Love & Pollination

Book 1 in the Love & Mishaps Series

Shortlisted for Choc Lit’s 2019 Search for a Star competition

Sponsored by Your Cat 


Mari Jane Law’s sweet, uplifting, laugh-out-loud “fade to black” quirky romantic comedy series is set in the Bristol area of the UK. Love & Pollination has been published by DuBois Publishing.

Perdita Riley is facing the greatest dilemma of her life. Why had she taken Violet Freestone’s advice on how to make herself look more alluring? It led her into the arms of a womaniser. And now Perdita has to deal with a huge setback. Actually, Setback Number One isn’t huge yet, but it won’t be long before it is.

To cheer herself up, Perdita goes shopping, where an extraordinary encounter deposits her, literally, into the lap of Saul Hadley. She would like to stay there, but Setback Number One is going to get in the way.

Will she find a way to deal with what has happened? Can she manage the complications of her growing attraction to Saul?

This hilarious situational romantic comedy will keep you gripped until the very end.


This guy was so keen to read Love & Pollination that he handed the driving to his dog.

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Read an extract on 1618 Words that will help with your understanding of the book cover. Had you guessed what the image represents?


A note to readers outside the UK

The British education system may not be like yours. Love & Pollination was published in 2020. Perdita was 28 years old. At the time Perdita attended high school, faith schools did not have to follow the state rulings on Sex and Relationship Education – so Perdita’s Catholic convent school was not obliged to teach about sex in the context of relationships, or contraception. Read the book to find out how the nuns dealt with teaching this aspect of biology in preparing students for the exam! (Although, please note that even in Catholic convent schools not all the teachers are nuns. In fact nuns can be in the small minority. But usually lay teachers are practising Catholics.)

Also, in the UK, students are expected to start specialisation at the age of 16. They do not have a broad and balanced curriculum between the ages of 16 and 18 – unless they study the International Baccalaureate, which is far less common than A Levels. But that doesn’t mean they would have to choose human biology as their science subject. At university (which is sometimes called college), only the degree subject is studied. So since Perdita read maths at university, there was no opportunity for her to gain further knowledge. Perhaps there was a lecture in Freshers’ Week – but this is more likely to have been on teaching students about consent as there would have been an assumption that effective sex education had already taken place.

Now, in 2020, the British Government is playing down the sex part in Sex and Relationship Education (SRE) as it talks about Relationship and Sex Education (RSE). (Perhaps to put an emphasis on having a relationship before one has sex. Perdita would have missed out on this subtle difference as she’d left school long before and RSE wouldn’t have been taught in her school anyway.) Take a look here and note that even in 2020 the government allows: Flexibility for schools in their approach, including for faith schools to teach within the tenets of their faith.

How good was your Sex and Relationship Education? Or was it as bad as Perdita’s? Did you go to a faith school?



Thanks to Love Books Group for arranging my 2020 tour:

DateBlog NameHandle
21st SepAbbi Reads xx@abbi_reads_xx
21st SeptBooks in Bucks@booksinbucks
22nd SeptMrs LJ Gibbs@mrsljgibbs
22nd SeptA Little Book Problem@book_problem
23rd SeptBooky Charm@jrw1904
23rd SeptBooks in Bucks@booksinbucks
24th SeptJajaborquiline@jajaborquiline
24th SeptJenguerdy@jenguerdy
25th SeptBookish Bursnoll@bookishbursnoll
25th SeptLate Blooming Wallflower@late_blooming_wallflower
26th SeptRajiv’s Reviews@rajivsreviews
26th SeptKaren and her Books@karenandherbooks
27th SeptThe Book Reader@the.b00kreader
27th SeptJane Hunt Writer@jolliffe03

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