Four sisters. One family-owned flower shop. Endless opportunities for fun...or disaster! This fresh new series is full of girl--and flower--power.
Delphinium "Del" Bloom loves her grandparents' flower shop, where it's always peaceful and calm--unlike her cluttered house, where her three sisters--Rose, Aster, and Poppy--constantly cause drama. But then Gran and Gramps move away and leave the flower shop in the care of Del's scatterbrained parents! Their first order is for a big wedding and the bride wants everything--especially the flowers--to be PERFECT. Worse, the mean girl in Del's class happens to be a junior bridesmaid! Can Del help her family and save the day?
In this first book in the Petal Pushers series, readers meet Delphinium Bloom, the oldest grandchild of flower shop owners. When her grandparents announce their plans to retire and leave the shop to Delphinium’s parents, she is horrified. What do her parents know about running a flower shop? Worse, as soon as Del’s grandparents leave, in walks a demanding customer wanting the perfect flowers for her upcoming wedding. Del becomes convinced that her parents can’t handle this detailed flower order, and she begins trying to control every aspect of the shop. In the meantime, her younger sisters, Rose, Aster, and Poppy, become increasingly annoyed with Del’s attitude, while a new boy in school seems to find her very interesting.
This is the third series book I have read recently that focuses on middle school girls running businesses. I don’t know if three is enough to consider it a trend, but I sort of hope it becomes one. There is something really appealing about a tween book that concerns itself with things outside of girl drama and boy-craziness. In this book, Del is plagued by the same issues most fictional middle school girls struggle with - mean popular girls and confusion over a crush - but they don’t consume her entire life. More important to Del are her sisters, her parents, her grandparents, her best friend, and arranging and selling flowers. I think real girls can relate much better to characters who have full, multifaceted lives.
I also think the writing in this book is a notch above some of the other series books I’ve read recently. Sometimes series books like this one have a flat, simplistic style with little description and a “just the facts” approach to storytelling. They often include a lot more telling than showing. This author does a nice job of writing a series book that has that lighthearted, “fluffy” feel that kids expect from paperback fiction but doesn’t water everything down to a basic formula. There is even a great unexpected twist at the end of the book that caught me totally by surprise, which was set things up really well for future titles in the series.
Too Many Blooms is probably best suited to grades 4 to 6, but readers as old as eighth grade might still be interested in it, especially if they’re looking for a short beach read, or something to read on the bus trip to Grandma’s house this summer. It compares well to tween books by Lauren Barnholdt, Tricia Rayburn, and Mimi McCoy, whose works include some romance and friendship drama, but who also keep it clean for the young tween crowd. Other books in the Petal Pushers series include Flower Feud, Best Buds, and Coming up Roses.
I should've hard DNF'D this from the very beginning, especially as Daly's type of writing style wasn't really attracting my attention. I'm glad that there is a community who loves this book, and I genuinely thought that the synopsis was fairly cute (and by extension my mom who had thought of me when she saw the book). I have a very good feeling that this book was going to cause a slump if I continue to read this book since I wasn't really in the biggest mood to read this.
This book is so relatable, messy house, crazy family members and weird classmates, it checks all the boxes! I can't wait until I can get my hands on the next one in the series!
It was so good, I couldn't put it down! I really like Del. She may have a weird name( Who names their kid Delphinium?), but she is such a good character. The only problem is that she has to let loose. She is so neat and plays by the rules all the time. Her parents are let loose more than her! Her family owns a family business, a flower shop. They were the florists for this girl named Olivia. She was getting married to the mayor's son! It was going to be a big wedding, a really big one. But, there was a new flower shop that opens up and it quickly becomes Flowers on Fairfield, Del's family's flower shop. The new flower shop's name is Fleur. It was very modern. You could create virtual bouquets! But, thankfully , they didn't lose Olivia as a customer. One awkward thing about the wedding was that her nemesis, Ashley, was Olivia's junior bridesmaid. The funny thing is that the guy Del has a crush on, Hamilton's, mother was the owner of Fleur, the rival flower shop. Del's family is very unique. All of them have the names of flowers. Her sisters names are: Poppy, the youngest and Rose and Aster, the twins who are completely different. This was a really good book. I would give it not one, not two, but THREE thumbs up( Well, if I had three thumbs, but you know what I mean).
A quick read about four sisters who help their parents take over the family flower shop. The eldest (and narrator) Del, learns about team work as they prepare for a "Bridezilla's" wedding of the year. A bit too many details about who's wearing what for my liking, but might appeal to reluctant female readers grades 4-6.
This is a great series for 4th graders - middle grade readers. I wish I had this series when I was younger. I posted my full 5 star review on Mundie Kids here http://mundiekids.blogspot.com/2011/0...
It's a super- cute premise, but not entirely believable as being the narration of a 12 year old. The series definitely grew on me, no pun intended. What's really endearing, is the family closeness and the small town Americana values espoused by the book.
Devoted to her Grandparent's flower shop she is devasted when they talk of closing it and moving to Florida! Our plucky heroine vows to save the shop in spite of efforts of Bridezilla and a school enemy. Lightweight breezy read. Beginning of a series.