In this charming small-town romance, two best friends sharing a kiss might have made the worst mistake of their lives--or found the best thing that's ever happened to them.
Between helping at her family's inn and teaching painting, Elizabeth Wu has put her dream of being an artist on the back burner. But her plan to launch an arts festival will boost the local Blue Cedar Falls arts scene and give her a showcase for her own work. If only she can get the town council on board. At least she can rely on her dependable best friend Graham to support her. Except lately, he hasn't been acting like his old self, and she has no idea why.
Graham Lewis has been secretly in love with Elizabeth forever, but it's past time that he faces the cold, hard truth: vivacious, amazing Elizabeth will never see him as anything but a platonic pal. He's going to help her get the festival off the ground, but after that he needs to forget his one-sided crush. Until one impulsive kiss changes everything. Can they really rebuild their entire relationship--and the festival--from the ground up? Or will it all come crashing down?
She is a former high school science teacher, wife to a geeky engineer, and mom to an extremely talkative kindergartener. Her hobbies include crafting, reading, and hiking.
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🌸 For these two small-town best friends, sharing a kiss might be the worst mistake of their lives—or the best thing that's ever happened to them... Happy pub day @jeanniecwrites! 🎉 Get your copy of The House on Mulberry Street now: https://t.co/EjuBe4Fgel https://t.co/QSd4jt359j
sanguine reader, writer, and teacher learning irish. "It isn't an easy thing, to be undone and remade by love but it is a holy thing, this coming undone."
currently reading the house on mulberry street by jeannie chin and it’s giving me that romantic angst I’ve been wanting 🤌🏾
bookblogger of SFF/YA, adopted Chinese-American, she/her
he House on Mulberry Street is about feeling worthy of someone. Even if that’s just ourselves. To know that the importance is in the journey, in the transformative process not the end result. Thanks to the pub https://t.co/JZN5WO6s46
"A grounded and winsome love story."
--Publishers Weekly