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With unraveled embroidery and fraying hems, the Traveling Pants are back for one last, glorious summer. Lena: Immerses herself in her painting and an intoxicating summer fling, fearing that the moment she forgets about Kostos will be the moment she sees him again. Carmen: Falls under the... read more

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Lena
Lena is taking an extra painting class in the summer at RISD and becomes interested in the anonymous painter who comes in late on the first day. She soon discovers that it is Leonardo (Leo), one of the most acclaimed artists at the college, and she is tempted to look at his progress... read more (warning: may contain spoilers)

Lena
Lena is taking an extra painting class in the summer at RISD and becomes interested in the anonymous painter who comes in late on the first day. She soon discovers that it is Leonardo (Leo), one of the most acclaimed artists at the college, and she is tempted to look at his progress on his painting. She is overcome by his skill level of nudity. Leo sees her examining his work and they cultivate a friendship. Leo invites Lena over to his house for dinner, where she meets his mother, a professional artist. His mother suggests that Lena and Leo pose for each other's figure paintings, leaving Lena flustered, although she still agrees. However, due to her extreme shyness and strict upbringing, she is uncomfortable painting Leo in the nude and is unable to draw him the way she wants to. Leo, however, sees extreme beauty in Lena's body, kissing her after their first session. He asks her to pose for another one. Lena's feelings for Leo grow. However, shortly following the session, Kostos appears at her dorm room. He tells her that he divorced his wife after she apparently lied to him about being pregnant with their child. Lena, is at first in shock by Kostos's sudden appearance, but later becomes angry and yells at Kostos for coming back and expecting her to be waiting for him after he abandoned her. When she goes to apologize the next day, Kostos has already left. Lena poses for Leo, and after he kisses her, they make love. After, she goes to her apartment and cries, realizing that she never had feelings for Leo the way she had for Kostos. Later, while in Greece, she meets up with Kostos, who admits that he had gone to the US planning to propose to Lena, and never thought she might say no. Lena apologizes for her actions at her dorm and cries in his arms, and the two of them agree that they may never fall in love with anyone else. They kiss and part ways, but not before Kostos cryptically whispers, "Someday," in Lena's ear, indicating that their relationship may not be over for good.

Tibby
Tibby is staying in NYU over the summer to work and take a script-writing class. Early in the summer, her long-term boyfriend, Brian, visits and tells her that he has successfully transferred to her college and will join her in the fall. Tibby is overjoyed, both with Brian's news and their relationship in general, and her happiness is so extreme that she begins to worry that it will not last. Later that evening, the two drink to celebrate, and they get moderately drunk and make love for the first time. At first, Tibby is content with their actions, but this quickly changes and she begins to doubt her relationship with Brian. For a time she is concerned, thinking that she is pregnant. She is still discontent, and she breaks up with Brian. However, she begins to second-guess her actions when Brian tells her that he will not be transferring to her school- the realization that Brian truly accepts their break-up shakes her. She becomes even more upset when Effie, Lena's younger sister, meets Tibby to ask her if she would mind it if Effie and Brian dated. Tibby lies and says that she would not be bothered. Later in the summer, Tibby realizes that she allowed her fear over the pregnancy to darken her relationship and her feelings for Brian. She tells him that she is sorry and that she still cares for him, and he returns the sentiment. They soon resume their slightly modified relationship.

Bridget
Bridget is upset to learn that her boyfriend, Eric, has taken a job as a coach at a summer camp in Mexico. She doesn't want to spend the summer at home, wishing to avoid both missing Eric and her family; following her mother's death, both her father and brother became very withdrawn and antisocial. She impulsively signs up to take a trip to Turkey to work on an archaeological dig with some of her classmates. Once in Turkey, Bridget finds that she loves the work, especially pain-stakingly unearthing a floor in a room discovered by the archaeological team. Equally enthusiastic is Peter, a handsome young professor. They both find themselves equally attracted to each other, and on Peter's thirtieth birthday, they kiss. Peter reveals that he wants it to turn into something more, but instead, they part ways for the night. The next day, Peter's wife and kids visit and Bridget, seeing his family in person, becomes disgusted with herself. She realizes that she almost ruined what she longs for most: a family. Upon returning home, she attempts to get closer to her father and brother. Eric visits her at her house and her family, while clearly uncomfortable in social situations, tries to get to know him for Bridget's sake. Later that evening, Eric tells Bridget how much he missed her, and she realizes that she missed him as well. Eric stays the night at her house, and they end up having sex. After Eric leaves the next morning, Bridget finds some boxes in the basement filled with carefully organized and preserved memento's of her mother and her younger self. It becomes evident to Bridget that despite her father's coldness, the work he put into the boxes shows that he truly cares about her. She realizes that, despite their limitations, her family does have something to offer her.

