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Friday 10 February 2012

The Language of Flowers by Vanessa Diffenbaugh

The main character, Victoria, has spent her life in various foster and care homes moving from one place to another. She is angry and alone and does not like to be physically touched by anyone. She is fostered by Elizabeth when she is 10 years old and this is where she learns the language of flowers. Fast forward to when she is 18 and about to be emancipated from the care system with no job and no home and all she has is her love of flowers and floristry.


She starts growing her own garden by stealing the flowers from local gardens and then sleeps there as she has nowhere else to go. She then finds a florist who can see the vast potential she has with flowers and offers her a job and somewhere to sleep. Victoria then starts helping the customers buy the right flowers with the real meaning behind them. This leads Victoria down a path of having to come to terms with her past culminating in coming face to face with the one person she cannot bear to see.

I don’t want to give too much away with the story but Vanessa Diffenbaugh covers topics such as guilt, motherhood, family, love and forgiveness all told through flowers and the meanings they have. I thought this was a great book and got thoroughly immersed with wanting to know what all the flowers meant and how just one stray flower could alter the meaning of an entire bouquet. I thought that the only way Victoria could express any emotion with flowers was a really interesting way of writing and I loved the way that she ended up being healed by the flowers. It is not a light hearted book by any means and she does touch on topics such as failing as a Mother but it is told in such a way that it does not seem bleak and the colour always comes back to the flowers.

This is a great debut novel and I would highly recommend it to anyone especially those who already have an interest in the meaning of flowers.



Many thanks for Emma at http://www.bookangelbooktopia.com/  for the loan of the book.




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