Reviews

Loving The Prince by Nicole Murphy

fangirljeanne's review

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DNF - Flimsy World Building and Boring Characters

Disclaimer: I was given a free copy of this book in exchange for an honest review.

I made it about 30% into this and just couldn't bring myself to continue. The world building is half assed. I still don't have a clear understanding of what sub-genre of sci fi this even fits into since it seems to be a mash up of a contemporary business setting and a period romance. None of it melds well at all. Plus the dialogue is littered with modern slang to that constantly took me out of the story. It was like someone saying "whatever" in Regency England. Just nope.

The characters were flat and boring. I couldn't be bothered to care about any of them, much less find them attractive enough to want to read about them fucking. So I'm done.

meh.

fromjesstoyou's review

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3.0

"3.5 out of 5 stars! A woman finds a man who might be her perfect match if only threats, relatives, and obsessed "fans" don't get in their way.

This intense dynamic novel keeps readers on their toes as they follow Cassie & Kernan's search as to who could be planning to hurt her company while watching them fall in love at the same time."

Read more of this review and TWO teasers here: http://frommetoyouvideophoto.blogspot.com/2014/11/made-grade-jorda-series-book-1.html

tsana's review

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4.0

Loving the Prince by Nicole Murphy is the first in a new series of science fiction romance books by the author. I've previously read her paranormal romance series, which began with Secret Ones. This is more different and more science fictiony than I expected.

A scientific error on the very first page did not bode well for this book. But happily it turned out to be the only egregious error and I was able to enjoy the rest of the book without getting annoyed at science. Admittedly, that was largely because most of the book dealt with logistics and corporate sabotage and not with anything technical, but that worked quite well. And the relationship between the two main characters, of course. That was also central.

I've made no secret in the past that romance isn't my favourite genre and one that I only dip into occasionally and then only if it's speculative. Loving the Prince was not too heavy on the romance — I'd say medium romance maybe — which worked for me. The story was very much driven by the plot — Cassandra trying to work out who's undermining her and get to the bottom of the conspiracy — and the romance was something that happened because the two characters were brought together. Plot driven romance is the kind I prefer.

I read through this book fairly quickly in about two sittings, which is a sign of how much it kept me entertained. The only part that almost made me put it down was (spoiler free) the bit in the middle where circumstances conspire to keep the two leads apart. But I suspect frustration was the intended reaction for that part. For those interested in the "steaminess" of Loving the Prince, I'd say it's low-ish (being medium romance, honestly I'm not sure what the standard scales are) with only one on-page sex scene.

Generally I found Loving the Prince to be an enjoyable read and I would absolutely recommend it to any speculative fiction romance fans. It kept me entertained throughout and I am interested in reading the sequel (although I'm also a bit sad it will probably star other characters).

4 / 5 stars

You can read more of my reviews on my blog.

calissa's review

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3.0

A sci-fi romance between the heir to the throne and her bodyguard. I appreciated the fact that even though Cassandra is the Rican heir, she's also a no-nonsense business woman. In a nice reversal of gender roles, it is her bodyguard Kernan looking to settle down and start a family.
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