Majesty (American Royals #2) Katharine McGee. 2020. 320 pages. [Source: Review copy]
First sentence: The
morning had dawned dreary and gray, with a mist that hung over the
streets of the capital. It was, the media correspondents all agreed,
appropriate weather for a funeral. They stood behind a velvet rope to
one side of the palace doors, swapping cigarettes and breath mints,
hurriedly checking their lipstick in their phone screens. Then the
palace’s main gates swung open to admit the first guests.
Premise/plot:
Majesty is the second book in the series. (The first one is American
Royals). The series has a unique-ish premise: what if George Washington
had been crowned King after the war ended? And what if he had actually
you know had biological descendants to inherit the crown? And what if
America still had a Monarchy?
So Beatrice has just inherited the
throne and become America's first QUEEN. But some--many? few?--can't
imagine her ruling America on her own. Could a woman possibly handle the
task of ruling a country on her own?!?! Beatrice must marry Teddy
practically immediately so there will at least be a king-consort by her
side. But is this what Beatrice wants? What Teddy wants?
So
Beatrice has two siblings--twins--Samantha and Jefferson. And this soap
opera wouldn't really be soapy if they didn't have tangled love lives.
Samantha is still bitter over losing Teddy to her older sister...will
she find a new man in this second book? Perhaps even finding one that is
a better fit for her?!
Jefferson and Nina have broken up. But
will Nina be ready to move on before Jeff? Perhaps. Regardless Daphne
can't keep her interfering hands from playing puppet-master. Ethan,
Nina, Jeff--she wants to control them all. And that's leaving off her
supposed, supposed best-ever friend who spent the whole first book in a
COMA. (She's not in a coma in book two).
Life goes on.
My
thoughts: I didn't love the first book. Perhaps I'm just a little too
old to get giddy about a book founded on such a silly premise. George
Washington had no children. George Washington had NO children. But there
is something breezy about both books. Even if it was ridiculous, I
raced through the first book...and now the second. Not because I found
it intelligent or well-written or super-clever or thought-provoking. But
because it was almost the exact opposite.
I will say this, I
definitely found the second book better than the first. I repeat I found
it way more enjoyable than the first book in the series. I found it
satisfying in the end.
The series definitely reminds me of Anna
Godbersen's series: Luxe and its sequels. Which I believe Luxe is a
copycat Gossip Girl. Which I suppose makes this a copycat of a copycat
Gossip Girl? But one scene in particular appears to have been largely
inspired wink-wink-wink from Gone With The Wind. The whole confrontation
between Rhett and Scarlett is almost duplicated between two
characters...I won't tell you WHO. Now that I've seen this character
speaking Rhett's lines I'm not sure I'll be able to look at him the same
way again. And that's not necessarily a bad thing! Perhaps it makes me
like him even more?
© 2020 Becky Laney of Becky's Book Reviews
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