"Farzan Alavi may be looking for love, but after another disastrous break-up, he decides it's time to (temporarily) throw in the towel. He plans to drown his sorrows at Kansas City's newest winery. Only instead of spending a lonely night at the bar, he's escorted to a table for one. There, the hot sommelier more than treats him like a VIP: the way he flirts with Farzan ignites a lust he didn't think was possible. Only David Curtis isn't flirting because he finds Farzan attractive (though, he definitely does think that). David thinks that Farzan Alavi is really Frank Allen, Kansas City's most…mehr
"Farzan Alavi may be looking for love, but after another disastrous break-up, he decides it's time to (temporarily) throw in the towel. He plans to drown his sorrows at Kansas City's newest winery. Only instead of spending a lonely night at the bar, he's escorted to a table for one. There, the hot sommelier more than treats him like a VIP: the way he flirts with Farzan ignites a lust he didn't think was possible. Only David Curtis isn't flirting because he finds Farzan attractive (though, he definitely does think that). David thinks that Farzan Alavi is really Frank Allen, Kansas City's most influential food critic. It's only after the two spend an unforgettably hot night together that the truth comes out. Good news-both think the mix-up is hilarious. Bad news-David is studying to become a Master Sommelier and looking for anything but a relationship. Neither expects their paths to cross again-but when Farzan unexpectedly inherits his family's bistro, David is the only person Farzan knows (however iffily) with any knowledge of how to run a restaurant. The two agree to an exchange, where David will answer Farzan's questions, and Farzan will help David study. Only business turns to pleasure when neither can ignore the attraction still sparking between them. But with David set on moving for his career ambitions, and Farzan committed to his family's restaurant, can their relationship last past the expiration date?"--Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
ADIB KHORRAM is the author of Darius the Great Is Not Okay, which earned the William C. Morris Debut Award, the Asian/Pacific American Award for Young Adult Literature, and a Boston Globe–Horn Book Honor, as well as a multitude of other honors and accolades. His follow-up, Darius the Great Deserves Better, received three starred reviews, was an Indie Bestseller, and received a Stonewall Honor. He also is the author of Kiss & Tell and the picture book Seven Special Somethings: A Nowruz Story. When he isn’t writing, you can find him learning to do a Lutz jump, practicing his handstands, or steeping a cup of oolong. He lives in Kansas City, Missouri, where people don’t usually talk about themselves in the third person.
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