
Like everything that goes through the mail centre, only time will tell if Malachi has found his intended destination or if he’ll find himself returned to sender. He also needs to solve the mystery of the pile of old letters that sits in Julian’s office and maybe get to the bottom of what makes Julian tick. To keep his father happy, Malachi needs to keep this job. Where Julian is calm and ordered, Malachi is chaos personified, but despite their outward differences, there’s an immediate chemistry between them that sends Malachi’s head-and heart-into a spin. Malachi’s intrigued by Julian at first, and he soon learns there’s more to the man than his boring clothes of beige, tan, and brown a far cry from Malachi’s hot pink, lilac, and electric blue. Malachi expects tedious and boring but instead discovers a warehouse with a quirky bunch of misfit co-workers, including a stoic and nerdy boss, Julian Pollard. The liberty of conscience, which above all other things ought to be to all men dearest and most precious. “Dearest Milton James” is available from Amazon.Malachi Keogh finds himself in a job he neither wanted nor asked for when his father, boss of Sydney’s postal service, sends him to the end of the business line, aka The Dead Letter Office.

In addition, all of Malachi's coworkers are described in enough detail to make them fully three-dimensional characters. Julian is also a very relatable character. Most of the many laughs in the story come from the man's total lack of filter. Dearest Milton James Print length 242 pages Language English Publisher BlueHeart Press Publication date 25 August 2021 Dimensions 12.7 x 1.4 x 20.

He's a character it's almost impossible not to like. The story is related entirely from Malachi's point of view. Well, maybe it wasn’t love at first sight, but it sure was something.

Walker: New Release Review Novemby Denise Julian Pollard never believed in love at first sight. The ‘mystery’ of the undeliverable letters addressed to Dearest Milton James really just serves to bring the two men together, but it's still a well-constructed plot line. Dearest Malachi Keogh (Dearest Milton James Book 2) by N.R. The relationship between Julian and Malachi develops very quickly, but in a rather pleasant change of pace, both the characters readily admit this and talk about it. “Dearest Milton James” is a very sweet romance of the not-quite-opposites attract kind. Yet, as Malachi gets to know Julian and his colleagues, he starts to find hidden depths, and a mystery. The slightly older man who always dresses in shades of brown seems the definition of dull. Things are not looking good, even less so when the young man meets his new boss, Julian.

He's arranged for Malachi to work at the “dead letter” warehouse. His inability to keep a job is driving his father crazy. The only blemish on his fabulous life is work. Malachi is a fun-loving young gay man with a sunny outlook on life.
