Reviews

The Cup and The Prince by Day Leitao

littlebookhunter07's review against another edition

Go to review page

3.0

Thank you to the author and book funnel for giving me an ARC in exchange for an honest review. This book comes out on the 15th October.

Where to begin. I feel conflicted with my thoughts on the book because I thoroughly enjoyed my time reading it, unfortunately it just fell flat for me in some regards.
The book was an easy read, I was entertained and there was not a moment where I felt bored. The plot kept me intrigued enough that I often found myself thinking about it when I wasn’t reading it, and I wanted to know where it goes. This book had so much potential to be great however this is where my disappointment comes in. There were multiple issues that could have picked up by the novel being longer, detected by Beta readers or fixed through developmental editing.

Characters:
I liked some of the characters in this book, however I did not love them. I felt as though a lot of the characters were one dimensional, and there needed to be more depth to their personalities, motivations, and back stories to give them more individuality. The character that I found the most appealing and has a lot of potential would be Larzen; he gave me strong Loki (of the Marvel Cinematic Universe) vibes and I enjoyed his scenes in the book.

As for the romance, you can tell who the love interest is the moment you meet him. This is purely because of the typical structure of a love interest and the fact that even though Zora exhibits some amount of disgust for this person, she cannot help pointing out how handsome he is. Their relationship felt rushed and the connection they supposedly had was not convincing or realistic enough for me to care about them as a possible pairing. At most I would have believed friendship, although they had no build up, no chemistry and when they kissed, it felt unimportant rather than the milestone it should have been. It would have been better if it were more of a slow burn, more hints at this tension between them, then the romance progressed in future books.

Pacing:
Although fast paced books are generally good and easy to get into, in this instance it impacted the book negatively. The transitions between scenes were abrupt and I felt I did not have enough time to take in what was happening before it moved on to the next thing. It felt like the plot points and action was crammed into a novel half the size it should have been.

Plot:
The concept for the plot was solid. However, I think the execution is what primarily has fallen short for me.
I loved the idea of the shadow creatures manifesting in any dark spot within the Dark Valley, even somewhere as simple as the shadow inside someone’s shoe. I was however disappointed that it was not explored more. That the mental toll that this took on Zora did not play a part in other scenes as much as a childhood of well based fear of even the smallest amount of darkness would have on a person. I hope we get more information and more depth on these creatures and their influence in Book 2.
There are major inconsistencies where the book constantly spoke about how dangerous the games were yet I felt none of that tension because they were over as soon as they began. They also were not particularly large in scale or as life threatening as they were made out to be.
Each competition Zora used potions as an advantage against her competitors and she was made out to be highly skilled in alchemy. However, we didn’t get to see her actually make the potions or get a sense of the process required/how challenges it is to make them or prove that she is as proficient as she says because it was glossed over .The potions she did use were terribly similar to each other and there was not enough variety in their effects or anything that showcased how talented she was. To be fair, it is book 1 so maybe we will see more in book 2? If she were as talented as we are made to believe, could she have not made a truth potion or something to question people she thought were trying to kill her?
This goes into another issue I had. There were many cases throughout the book where there was not a lot of build up or clues before Zora came to conclusions or figured things out. For example: Zora suspects Alegra of trying to kill her or plotting against her and I don’t understand how Zora came to that conclusion so quickly. Zora is painted out to be naïve, she was getting along with Alegra and it seemed they might form a friendship, then she finds out that Griffin and Alegra are involved with each other… and suddenly her opinion on Alegra shifts and when something goes wrong she suspects Alegra straight away.

Writing:
This book was easy to follow for a fantasy book which I appreciated.
Although it is considered YA and it does have scenes that support thisp, majority of the book felt like it was written as middle grade due to the maturity, the simplistic writing style and the common case of telling instead of showing. The main issue I found with the writing goes hand in hand with the other problems I found with the book. This book would have thrived if it were longer, took a closer look at the details and had more development throughout.

