Over 850 FIVE and four stars on Goodreads and Amazon.A Muslim Arab Prince with a heavy weight of responsibilities on his shoulders and a young Catholic American woman with a dark, haunted past living inside her heart. Unexpectedly thrust together in a deal of betrayal brokered by her brother, the last thing she imagines when she goes to his wedding in a kingdom far away from her home, is to find … is to find out that it’s her own wedding, as well.
A bright, independent CEO struggling to live this new life, where the traditions and rules are too numerous to keep up with, and an attractive, intelligent prince wanting nothing more than for his bride to find the black keys.
Fate steps in to teach the troubled new princess a few lessons about love, life, understanding, and acceptance, while destiny forces the Crown Prince into allowing his beautiful wife to break a rule or two.
Because when it comes to love, rules blur and traditions fade.
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This series is good – some of the religion aspect/prejudice themes seem to fit more of a YA audience than me (I’m in my 30s) but overall an entertaining read.
I kept trying to figure out why this plot sounded so familiar then I remembered I had read this as a Twilight fanfiction some years ago. It wasn’t that good then and the transition to “original “ fiction didn’t really improve it
The story was not realistic. I could see that there would be desparation on the part of Joseph, but it was too trite to have a woman to exchange for a woman. And as it seemed that many of the characters spoke english, how is it that no one said anything to her about the marriage?
Wait, what? I love a cheesy romance as much as the next girl, but trying to combine very serious themes like religious controversy and racism with a “love at first sight” romance? This doesn’t work at all.
Awful. Horrible grammar and character development (as in, the characters were not developed).
Found book to be boring. Put it down after reading the first five pages.
You get what you pay for.