![]() ![]() I especially enjoyed reading about Alexander’s boyhood and Tatiana’s life in America (struggling with feelings for Alexander and the unknowns about his life), but I did feel a little short changed regarding the former. It wasn’t until the first storyline was gone and the second close to it that I truly became engrossed in the story and the story. However, because of the switching between storylines, I found the book a little hard to get into. I was already attached to the characters when I started the novel, but I think it can also be a standalone novel, as there are enough flashbacks to fill in any holes in the story. Recommendation: Of the trilogy, this was my least favorite. as a boy with his communist parents, to his education and start in the military, ending when Alexander and Tatiana part ways. Finally, the story flashes back to Alexander as a boy, from leaving the U.S. On the flip side, Simons shows the reader the life that Alexander lives from the moment he and Tatiana are separated. The reader follows Tatiana as she leaves the Soviet Union and starts a life and a family in New York. Tatiana and Alexander (aka The Bridge to Holy Cross) picks up where the first book in the series, The Bronze Horseman, left off, sort of. Missed my review of The Bronze Horseman, book 1 in the series? Check it out here. ![]()
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