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Review | The Heir and The Spare by Emily Albright

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Title: The Heir and the Spare

Author: Emily Albright

Series: Untitled #1

Genre: Young Adult/New Adult Contemporary Romance

Release Date: December 4th, 2015

Publisher: Merit Press

Edition: Kindle E-book

Pages: 288

Rating: 2 Stars

Why I Read the Book: I'm in the mood for contemporaries lately and this was free in the Kindle store.

Synopsis: Family can be complicated. Especially when skeletons from the past pop up unexpectedly. For American Evie Gray, finding out her deceased mother had a secret identity, and not one of the caped crusader variety, was quite the surprise. Evie’s mom had a secret life before she was even born, one that involved tiaras.

In this modern day fairytale, Evie is on a path to figure out who her mom really was, while discovering for herself what the future will hold. Charged with her late mother’s letters, Evie embarks on a quest into her past. The first item on the list is to attend Oxford, her mom’s alma mater. There, Evie stumbles upon a real life prince charming, Edmund Stuart the second Prince of England, who is all too happy to be the counterpart to her damsel in distress.

Evie can’t resist her growing attraction to Edmund as they spend more time together trying to unravel the clues her mother left behind. But, when doubts arise as to whether or not Edmund could ever be with an untitled American, what really ends up unraveling is Evie’s heart. When Evie uncovers all the facts about her mom’s former life, she realizes her mom’s past can open doors she never dreamed possible, doors that can help her be with Edmund. But, with everything now unveiled, Evie starts to crack under the pressure of new family responsibilities and the realization that her perfect prince may want her for all the wrong reasons.


Review: This book gave me "The Princess Diaries" and "The Prince and Me" feels! I enjoyed it except for two things: the insta-love and the way they just glance over Evie's attempted rape. Almost as soon as Evie meets Edmund, she starts having feelings for him. The same happens with Edmund. I wanted to die from all that insta-love. Then somewhere later on in the book, Evie almost gets raped, but Edmund saves her. The whole thing takes about two-three pages and then it's never brought up again. It's like the whole thing isn't even a traumatizing event for Evie. The only thing she cares about is Edmund. Seriously??!!!!! If I had a physical copy of the book, I would have thrown it around my room. Everything else was good except for those two points that practically ruined the book.

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