"A kingdom is best served by a tapestry of voices and viewpoints."
I liked the idea this book was trying to accomplish. A Beauty and the Beast retelling set after the classic tale with the French Revolution brewing and tensions rising to the breaking point would have been fascinating. Sadly, this book did not accomplish what it set out to do. Belle, the main character, was flat and rather dumb. Instead of focusing on ways to actually help her struggling people (charity work, tax reforms, building projects, appeasing foreign powers, etc) she decided to host a salon and organize a library in the midst of a political crisis, because that would obviously be the best use of her time *facepalms*. She also ignored her (usually correct) instincts and trusted people blindly (which is clearly something you should do when people are actively trying to overthrow you).
"You must not wait for others to save Aveyon. You need to trust your instincts and become the queen you're capable of being."
The villain was easy to spot the moment he appeared, and it didn't help that Belle was constantly alluding to him. She would wonder why he was acting suspicious or going behind her back to do things, but would then move on with her day instead of trying to solve the problem. Additionally, he had literally no motivation, and his actions were extreme for someone who should have been invested in the opposite cause. The Beast (whose name is apparently Lio) was rather abusive towards Belle. He wouldn't trust her word, he didn't value her opinion, he ignored her complaints, he tried to keep her at the castle in the name of "protection" and honestly acted a lot like Tamlin in ACOMAF. Both Belle and Lio kept secrets from each other, and constantly found reasons not to communicate with their partner. Though Lio's abusive behavior was seen as wrong by some of the house staff, it was never fully addressed, and the romance was still glorified.
"It was a bit like falling in love in a place out of time. It didn't matter that we didn't make sense together; it didn't matter who he was or who I was. We just...fell."
The plot was pretty slow, and when the conflict did pick up, everything resolved way too quickly. None of the side characters were developed at all, and they were rather easy to sway over to Belle's side should she want them to be there. There was magic that appeared at random points in the story that was never explained and I didn't really find it necessary either. The plot could have stood without it. The one thing that saved this book from being one star is that it wasn't poorly written, and Belle did get some character development towards the end.