3.5 stars (rounded up)
1 green pepper (tbh maybe just 1/2 a green pepper)
If you're looking for a cozy-adjacent adventure full of mystery and magic, with enemies-to-lovers romance, check out 'Cold Hearted' by Leia Stone and Julie Hall. It's the first book in the Cursed Fae series, but can be read as a standalone. It's closed door, light spice, with tension and flirting. Sweet and easy to follow, I imagine it would work great as a palate cleanser.
Dawn, our FMC, is a princess who has been trained from birth to one day travel to a mirror realm through a portal to unalive an Ethereum Lord, and return to her realm with his heart, in order to save her realm. But when Dawn goes through the portal, she finds herself take prisoner by Zander, a handsome royal guard. They both have secrets, and only one horse available to get them to their destination. What will Dawn do, what will she sacrifice, in order to save her realm and all of the people who live in it? Guaranteed HEA. Ends in a way that ties to the next book, 'Faint Hearted,' but no major cliffhanger ending.
The plot is good. It's dual POV, which I like. I found it interesting and enjoyable. I didn't find it to be very unique or original in overall plot, however it was still a fun read.
Pacing felt great. I flew thew this book, it isn't a long book at 288 pages, so it's a nice, quick read. The actions starts pretty immediately and there aren't any big breaks.
Prose is good, flowed well. Dialogue felt natural, had some funny lines and some sweet lines.
If you like these tropes, you'll probably like it: royalty, one horse/bed, fated mates, enemies to lovers, cursed kingdoms
I'm now realizing just how much I don't love it when books put so much value on a woman's virginity. If you chose to remain chaste for whatever reason(s), that's your choice and good for you for sticking to your goals. But I feel it isn't healthy to insinuate that a woman's worth can be found in her v-card status. Take a second to reflect on what that could feel like for a SA survivor. This isn't exclusive to this book, and it isn't a major factor in the plot at all, (but is mentioned multiple times). I know some people enjoy this trope, and that's their choice - I don't mean to hate on them. I just don't enjoy that trope much, and felt the need to explain why. We're all free to like/dislike whatever we want.
I do plan to continue the series. This book includes a preview for 'Faint Hearted' that indicates that book will have some rep that the literary world could always use more of.
Thank you to the authors and The Nerd Fam for the gifted eARC of this book. This is my unbiased review.