The summer my mother had green eyes

Tatiana Țîbuleac

Book - 2026

"From one of Moldova's most celebrated writers, The Summer My Mother Had Green Eyes is a complex coming-of-age story unraveling the fragile, complicated, redemptive relationship between a mother and her son. Aleksy still remembers the last summer he spent with his mother in Northern France. At eighteen, eager to fly the nest and escape a family still grief-stricken by the death of his sister years earlier, these lazy months in the countryside are akin to torture. And then, his mother tells him she's dying. Fourteen years later, at the urging of his psychiatrist, Aleksy relives the memory of the summer when everything changed, shaken once again by the emotions that besieged him when they arrived in that small French village. F...or fans of Claire Keegan and Elena Ferrante, this is a story of reconciliation, of three months in which mother and son finally lay down their weapons to make peace with each other and with themselves" --

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Subjects
Genres
Bildungsromans
Novels
Fiction
Romans
Published
Dallas, Texas : Deep Vellum Publishing 2026.
Language
English
Romanian
Main Author
Tatiana Țîbuleac (author)
Other Authors
Monica Cure (translator)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
182 pages ; 23 cm
ISBN
9781646054091
Contents unavailable.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

In Moldovan Romanian writer Țîbuleac's striking English-language debut, an infamous English painter reflects on the last summer he shared with his Polish immigrant mother before her death from cancer. Aleksy, the narrator, was abandoned by his father and neglected by his mother after the death of his six-year-old sister, Mika, when he was eight. He grew into a volatile teenager whose violent outbursts landed him in a school for troubled youths. At 18, still consumed with loathing for his mother, Aleksy reluctantly agrees to spend the summer with her in a small village in France in exchange for a new laptop and a car. What begins as a tense stay takes a turn when she reveals that she has five months to live. They take tentative steps to mend their relationship--visiting the beach, shopping at flea markets, and decorating the village house together. Fourteen years later, an older Aleksy painfully recalls how he and his mother finally offered each other the affection they'd long withheld, and how his life in the village led to his involvement with an enigmatic woman whose fate would help shape the "deranged genius" reputation that fueled his success. Țîbuleac offers a wryly tender exploration of grief, rage, and the fraught process of repairing a broken parent-child relationship. This slim but powerful novel will stay with readers. (Jan.)

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