Tag Archives: Paullina Simons

Top Ten Tuesday: Authors I’d Have At My Thanksgiving Dinner

Good morning guys and gals (mostly gals), it’s Tuesday! Yay! I’m excited because my sis and baby nephew are spending the night tonight, but it’s also an exciting day because it’s time for Top Ten Tuesday, hosted by The Broke and The Bookish. This week’s topic is Top Ten Authors I Want at My Thanksgiving Dinner.

 

 

1. Christopher Moore – Because he wrote Lamb, and A Dirty Job, and so many other novels that make me laugh my ass off. And I am thankful for those. And I am sure he would be hysterical in person as well.

 

2. Diana Gabaldon - Because I will forever be grateful that she brought the Outlander series into the world. And so I can hound her for information about future books.

 

 

3. N.K. Jemisin - I loooooove her Inheritance trilogy (AKA The Hundred Thousand Kingdoms  / 100K trilogy). And I think she would be fun and snarky and interesting. And I think she’d be fun to get into political / social discussions with.

 

4. Matthew Norman – I REALLY enjoyed Domestic Violets. However, there were a couple of things I didn’t like about it, so I’d like to invite him so that I can hound him about any other novels he has in progress and make sure he doesn’t make the same mistakes. (I’m so rude.) Also, he seems pro-Obama in the book. Yay!

 

5. Emily Bronte – Because I love Wuthering Heights, and so I can quiz her about the rest of her family. I really wanna know if Charlotte Bronte was the crazy super-bitch I suspect she was.

 

 

6. George R.R. Martin – Because I want to ask him how in the bloody hell he keeps track of the HUGE number of characters and crazy plots in the A Song of Fire and Ice series. Which I love for it’s epicness.

7. Libba Bray – Okay, actually before I meet Libba I need to read more of her books, because I’ve only read Beauty Queens and thought it was AWESOME. And she seems like the kind of weird person I’d get along with. Plus, look at her glasses! I would try to steal her glasses, those are cute. And to ask her if she goes by “Libba” because that way, her name kinda looks like “library”. Yes, these are the thoughts that I think.

 

8. Patrick Rothfuss - Because he’s PATRICK F-IN ROTHFUSS. I need insider info on the rest of the Kingkiller Chronicles! And he has to being baby Oot with him to dinner – normally I wouldn’t allow children, but his blog posts about his son are just so cute.

 

9. Paullina Simons – Ya’ll know how much I love The Bronze Horseman and Tatiana & Alexander. But the last book in the trilogy, The Summer Garden, was AWFUL. And I need to beg her to re-write it. I realize that’s a crappy reason, but it’s that serious.

 

10. Jane Austen – Because the invite list wouldn’t be complete without her! I have so many questions for her – like which of her novels was her favorite, and how does she feel about the Brontes, and what does she think of the skanky-ness and general impropriety of this generation?

 And of course I’d hit up each of these authors for their autographs in my copies of their books, because ya know… I’d HAVE to.

And there are a bunch of other authors I’d want to include – Jesse Petersen, Philippa Gregory, Mercedes Lackey, Anne Bronte, and yeah, it wouldn’t be just a “dinner”, it’d be a damn banquet!

Okay folks, that’s all I got. What are your author picks? OH, and go vote in my December poll on the right-hand side!

~Sarah

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Filed under Top Ten Tuesday

The Summer Garden by Paullina Simons

Okay, before I get into the review of this book… this is the third and final installment in a series by Paullina Simons. (Hence, there will be spoilers if you haven’t read the first two books.) The first book is The Bronze Horseman, and it was fantastic – definitely a 5-star read. The second book, called Tatiana and Alexander, was another wonderful book. I just realized that I never actually reviewed Tatiana and Alexander here on my blog, so click here for my review on Goodreads. So, here the third book, The Summer Garden, will be reviewed. I had been dying to read this for quite some time, to see how Tatiana and Alexander’s epic love story ends. To say I was disappointed would be an understatement.

Tatiana and Alexander go through some seriously tragic stuff throughout the first two books – they meet the day that World War 2 stars in Russia, and have to beat impossible odds to be together. They are a wonderfully romantic and passionate couple, and after so much tragedy and grief, I was really looking forward to them starting their life together in America.

At first, they suffer through some pretty regular problems – Alexander is still haunted by his days as a Soviet solider, and it takes a long while for him to deal with that. Eventually, him and Tatiana work their problems out, and go to Arizona to see the land that Tatiana bought for them. They start to settle down, and though they encounter some problems, everything is going pretty well for them.

However, right here around the middle of the book, their relationship turns really, really crappy. I can’t help but rant about this, so highlight the following if you want to read the spoilers:

Tatiana starts to work as a nurse at a hospital, even though they don’t really need the money. This pisses of Alexander, but she says she’ll quit when they get pregnant. Except they’ve been trying for years, and haven’t gotten pregnant yet. They just stop communicating – Alexander doesn’t express why her working at a hospital is so upsetting to him, and Tatiana doesn’t explain why she wants to do it so badly, even after she sees how upset it’s making him. There is NO communication. Then, Alexander does the unspeakable and CHEATS on Tatiana. He almost had sex with this other woman, but doesn’t (somehow, he doesn’t think making out with another woman isn’t as bad as sleeping with another woman), and after they have a huge fight (in which he actually hits her), she reveals that she’s finally pregnant. Which is confusing, because they’ve been trying for ten years and all of the sudden she’s knocked up. He’s happy, she finally quits her job, and they go on to have many other kids and grandkids.

So yeah… I understand that the issues mentioned above her common in marriages in the 1950′s. I understand that if Tatiana and Alexander were real life people, this all actually might have been very realistic. But we love to read about great love stories because their love is so uncommon, and because they manage common problems better than the every-day couple. So to see their marriage take such a nasty turn was really, really upsetting. Sure, everything ends up happy-ever-after, but still.

Honestly, I wish that I hadn’t even known that this book existed, that I had never read it. I’m hoping that I can re-read the first two books next year and then forget that this third book was ever written.

Sarah Says: 1 star – do yourself a favor and read the first two books, but skip this one.

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Filed under 1-star, Historical Fiction

The Bronze Horseman by Paullina Simons

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Ohmygodohmygodohmygod. This just about broke my heart.

Set in Leningrad in 1941, on the day that WW2 starts in Russia, Tatiana and Alexander meet. They fall in love almost immediately, but are constantly trying to stay apart – for the sake of Dasha, Tatiana’s sister, who fell in love with Alexander first. Trying not to fall for each other is like trying not to breathe for these two. Despite how dangerous is could be, given Alexander’s past and Tatiana’s present, they are drawn to each other and have to struggle to stay alive throughout the siege on Leningrad.

THIS is exactly how historical fiction is supposed to be written. Tatiana and Alexander are such engrossing characters, and you’re watching history happen to and around them. This book actually makes me want to go online and learn more about Russia in WW2. Historical fiction books very rarely do that for me (for instance, I recently read Madame Tussaud by Michelle Moran and I still don’t care to learn more about the French Revolution). The setting, and the characters in this book are just magical.

Tatiana is one amazing young woman. She was constantly surprising and amazing me at the amount of courage, stamina, and love she possessed. And Alexander – fiction rarely sees such a capable, protective, sweet man.

I’m so glad I heard about this book – it absolutely deserves the high ratings it gets. At 894 pages, it’s definitely long – but I read it in two and a half days, and was never bored. And near the end, I could hardly stop crying.

Sarah Says: 5 stars!!! And now I’m going to go start the sequel IMMEDIATELY.

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Filed under 5-star, Historical Fiction, Romance