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Winter Garden

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Format: Paperback

Condition: Like New

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Book Overview

Can a woman ever really know herself if she doesn't know her mother? From the author of the smash-hit bestseller Firefly Lane and True Colors comes Kristin Hannah's powerful, heartbreaking novel that... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

10 ratings

Great story!

Love the way we gained insight into why some people are the way that they are. I thought it was a sweet story!

Sad but Good

It made me sad that it took to almost page 200 to get into this book. After that it was a fast, easy, but sad read. This is a fiction story but I'm sure there are some non fiction stories out there very similar to this. I used this book as part of a teaching lesson on how blessed we are to live in 2024 and that we don't have to eat wallpaper off the walls to survive. This would be a great book to have in a High School or College literature class. Lots to learn from this book.

HANNAH never disappoints

A story within a story. Heartwrenching at times; humor too. Every family has strained relationships...but it's never "to late"

Big Kristin Hannah fan…This is a book I will never forget!

Loved this book. Yes, the beginning is a bit slow, but stay with it. You won’t be disappointed. I woke my husband up one night sobbing as the story was so real. Those are the kind of books I love. Very moving.

Hannah Ktisten's Winter Garden

This is an amazing book. If you have ever been mad at your mother or felt a disconect, this book is for you. It an an amazing story that shows mothers as human, with scars of her own. Some scars just cannot heal; especially, on their own.

can not put down this book

wonderful story. must read.

I love a good curve ball

This book had me crying in some parts. The story of the mother was a curve ball to me but it was well told. This book didn’t disappoint whatsoever.

Her words put me there.

Amazed how the author could both write words to put you in the 900 day siege of Leningrad and also feel what it was like to live it.

Favorite Kristin Hannah Book Ever!

I've read probably most all of Kristin Hannah's books, & I'd have to say this is my absolute favorite!! I finished it last night, but I think it's going to be haunting me for a while, especially because of how it reminded me of my Grandma. As some reviewers have said, the book starts off kind of slow, but not so slow that I wanted to stop reading it. I don't have patience for long boring books, & I never once wanted to give up on this. Once the story got really going I had a hard time putting it down!! It's a story about two sisters & their relationship with their cold & seemingly uncaring Mother. When you hear the whole story, especially the story's ending, you will see why the Mother is so closed off to her daughters, not that it made it right, but I understood how her life's experiences could cause her to be so distant with her daughters, but still be loving toward her husband. At least these two sisters had each other & felt loved & cared for by their Father, but that still didn't stop them from trying to gain love from their Mother as children. Before he died their Father told them that they had to get their Mother to tell them the ending to the fairy tale which she had been telling thru their childhood. Once they finally heard it all, they started looking back on things & could see why Anya, their Mother, had reacted as she did to different situations in their childhood. As a lot of reviewers have said, the ending just ties up too neat & perfect. I read the interview with the author & that gave me an insight as to why she ended it as she did, & also an alternate ending that she'd had in mind. I think another reason that I loved this story was because of how much the young Anya reminded me of my beloved Grandmother who also had to be strong & keep her family together in Europe during World War 2. Thankfully Grandma didn't become closed off like Anya did, but she was a good strong woman as Anya was, & a great cook!

Requires some patience for the first half

...but don't give up on it. I'm glad I listened to that advice from another reviewer as I might have put it down myself. The first half lays the groundwork of the familial relationships between the main characters. Sometimes the reader will get impatient with the flawed characters, as it seems drawn out at times, therefore 4-1/2 stars from me. It is not a happy or feel good type of read. It is sad, heartbreaking, and captivating. There have been many novels lately that flip back and forth between the past and the present, many revolving around wartime. Personally I like that, it is like reading two novels in one. We have seen this in Shanghai Girls, on the Corner of Bitter and Sweet, Whiskey Island, and countless others. This one gives us an intimate look at Leningrad survivors in the Russian/German war. It varies in the fact that the past is presented as a fairy tale by the Russian mother of two American born daughters. All three are strong-willed and feeling incomplete and do not relate well to each other. As adults, grief unites them and a death-bed promise forces them to face and come to know each other as well as themselves. It starts as the two young daughters Meredith and Nina fail time and again in seeking affection from their cold, distant mother. When they were young their mother would tell them this fairy tale at night, practically the only communication they had between them at the time. It mesmerized them, leaving them wanting more, but the story telling stopped suddenly and does not continue until their adulthood when circumstances brings about the completion of the tale. In actuality the "fairy tale" is the story of their mother's young life in Russia. This tale is the highlight of this novel, and as we move into the second half, this is where the reader gets drawn in as we get more of the story of young Anya and all we've wondered about is brought to light. The author did a wonderful job of evoking every emotion from a mothers and a daughters perspective. The description of war-torn Leningrad is something I won't easily forget. It is atrocious how often it happened in wartime that foreign armies separated children from their parents, and how unfathomly emotional that separation had to be for parent and child...just one aspect of war. I cannot even imagine a hunger so bad, or cold that is so harsh that the children could hardly open their frozen eyelids without bleeding.... and the strength required to get through it all. Most did not. My heart broke and real tears streamed down my face at this mothers plight to save her children, from the hunger, the cold, the war... reminding us once again that war is the ugliest atrocity that mankind has brought upon itself in its quest for power. In the present day story, the visit to Alaska by the three women, the look at Sitka and the history there, and the ending of the novel was extremely satisfying. Even the title is perfect, Winter Garden. It is one of those novels that you

Winter Garden Mentions in Our Blog

Winter Garden in 29 Beach-Perfect Books
29 Beach-Perfect Books
Published by Ashly Moore Sheldon • June 30, 2024

With your toes in the sand, the sun on your face, and the roar of the surf drowning out your worries, reading at the beach is a double dose of escape. But what makes the perfect beach read? Depends on the reader. From frothy rom-coms to twisty thrillers, generational sagas to moving memoirs, our favorite beach reads run the gamut. Here are 29 beach-perfect books.

Winter Garden in A Kristin Hannah Reading List
A Kristin Hannah Reading List
Published by Ashly Moore Sheldon • January 11, 2024

Kristin Hannah is a prolific author whose stories often center on women navigating turbulent times and complex relationships Her newest novel, The Women, comes out on February 6. In the meantime, we have ten heart-wrenching recs from her robust back catalog. Just be sure to have your tissues handy!

Winter Garden in Thrift Books Editors' Choice Awards: 2015
Thrift Books Editors' Choice Awards: 2015
Published by Hugo Munday • December 30, 2015

This year was not short of standout literary highlights. One of the greatest novels of the twentieth century; To Kill a Mockingbird got "sequelled" with the acclaimed Go Set a Watchman, replete with a less prosaic Atticus Finch. Then, as the year progressed, two acclaimed authors reached out to us from beyond the grave, via their publishing houses. Dr. Seuss added to his body of two acclaimed authors reached out to us from beyond the grave, work when What Pet Should I Get, was unearthed in the office of the late author, complete with illustrations. Then along came The Girl in the Spider's Web, a further addition to the Millennium series which is a rare feat, since the author, Stieg Larsson died of a heart attack in 2004. This "quartet-maker" is very successfully channelled (or dare I say ghost written) by David Largercranz.

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