Carmen
Carmen, after a year of social transparency at her new college and a self-proclaimed loss of identity, has maintained only one new friendship- Julia, the resident Drama Diva of the freshman year at Williams, and one of the few freshman widely known in the social standings. Julia is glamorous, sophisticated, exuberant, and popular—the very antithesis of the new Carmen. Julia invites Carmen to work on the sets of the school play, and later on convinces Carmen to attend a summer drama program with her. Julia hopes to win a starring role, whereas Carmen just wants to build sets. However, after having been talked into auditioning for a part in one of the plays performed, Carmen outshines all the other camp attendants and lands the coveted role in the largest of the performed plays (that of Perdita in Shakespeare's The Winter's Tale). Julia, meanwhile, gets only a small role in the community play. She grows immensely jealous of Carmen, who begins to make new friends and regain her confidence in herself. Julia's happiness only returns when Carmen begins to struggle with her acting, and Carmen realizes that Julia enjoys Carmen's misery and feelings of unworthiness, as they make Julia feel better by comparison. At the end of the summer, Carmen performs wonderfully in the play and regains her identity, and ends her friendship with Julia.

Summer's End
At the end of the summer, Effie, depressed at the loss of Brian to his original love, runs off to spend a week in Oia, Greece with her grandmother. She impulsively takes the Traveling Pants with her in order to get back at Tibby (for getting back together with Brian) and Lena (for always choosing her friends over her sister). She accidentally loses the Pants, and when the girls find out, they all travel to Greece to try to find them. It is here that Lena patches things up with Kostos. Despite days of searching, the girls do not find the Pants. However, they enjoy spending time together, realizing that they haven't all been together in a year. They also realize that they had begun to rely on the Pants to maintain their connection, rather than trying to maintain it themselves. They vow to always maintain their bond but not to allow it to keep them from moving forward.

Characters/People edit see section history

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Quotes edit see section history

  • “What was home anymore? What counted as the status quo? Home was a time and it had passed.”
    Lena
  • “It wasn't always easy getting what you wanted.”
    Carmen
  • “Set building was strange in that it was always about the impression, made to be seen from particular angles and not made to last. It existed in space and time not as a thing, but as a trick.”
    Carmen
  • Popular Highlights from Kindle Customers
  • When you remembered to forget, you were remembering. It was when you forgot to forget that you forgot.
    Highlighted by 52 Kindle customers
  • Do not spoil what you have by desiring what you have not. —Epicurus
    Highlighted by 35 Kindle customers
  • Right now I’m having amnesia and déjà vu at the same time. I think I’ve forgotten this before. —Steven Wright
    Highlighted by 32 Kindle customers
  • Experience is a hard teacher because she gives the test first, the lesson afterward. —Vernon Law
    Highlighted by 31 Kindle customers
  • One’s real life is so often the life that one does not lead. —Oscar Wilde
    Highlighted by 30 Kindle customers
  • You shall know the truth, and the truth shall make you mad. —Aldous Huxley
    Highlighted by 29 Kindle customers
  • Crazy is what crazy do —The Black Eyed Peas
    Highlighted by 28 Kindle customers
  • Poor empty pants With nobody inside them. —Dr. Seuss
    Highlighted by 26 Kindle customers
  • Pain is inevitable; suffering is optional. —Greta Randolph
    Highlighted by 24 Kindle customers
  • In the depth of winter, I finally learned that within me there lay an invincible summer. —Albert Camus
    Highlighted by 23 Kindle customers
Show all 13 quotes from this book

First Sentence edit see section history

Gilda 's was the same. It always was.

Series & Lists edit see section history

This is book 4 of 6 in Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants. (standard series)

Preceded by Girls in Pants, and followed by Sisterhood Everlasting.

Authors & Contributors edit see section history

  1. Ann Brashares (Author)

First Edition edit see section history

Original Language: English
Publisher: Delacorte Books for Young Readers
Country: United States of America
Publication Date: 2007
ISBN: 0385729367
Page Count: 400

Notes for Parents edit see section history

Reading Level: Young Adults

Has some stuff that isn't the most appropriate, but is still just as good as the other books in the series. :)

Books with Additional Background Information edit see section history

   
  • Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants
  • The Second Summer of the Sisterhood
  • Girls in Pants

Books Influenced by This Book edit see section history

   
  • Sisterhood Everlasting

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