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Winter Garden by Kristin Hannah
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Winter Garden (original 2010; edition 2010)

by Kristin Hannah

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3,4421683,730 (3.95)119
The dying wish of a loving father ignites a family drama that brings two sisters and their acid-tongued, Russian-born mother together in a story that reaches back to WWII Leningrad.
Member:jamielynn44
Title:Winter Garden
Authors:Kristin Hannah
Info:St. Martin's Press (2010), Edition: First Edition, Hardcover, 394 pages
Collections:Your library
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Winter Garden by Kristin Hannah (2010)

  1. 00
    Ugly Ways by Tina McElroy Ansa (akblanchard)
    akblanchard: Both books feature a mother who pays more attention to her garden than she does to her adult children.
  2. 00
    Fliegende Hunde by Wlada Kolosowa (Sanganya)
    Sanganya: Leningrad
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» See also 119 mentions

English (167)  Dutch (2)  German (1)  All languages (170)
Showing 1-5 of 167 (next | show all)
Sisters Meredith and Nina have grown up within somewhat non-traditional parental dynamics. Their father is warm and loving, their mother cold and standoffish. Though the sisters were somewhat close in childhood, they've grown apart as adults and live totally separate lives: Meredith staying near home to help run the family business, and Nina working as a photographer traveling the world. When their father becomes ill, Nina returns home and as he lays dying, her father asks his wife to finish "the fairytale" -- the story she told them as children but never finished, about a young girl falling in love in Russia.

I'm still trying to figure out how I feel about this one. I tend to prefer the writing of Kristin Hannah's newer novels to those of her older ones, and this one falls somewhere in the middle. As a lot of readers have noted, the second half of this novel is much more compelling than the first half. It's a tear-jerker, though I didn't feel the character development was the greatest. Some aspects were predictable and some were a little unbelievable (primarily with the characterization), with an ending that was wrapped up a little too neatly for my liking. But the historical side of this story was compelling and is what carried this novel. ( )
  indygo88 | Feb 18, 2024 |
What a heartbreaking and inspirational story

I thought this book was slow at first. Please continue reading! it is a beautiful story of hardships, courage and loss. It shows you the power of a women and protecting her children. It includex all the terrible things that happened in Russia during the war. This story will stay with me. ( )
  Spiritrider1101 | Jan 18, 2024 |
Another Kristin Hannah book that broke my heart and made me enjoy it so much. With every book of hers I am traveling a little bit in time, and this time was Petersburg, Russia. It is a lot to process after reading this story, but as always, was beautifully written and will stay with me for a while, like all her books so far. ( )
  simonamitac | Nov 27, 2023 |
So many pages, so little plot! ( )
  SharronA | Jun 1, 2023 |
The first part and middle were a good read but it was the last third of the book that was amazing. I cried and cried. Very well done...how the past helped the present day. And to learn of Leningrad was captivating and eye opening! I love to read historical drama/fiction and this is definitely one of my favourites. It was loaned to me but I want to get my own copy so I can loan it to others! ( )
  BarbOak | May 1, 2023 |
Showing 1-5 of 167 (next | show all)
Resisting the urge to skip ahead so I could find out what happens was a serious problem with this novel. Even though there are a number of stories told in this novel; Meredith's struggles with her marriage, Nina's struggles with love and family, Anya's struggles with her past, and Veronika's story in Russia, everything flows so smoothly.

What starts out as a story of three struggling women turns into a beautiful story... one that literally brough tears to my eyes. I found that this book allowed me to laugh, cry, yell and hurt and a book that does that is a very powerful book.

Overall, this book needs to be read... it deserves a place on anyone's bookshelf! Well done Kristin Hannah, I will be reading many more of your books in the future!
 
For this reader, it doesn't work.
 
The Whitson family is rocked by the sudden death of patriarch Evan, a warm, loving man who doted on his two adult daughters, Meredith and Nina, and his reserved Russian wife, Anya. Meredith, who runs the family business, and Nina, a photojournalist whose job takes her to war zones around the world, have never been able to connect with their cold, forbidding mother. When Anya begins to act strangely, Meredith thinks she belongs in a nursing home, but Nina decides to try to fulfill her father's dying wish and get her mother to tell her and Meredith the elaborate fairy tales she used to share with them. Anya is initially reluctant, but once she begins, Nina realizes these tales are actually the story of Anya's life in Stalinist Leningrad. Meredith and Nina decide to attempt to uncover the truth about their mother's tragic past in the hope of understanding her, and themselves.
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Author nameRoleType of authorWork?Status
Kristin Hannahprimary authorall editionscalculated
Ericksen, SusanNarratorsecondary authorsome editionsconfirmed
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Prologue: 1972
Dedication
To my husband Benjamin: As Always. To my Mother: I wish I had listened to more of your light stories when I had the chance. To my dad and Debbie: Thanks for the trip of a lifetime and memories that will last even longer. And to my beloved Tucker: I am so proud of you; your journey is just beginning.
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On the banks of the mighty Columbia River, in this icy season, when every breath became visable, the orchard called Bele Nochi, was quiet. Dormant apple trees stretched as far as the eye could see.
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The dying wish of a loving father ignites a family drama that brings two sisters and their acid-tongued, Russian-born mother together in a story that reaches back to WWII Leningrad.

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