My rating: 5 of 5 stars
Keats McCulloch is content running his Sydney flower shop, even if it means his love life is a little wilted. Enter Linden Acres—fresh off a breakup, armed with his ex’s credit card, and determined to send a bouquet that screams poetic vengeance. Keats talks him down from floral felony to a more elegant form of spite, and in the process, sparks fly. Linden, who’s sworn off men, finds Keats disarmingly kind and quietly irresistible. Keats, in turn, is charmed by Linden’s chaos and wit. Though neither is looking for love, fate keeps nudging them together—planting the possibility that something real might just take root.
I loved this story with the two men who were drawn together by fate and flowers. It was a whimsical yet emotionally resonant exploration of heartbreak, healing, and the quiet magic of unexpected connection. I adored the use of flowers as emotional expression—especially through floriography (the Victorian language of flowers)—which added a rich symbolic layer. Each bouquet becomes a message, a gesture of defiance, affection, or apology. I loved how Keats’s gentle nature and Linden’s sharp humour created a balance of emotional safety and spark. Their relationship was built not on grand gestures, but on small, meaningful interactions that built trust. That emphasized that love doesn’t have to be dramatic to be transformative—it can grow quietly, like a well-tended garden. A sweet story with lots of humour, emotions and feelings. This was an MM story with mature content.
Buy from Amazon
No comments:
Post a Comment