Themes:
Feminism – what it is like being in a man dominated world.
It felt like the author was forcing the theme onto the reader as though it was a box to check for every chapter, however I appreciated what she was trying to achieve. My favourite scene was when Zora was at the market and saw explicit paintings of herself. She confronted the painter and he explained that while he wasn’t fond of them and he actually admires her, sex sells and he needed to feed his family.


Overall: (despite my issues) I actually did enjoy the story and I am excited for the possibilities and directions that this story may take. I look forward to continuing with book two, however these issues I have mentioned, if not in some way addressed, may mean that the second book is as far as I may take it.

iina_reads's review against another edition

Go to review page

4.0

3.5⭐️
I enjoyed it. I found some dialouge unatural at times but it did not bother me too much. I liked the characters and it was a fast read. I wish there was more focus on the romance tho but I think its comming in the next book

heyitsmeg777's review against another edition

Go to review page

3.0

After facing heartbreak, you'd think Zora would learn her lesson and try not to fall in love with two people with different intentions... of course, we're clearly wrong and she falls for one of the guys while dealing with the tournament... Overall this book was a somewhat quick read and while there were parts that brought a smile to my face there were parts of the tournament that weren't really high-stakes. I felt like the stakes could've been higher and honestly it would have made the tension in the book so much better!

Thanks to Netgalley for this ARC

anotherstoryreader's review against another edition

Go to review page

5.0

Thank you to Day Leitao for getting me out of a book slump!
NEVER underestimate a girl from the shadowlands. When Zora's boyfriend tries to pressure her into sex before he leaves for a tournament. She does the only logical thing… She drugs him and takes his place.
Zora then has to use her wits to overcome the challenges of the tournament while not getting caught in her deception. She also has to maneuver with the three royal brothers who each seem to have their own schemings going on and someone is trying to kill her!
This book was fast-paced and exciting. It may not seem groundbreaking to some but it was thoroughly enjoyable for me after a run of mediocre books. I will definitely be watching for book two to come available to see what happens with Zora.

selene_1940's review

Go to review page

Some of the worldbuilding and fantasy words just felt really mediocre and that no effort was tried

whitneymouse's review against another edition

Go to review page

4.0

**Thank you to Netgalley and Sparkly Wave for an eArc in exchange for an honest review. This in no way changed my rating**

The Cup and the Prince has two main protagonists: Zora, a girl who leaves her dangerous village as a means of petty revenge on her cheater ex, and Griffin, a prince with a secret. Both enter into a dangerous series of competitions, as well as games of political intrigue.

This was a perfectly good Fantasy book. The idea of the shadow creatures Zora has to fight in her home village and her underlying motivation to win the competition to help her people were bright spots. Additionally, I liked all three royal brother characters (although Larzen was my favorite). I liked that Zora was a capable female character with capable female friends, which is a trait that is all too often skipped in YA series nowadays.

That said, the idea that the main motivation for another female character appears to be jealousy the entire book up until the bitter end was a problem for me. The actual issue behind her character was so much more intriguing than "a pretty girl is flirting with a prince" and I would have liked to have been let in on that earlier. Additionally, the ending left a lot open. I would probably read the second book of this series because it was left in a place that I want to know what happens and the writing was good enough to check it out. I just am hoping for a little more detail on the parts that were left open (where did the shadows come from? can they be stopped for good? What's going on with Griffin?) and less petty girl fights and open underestimation of female characters due to sexism.

4/5 stars

kayarnold's review against another edition

Go to review page

adventurous lighthearted fast-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? Character
  • Strong character development? Yes
  • Loveable characters? It's complicated
  • Diverse cast of characters? No
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes

3.5

rosariofacio's review against another edition

Go to review page

4.0

Thank you to netgalley and sparkly waves for approving me for the e-arc for The Cup and The Prince. I did enjoy reading parts of this book and some of the characters. It was a pretty short read and it felt like everything was rushed especially with the whole tournament and characters in the end.

lonelyhuman's review against another edition

Go to review page

4.0

3.5/5
It was enjoyable. I really want to know what Griffin was about to say at the end so I’ll read the next book.

rampion12's review against another edition

Go to review page

4.0

Held my attention but had its flaws, not sure if I like where this is going