Just like a fresh British sketch of a cup of jasmine tea, it is a story that is not surprising and built by a few wonderful characters, which is flat and quiet. The translation name is inappropriate, and there is no fantasy element, which wastes the setting of the heroine's obsessive-compulsive disorder and the ideal of a fairy tale writer. The character settings are all lovable, the heroine is a popular setting for literary young women, obsessive-compulsive disorder is cute, and the librarian and fairy tale writer have dual romantic identities. The male character is seasoned properly, a horticultural grandfather with a tongue and a personality, a gentle and warm-hearted single-parent cook -- still played by Mo Niang Andrew Scott, and a sloppy, handsome, eccentric, and clever mechanic. These few cultural relics are put together, no matter how bland the story is, they look warm, there is no way not to like it. The story is too bland, and the contradictions are not stimulated enough. Obsessive-compulsive disorder and hate plants are very confusing to deal with later. The so-called fantasy, except that the pencil mark on the paper left by the heroine fantasy mechanic turned into a butterfly and flew away for a shot, and there is no fantasy component. Pity. And responsible for the beautiful garden is not stunning enough. All in all, it's a warm and wonderful work. The first half is very attractive, and the second half turns boring and tedious. It would be great if Bella's transformation from fear of plants and gardens to love, from introversion to open-mindedness, can be fully demonstrated through fantastic imaginary scenes. Unfortunately not. Everything comes naturally, so it's tedious.
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