Reviews

Royal Holiday by Jasmine Guillory

linnaboobooks's review against another edition

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4.0

3.5 stars.

I need more older POC romances in my life and I will continue to look for them.

While this book follows a few of the beats a lot of other Jasmine Guillory novels do (not a complaint, I consider those tropes/beats her brand), I find the take on them in this one to be pretty interesting because of the British setting and how Malcolm worked for the queen while Vivian is a social worker in America who was a single mom when she was younger. The internal struggles in this one hit different as they are from the perspective of people who are established in life because of age and other things they've gone through prior to it.

Overall, I really enjoyed it. If you like other Jasmine Guillory novels, I recommend this, especially if you wanted more of Maddie's mom. I will say this book doesn't feel too festive holiday-wise, so if you went into it for Christmas vibes or even winter ones, you're kind of out of luck.

alicebme's review

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4.0

I sure did enjoy this book.

nicolehurst's review against another edition

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hopeful lighthearted medium-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? Character
  • Strong character development? No
  • Loveable characters? No
  • Diverse cast of characters? No
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes

2.5

lbarsk's review against another edition

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4.0

Okay it was FUN to read about 55-year-old folks getting together. YES PLEASE. Also after the high drama of Book 3 it was nice to have a much calmer and sweet romance. The resolution felt a LITTTTTLE FAST THERE at the end but overall a good time.

tatyanavogt's review against another edition

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3.0

This is a low 3 stars. It was enjoyable but I just wasn't in it. I loved the idea of it, but didn't really care for the romance..

thephdivabooks's review

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4.0

Perhaps one of her best books yet, Jasmine Guillory’s Royal Holiday left me with a smile on my face and joy in my heart! Guillory continues to push contemporary romance into showcasing diversity in the genre, while still maintaining the steamy, fun, sassy, and heart-warming moments that make you forget you are also learning a valuable lesson. Lovely!

Jasmine Guillory’s books are some of the ones I most look forward to. Each book somehow ties loosely to the book before it through the characters. Last year’s The Wedding Party starred Maddie Forest, a stylist in California who is probably my favorite protagonist of Guillory’s books to date. Maddie was tough and vulnerable, and wholly easy to adore in my opinion.

In Royal Holiday, Maddie’s mother Vivian is center stage, and I didn’t realize how excited I would be to read a wonderful, charming story about love over 50. As if that is shocking? But somehow, it is. We rarely see women in contemporary romance older than mid-30s, and a black woman over the typical age range seems almost unheard of.

But as with every book Guillory writes, the diversity is as important as the romance itself. She manages to constantly remind us that love is universal, but the way society treats love stories is not always equal depending on surface characteristics. All of this combines to have me both loving the rom-com of her books, and also feeling more tolerant, accepting, and educated about the struggles faced by people of color.

Let’s get to the story!

When Maddie is hired as the stylist to the Duchess for the Christmas holidays, she and her mother travel overseas to spend holidays in royal fashion (pun intended!). The queen is also at the estate with her private secretary Malcom Hudson (whom Vivian calls “Hot Chocolate” to my delight!). When a holiday romance heats up between Vivian and Malcolm, the attraction is much deeper than just physical.

Of course, with Vivian living in Oakland, CA and Malcolm’s duty to the queen, the romance seems doomed to be not much more than a holiday fling. But perhaps, as they say, love will conquer all—even those pesky thousands of miles keeping them apart!

I felt like this was the type of book that you could love just on the surface, and also for the brilliance of Guillory’s writing. The diversity didn’t feel like it took precedence over the story, but it also didn’t take a backstage to it. It was as much a part of their identities as their hilarious banter and their hearts. I felt that the book both showcases the inherent lack of diversity in the genre, while also making it seem almost silly that we don’t see more age and racial diversity historically in romance books.

And then of course, in addition to all of that, is the message that we should always allow our hearts to be open to love!

Thank you to Berkley Publishing for my copy. Opinions are my own.

akelf4you's review against another edition

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lighthearted medium-paced

4.0

taylersimon22's review against another edition

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3.0

It was good, but not the best in the series. I did appreciate the perspective of an older black woman’s desires!

miniibooks's review

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4.0

3.5/5 ⭐️