September 19, 2023
1.5/5 ⭐
DNF-ed it at 32% because it was pointless
I tried to give it a chance, I didn't want to put an end on it like that, but the whole action was not going anywhere so I had to end it. I was struggling with it like a fish struggles to find water on Mercury.
I didn't want to award this the honourable 1-star because that pretty little star is reserved only for the morally-outrageous, bland-as-all-bloody-hell, terribly-unliterary-written, super-offensive books so that's why I pushed that half star in there (even though I shouldn't have but oh well). I have principles that I want to follow, though this book was ugly-crying in its blandness.
I thought I might get over the fact that I didn't like any of the characters but sadly I didn't. And by any I mean any. Not even a single one.
They were all whiny, arrogant creatures, some rich kids going to boarding schools all over the world, all fussy and pretentious because daddy forgot to buy them their yearly luxury car limited edition with golden tyre caps and they had to go to school with the one from last year.
*Ah, the shame! I could >never be seen poor like that, I would die!*
I am not really a fan of the only-first-world-problems-here characters, sorry.
Also, I disliked Princess Jaya Rao...wait no, pardon this stupid simple girl...is just Jaya.
I could get over the fact that she was raised to be an heir to a symbolic throne and she had different visions than me, but she really really annoyed me with her 'humble' attitude.
Like please, I know I am a princess and my dad is a maharajah but please, I'm being so modest and humbled and embarrassed for everyone to know that, just call me Jaya, I'm just a normal girl, I too drink water like all of you *wink wink*

And the fact that it was supposed to be a Beauty and the Beast retelling was also beyond my power of understanding. My brain tends to be dumb more times than often but still did not acknowledge that information.
True, I did not read enough of it to be entitled to have an opinion or whatever but in the first 32% there's nothing for me to work with.
The closest> thing to that statement might be the fact that there is a curse thrown in there somewhere and that Grey (the male MC) was of course 6 feet plus and tons of pounds of pure muscle and looked 'like a feral beast' (okay, uh-huh, every beast wears sandals in its free time, duh, of course!).
Oh and Jaya had a pretty little necklace gifted by her father the maharajah, in the shape of a rose with eighteen rubies on it...oops no wait, she tragically lost one ruby so only seventeen rubies now.
*All of us plebeians in the background now searching the whole damn Earth for that bloody ruby*
I did want to think that this book isn't bad and I did try to convince myself to believe that I'd probably enjoy it, and maybe I would've enjoyed it if I were to read it when I was younger (way younger), but for me now? No thanks, I'm not buying that, I love having my time well-spent. Sorry.

DNF-ed it at 32% because it was pointless
I tried to give it a chance, I didn't want to put an end on it like that, but the whole action was not going anywhere so I had to end it. I was struggling with it like a fish struggles to find water on Mercury.
I didn't want to award this the honourable 1-star because that pretty little star is reserved only for the morally-outrageous, bland-as-all-bloody-hell, terribly-unliterary-written, super-offensive books so that's why I pushed that half star in there (even though I shouldn't have but oh well). I have principles that I want to follow, though this book was ugly-crying in its blandness.
I thought I might get over the fact that I didn't like any of the characters but sadly I didn't. And by any I mean any. Not even a single one.
They were all whiny, arrogant creatures, some rich kids going to boarding schools all over the world, all fussy and pretentious because daddy forgot to buy them their yearly luxury car limited edition with golden tyre caps and they had to go to school with the one from last year.
*Ah, the shame! I could >never be seen poor like that, I would die!*
I am not really a fan of the only-first-world-problems-here characters, sorry.
Also, I disliked Princess Jaya Rao...wait no, pardon this stupid simple girl...is just Jaya.
I could get over the fact that she was raised to be an heir to a symbolic throne and she had different visions than me, but she really really annoyed me with her 'humble' attitude.
Like please, I know I am a princess and my dad is a maharajah but please, I'm being so modest and humbled and embarrassed for everyone to know that, just call me Jaya, I'm just a normal girl, I too drink water like all of you *wink wink*

And the fact that it was supposed to be a Beauty and the Beast retelling was also beyond my power of understanding. My brain tends to be dumb more times than often but still did not acknowledge that information.
True, I did not read enough of it to be entitled to have an opinion or whatever but in the first 32% there's nothing for me to work with.
The closest> thing to that statement might be the fact that there is a curse thrown in there somewhere and that Grey (the male MC) was of course 6 feet plus and tons of pounds of pure muscle and looked 'like a feral beast' (okay, uh-huh, every beast wears sandals in its free time, duh, of course!).
Oh and Jaya had a pretty little necklace gifted by her father the maharajah, in the shape of a rose with eighteen rubies on it...oops no wait, she tragically lost one ruby so only seventeen rubies now.
*All of us plebeians in the background now searching the whole damn Earth for that bloody ruby*
I did want to think that this book isn't bad and I did try to convince myself to believe that I'd probably enjoy it, and maybe I would've enjoyed it if I were to read it when I was younger (way younger), but for me now? No thanks, I'm not buying that, I love having my time well-spent. Sorry.
