Over breakfasts in Zo’s garden, the two men begin a friendship that transforms the isolation of their lives. But Hylas’s aqueduct project is threatened by bureaucratic delays, and Zo is pressured to secure a rich patron to help support his failing house. When they have begun to hope that they have found a home in each other, the world seems intent on forcing them apart.
Comment: I saw a recommendation for this book at a site I usually check and this one seemed to contain a quiet, cozy type of plot, and I was interested in seeing why readers liked it.
Hylas is an engineer who travels to the island of Tykonos to help with the construction of an aqueduct. However, things don't happen at the speed he imagined and there is a lot of talking and planning that leads to no real plans. While he becomes used to the pace of the island, he rents a room at a tea house, which he learns later is actually a pleasure house. he decides he doesn't need to partake but after a while he starts to become friends with the cook and the waiter and even some of the companions. He especially likes the company of his neighbor Zo, and he feels they are becoming very good friends. But is it only friendship or will they discover that there is more uniting them than that?
This is the first book I try by this author. I only knew that her stories are mostly set in fictional worlds which resemble ancient civilizations, kind of similar to ancient Greece and/or the Roman empire. The descriptions and setting are actually very alike what I remember from this in school and I think it was almost too easy to try to imagine what I knew of those civilizations as inspiration for what I was reading here.
The writing was smooth and fluid and I had a good time going through this story. I think the vibe is a little moody, not exactly sad or depressing, but there is this vibe of things not being always, completely secure in how they can or will work out. I mean, I imagined this would have an HEA but the main characters were facing some issues, mostly related to their lives and not as much their feelings, that made me think their path to happiness would not be simple.
The plot is not really the important element here. Basically Hylas is in the island for a work project but as often happens, he isn't able to do things the way he planned because there are always some weird/unknown rules in how things work, and sometimes they don't make much sense, something that an be seen as a cultural issue. Stereotyping places and cultures is the same, and we can infer that things in Tykonos aren't rushed, even though building the aqueduct is necessary. Thankfully, by the end of the book, it seems doing this construction might become a reality.
Therefore, the really key element here is the personal relationships and how Hylas discovers something new about himself by having had the experience of interacting with others, namely Zo. Their romance isn't fast, isn't insta-love and doesn't seem to set in uncontrollable passion. Still, I liked how sweet they were together once they started becoming closer. I think the author developed things in such a way that we get to appreciate the time it took for them to get used to the other nearby - their apartments in the tea house are door to door if I got it correctly - and then to think of the other romantically.
Hylas seemed to be someone very lonely and we get little glimpses of why, although the author really doesn't waste too much time with past details or explanations. I kind of like this method of giving the reader little hints, this way it makes seeing how characters deal with things a more rewarding exercise. Hylas is a shy, quiet person and I wanted him to feel comfortable in finding someone who could love him as he deserves.
Zo is probably a bit more complex and, to be honest, we learn something about him closer to the end that I didn't expect but I guess the author never meant for that information to be a big deal or for it to define who Zo is supposed to be. However, there were times where he was a bit abrupt (in my opinion, maybe others didn't see this) and I wasn't always fond of his behavior. Thankfully, for a tea house environment, there wasn't much about what the companions like Zo did that bothered me. But I can't help thinking that it would have been as interesting if the main characters weren't in a pleasure house... the actual setting could have been anything else and the main conflicts would not need to change much.

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