His Cursed Prince by Ryan Loveless


His Cursed Prince by Ryan Loveless
Publisher: Dreamspinner Press
Genre: Contemporary, Sci-Fi/Fantasy
Length: Short Story (98 pages)
Other: M/M, Anal Sex
Rating: 4 stars
Reviewed by Moonflower

Three facts about Tuckington Belle:

1. Given the choice between illegally scaling the royal castle’s walls to steal flowers for a client at his family’s dress shop or going on a date with a girl his brother set him up with (“He’s fertile, and he can sew!”), Tuck will scale the wall like a spider after a fly.

2. If, upon knocking himself unconscious when he falls off the wall, Tuck wakes up bruised, blindfolded, and inside the castle, where—based on the unearthly wails heard nightly—the prince no one has seen in ten years is probably a ghost, Tuck would still choose this over a date with a girl.

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Three facts about Prince Frederick George Deor (Read and approved with great reluctance by Lord “Protocol is Protocol. Stop Being a Pain About It” Todd):

1. He brought a curse upon himself and now bears the skin of a snake.

2. He can’t take his eyes off the injured thief recovering in the castle.

3. Friendships born from lying and insisting the other person wears a blindfold can blossom into true love—which he needs to break the curse.

“He’s young, employed, and fertile. And he can sew.” This is in the opening paragraph of this book. In a world that has both Twitter and mobile phones, we also see a fairy-tale world of princes, castles and curses.

With a cast of characters designed to make you smile, this is a fairy-tale of a story. The storyline is a simple one. Our prince gets cursed for moaning about himself, and shuts himself away from everyone, including his family. However, the way it is written, makes for a delightful time-out. The pacing is smooth, and the world is well-fleshed out. It did seem a bit strange reading about Twitter, but once I accepted it as part of the world, all was well. There were no editing or grammatical errors that disrupted my reading flow, and I finished this book with a huge smile on my face.

For a light-hearted fairy-tale romance, I can definitely recommend this story.

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