The Contest is Over But You Can Still Purchase Melissa’s Book

Mr. Chef & Ms. Librarian

Tariq and Ivy aren’t just from opposite sides of the tracks, they’re from opposite worlds.

He lives for food. She tolerates it.

He’s got his Muslim-Canadian family on speed dial; she doesn’t speak to her mother in England.

Her ex just dumped her. His business is on its last loan.

And yet, when Ivy strolls into Tariq’s cooking class, just before Christmas and Eid, love is too delicious to resist.

Ivy Appleford is not a diva. Most librarians aren’t. But for once in her life, she’s breaking all the rules and doesn’t care about the consequences.

Take Tariq Zahid. In fact, that’s the main problem: she wants to take him. He’s tall, dark, and handsome, but off-limits in so many ways. First of all, she just broke up with her professor boyfriend. Everyone knows you shouldn’t scoop a new guy up on the rebound. Someone’s bound to get hurt.

But she literally falls at his feet during his Mediterranean cooking class, thanks to borrowed shoes and a little mutt named Jerry, and they can’t keep their hands off each other.

Tariq’s got problems of his own. His catering business is on its last loan. What’s more, the loan is from his parents, who immigrated to Canada from Pakistan and devoted their lives to him. Shouldn’t Tariq retreat to the safe world of computer programming, marry a good Muslim gal, and set up an RRSP?

Instead, he falls in love with Ivy.

Will Tariq and Ivy live–and eat–happily ever after?

Cover for Mr. Chef and Ms. Librarian by Melissa Yi

About Melissa Yi

Melissa Yi, also known as Dr. Melissa Yuan-Innes, studied emergency medicine at McGill University in Montreal. She was so shocked by the patients crammed into the waiting area, and the examining rooms without running water, that she began to contemplate murder. And so she created Dr. Hope Sze, the resident who could save lives and fight crime. Her 9th book in the Hope Sze Medical Thriller series released in October.

Dr. Melissa Yuan-Innes applied to medical school mostly because she wanted to save lives, but also because she’s nosy. Medicine is a fascinating and frustrating window into other people’s lives. She shares her sometimes painful, occasionally hilarious stories in The Medical Post, Chicken Soup for the Soul, and in her essay collections The Most Unfeeling Doctor in the World, Fifty Shades of Grey’s Anatomy, and Broken Bones.

As Melissa Yuan, she writes children’s and middle-grade books ranging for ages ranging from kindergarten through middle-school.