💫🔥 Four hearts discovering that love doesn’t divide — it multiplies when you let it. 🔥💫
Rating: ⭐⭐⭐⭐☆ (4/5)
Spice-meter: 🌶️🌶️🌶️☆☆ (3/5)
Audiobook: 🎧 Duet
📚 Standalone
Chestnuts is a lively, tender, and surprisingly thoughtful why-choose romance that blends humor, heat, and emotional depth without ever tipping into chaos for chaos’ sake. It follows Meghan, a woman thriving in her career and relationships, and the three men who love her Noah, the steady heart; Henry, the passionate dreamer; and Dean, the unexpected spark who pushes their world open just wide enough to let love evolve.
Instead of leaning on shock value or relentless steam, Irene Bahrd builds a story about connection, trust, and the courage it takes to expand your definition of love. The pacing is quick but intentional, balancing spice with sincerity. With multiple POVs and a multi-year timeline, the narrative explores longing, distance, reconnection, and the delicate art of choosing each other, not just once, but over and over again.
It’s not a story about replacing anyone or fixing what’s broken. It’s about making space, honoring emotional truth, and recognizing that sometimes the heart wants more because it finally feels safe enough to ask.
The Story
Meghan lives a full, content life running two successful restaurants and loving Noah and Henry with her whole heart. Their triad works stable, warm, intimate until the universe throws Dean Thomas into her orbit. Cocky, charming, relentlessly persistent, Dean brings an energy that unsettles her in all the right ways. What begins as harmless flirtation soon becomes undeniable connection.
Noah and Henry, instead of reacting with fear or possessiveness, support Meghan’s journey even when it challenges the balance they’ve built. Their love for her is wide, not fragile, and that foundation gives the story genuine emotional weight.
Henry’s tour with a band adds strain and distance, forcing him to question what it means to chase a dream while missing the people who make him whole. Noah’s steady presence grounds the group, while Dean’s entrance complicates and enriches everything at once.
Across time jumps, shifting dynamics, and big emotional choices, the story asks:
How do you protect what you have while making room for what you didn’t see coming?
The result is a warm, spicy, and surprisingly heartfelt poly romance that treats every character with respect and emotional depth.
🎧 Narration
Narrated by Stephanie Rose, Brandon Francis, and Simon Dornet, the audiobook is a standout. Each narrator brings clarity, warmth, and personality to their roles, grounding the emotional shifts while giving the spicier moments the confidence they deserve.
Stephanie brings Meghan’s wit, vulnerability, and strength to life.
Brandon and Simon handle the male POVs with nuance never exaggerated, never flat, always emotionally aligned with the scene.
The duet format works especially well here, creating a smooth dynamic that keeps the multi-POV structure easy to follow and engaging.
What I Loved
✔️ A beginner-friendly why-choose romance with real heart
✔️ Spice that enhances the story instead of overwhelming it
✔️ Multiple POVs that feel balanced and purposeful
✔️ Narration that elevates emotion and chemistry
✔️ Honest exploration of distance, dreams, and evolving love
✔️ A surprisingly tender approach to poly dynamics
✔️ A fast pace without sacrificing plot
Tropes & Vibes
✔️ Why-Choose
✔️ Poly Romance / Sharing
✔️ Found Family
✔️ Established Relationship Expanding
✔️ Multi-Year Timeline
✔️ Medium Spice (not constant)
✔️ Light Angst + High Heart
✔️ Minimal Group Scenes
✔️ Character-Driven with Humor
Final Thoughts
Chestnuts is a fun, fast, and emotionally grounded poly romance that balances spice with sincerity. While the novella length brings a touch of insta-love and a few time jumps that skim deeper emotional layers, the story still delivers a warm, charming, and refreshingly human journey.
For readers curious about why-choose romances or anyone craving a lighthearted, spicy story with a beating heart at its center this is an ideal pick. It proves that love doesn’t get messier when it grows; it simply becomes more honest. And sometimes, more people means more strength, more joy, and more reasons to stay.