got dark so fast, and she was so sure she would find the lake, she hadn’t been thinking of making herself more comfortable in the woods. She kept walking and walking, and then was downed and breathless and unprepared for pitch black night. To quell the terror inside her, to not hear her own voices, Tatiana whimpered. Lay and cried, low and afraid. What was tormenting her from the inside out? Was it worry over Marina? No... not quite. But close. Something about Marina. Something about Saika... Saika. The girl who caused trouble between Dasha and her dentist boyfriend, the girl who pushed her bike into Tatiana’s bike to make her fall under the tires of a downward truck rushing headlong... the girl who saw Tatiana’s grandmother carrying a sack of sugar and told her mother who told her father who told the Luga Soviet that Vasily Metanov harbored sugar he had no intention of giving up? The girl who did something so unspeakable with her own brother she was nearly killed by her own father’s hand—and she herself had said the boy got worse—and this previously unmentioned brother was, after all, dead. The girl who stood unafraid under rowan trees and sat under a gaggle of crows and did not feel black omens, the girl who told Tatiana her wicked stories, tempted Tatiana with her body, turned away from Marina as Marina was drowning...who turned Marina against Tatiana, the girl who didn’t believe in demons, who thought everything was all good in the universe, could she . . . What if...? What if this was not an accident? Moaning loudly, Tatiana turned away to the other side as if she’d just had a nightmare. But she hadn’t been dreaming. Saika took her compass and her knife. But Marina took her watch. And there it was. That was the thing eating up Tatiana from the inside out. Could Marina have been in on something like this? Twisting from side to side did not assuage her torn stomach, did not mollify her sunken heart. Making anguished noises, her eyes closed, she couldn’t think of fields, or Luga, or swimming, or clover or warm milk, anything. All good thoughts were drowned in the impossible sorrow. Could Marina have betrayed her?”
Paullina Simons, The Summer Garden

Paullina Simons
“They stared at each other. Every ocean, every river, every minute they had walked together was in their gaze. He said nothing and she said nothing. She kneeled by him, her hands on him, on his chest, on his heart, on his lungs that took air in but could not move air out, on his open wound; her eyes were on him, and in their eyes was every block of uncounted, unaccounted-for time, every moment they had lived since June 22, 1941, the day war started for the Soviet Union. Her eyes were filled with everything she felt for him. Her eyes were true.”
Paullina Simons, The Summer Garden


Reading Progress

Finished Reading (Paperback Edition)
March 14, 2014 – Started Reading
March 14, 2014 – Shelved
September 8, 2014 – Shelved (Paperback Edition)
September 11, 2015 –
page 59
7.81% "Oh Deer Isle....I made it through. Onto Coconut Grove. I love this book!!!"
September 12, 2015 –
page 98
12.98% "I love Coconut Grove. What a chapter."
September 13, 2015 –
page 135
17.88% "Paradise Valley...check. Beautiful parts in that chapter. Vianza here I come."
September 22, 2015 –
page 197
26.09%
September 29, 2015 –
page 385
50.99%
October 5, 2015 –
page 421
55.76% "Chapter 11..."
October 11, 2015 –
page 529
70.07% "Finally made it to Moon Lai. THIS!!! BOOK!!!"
July 24, 2016 –
page 1
0.13% "Reread"
July 26, 2016 –
page 59
7.81% "This is my fourth time reading this book and I STILL find new meaning and pick up on things that didn't click in previous reads. Paullina Simons is by far my favorite author. This series is everything I could ever desire."
August 9, 2016 –
33.0%
August 9, 2016 –
52.0%
August 9, 2016 –
52.0%
August 10, 2016 –
70.0%
August 12, 2016 – Finished Reading
March 28, 2017 – Started Reading
March 28, 2017 –
page 1
0.13% "Reread. Started 3/28/17. This will me my first time listening to the audiobook!!"
March 29, 2017 –
2.0% "Wow. This book is getting to me so much already!!!!!"
April 2, 2017 –
68.0% "What. A. Book."
April 3, 2017 –
91.0% "Kings and Heroes"
April 3, 2017 – Finished Reading

Comments Showing 1-2 of 2 (2 new)

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Linda D God, this story <3 <3 <3 the absolute best


SReads Omg this book! I totally agree we can read it till the end of time!! Xx


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