Must Love Flowers
by Debbie Macomber
As may know, Debbie Macomber, after forty years of writing, put aside her pen for a well deserved retirement. That lasted for four months before she picked up her pen to compose Must Love Flowers, a sweet romance about a widow who is in her fifties and needs to move on with the grieving process and can’t seem to do so. I’m glad Macomber decided to tell this tale.
I don’t normally read anything about the Covid fiasco, but I could tolerate it in this book because it is not set during the restrictions, but shows the negative effects on someone who maintains feelings of being “safe” and “protected” by continuing to cut herself off from people and activities—life, in short. Family members want to help her, but are at a loss as she is in denial that she has a problem.
This novel tells Joan’s story as she takes a few steps at a time to rejoin the world and find her new place in it. Joan was pushed into these changes by threats from her HOA because in four years she has let the yard she was once proud of become an overgrown mess. Enter Phil Harrison, a former lawyer, who is currently a landscaper and a really nice person. She even decides to take in a boarder, Maggie, who needs to get out from under her alcoholic father. Along the way she joins a grief therapy group, which she had said she would never do. The ramifications of Joan’s decisions reach out to affect the lives of her two grown sons and their relationships with others.
I enjoyed this novel which contains several romantic threads. When one of the twists occurred, I was sad because it potentially meant good things for some characters and bad for others, but Macomber works the situations out for her characters in a way that is both realistic and satisfying for me.
I received a complimentary copy of this book in exchange for an honest review. Opinions expressed in this review are completely my own.
Rating: 5/5
Category: Romance
Publication: July 11, 2023—Random House (Ballentine)
Memorable Lines:
It used to be… That was what her life had become: a series of all the things that once were but were no longer.
As silly as it sounded, she recognized deep down with a certainty that she didn’t question that she was meant to help Maggie Herbert. For whatever reason, God had put Maggie in her path.
“It didn’t take me long to realize it didn’t matter how much money I had in the bank, or what my career goals were; if I didn’t have someone to share life with, they meant nothing.

This book sounds like one a lot of people could relate to.
LikeLiked by 1 person
I agree, Diane. There are a lot of relationships that tie into Joan’s inability to move on.
LikeLike
I know about Debbie Macomber books of course, but I actually have never read anything written by her…some how her books just don’t seem to appeal to me, do you think I’d like them?
Jenna
LikeLiked by 1 person
They definitely fit the category of clean romances, so I would recommend them from that perspective. I find them to be relaxing books to sprinkle in between mysteries, nonfiction, etc. just to shake things up a bit. I could never be an “only romances” reader. As to this particular book, I don’t know if it would hit too close to home or if it would be interesting to read about how this one fictional character handled what seemed to be for her an immovable hurdle. That is such a personal decision.
LikeLiked by 1 person
I didn’t realize Debbie Macomber had retired, as I have so many of her backlist books to read. Having been a widow in my 50s, I can connect with that, but I didn’t give up or hole up as it didn’t happen during the Covid times. Nice review, Linda. Off to see if my library has this one.
LikeLike
The lockdowns made it easier to stay cocooned and harder to move on. I was surprised to see this book published because I had read a goodbye letter at the end of one of her books. I’m glad she followed her heart and wrote this book.
LikeLiked by 1 person
None of my sources have this one, so I will have to see if it goes on sale at Amazon.
LikeLike
It will come around some day for you. Meanwhile, backlist!
LikeLike