This book got rave reviews, so I expected more. Sugar (aka Cherie Lynn) Wallace is a beekeeper who moves every year to a different location in the U.S. This year, she's living in Manhattan. On moving-in day, she sees what she thinks is a homeless man stumble across the street and nearly is hit by several cars. When he makes it to the other side of the street, he stumbles into a man in a bright Hawaiian shirt talking on his cell phone. Sugar, born and bred in Charleston, SC, and who prides herself on her manners, rushes across the street to see if the homeless man needs help. The guy on the phone helps her help the man to his feet and in a very brief moment when their hands touch, she feels electricity. So does the young man, because he spends days trying to track her down. When he finally does and tells her he sees them as old married people in 40 years, Sugar balks and tells him she never wants to see him again.
We meet the "homeless" man again (he's not really homeless), along with the various other denizens of her apartment building: anorexic Ruby; shy, overweight Nate; cranky Mrs. Keschl; angry and mean Mr. McNally, and Lola and her son, Ethan. Sugar believes everything can be solved by honey and she sets out to help her neighbors.
Here were my issues: I really dislike novels where the heroine spends most of her time explaining why she can't get involved with the hero and, in this case, that took up two-thirds of the book. And the reason may have made sense to Sugar, but it seemed silly and flimsy to me. Also, I'm not a beekeeper, but it seems improbable to me that one would pack up his/her bees every year and relocate them just because they hate putting down roots.