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review 2019-08-25 00:40
The Prince by Jillian Dodd
The Prince - Jillian Dodd

The 18-year-old protagonist, X, is one of the top students at Blackwood Academy, a boarding school for young spies. She's given her first mission before she even graduates: keep Lorenzo Giovanni Baptiste Vallenta, the Crown Prince of Montrovia, alive. Her new identity: Huntley, a 20-year-old socialite who has just learned that she has a 21-year-old brother named Ari (also a spy, but with a slightly different mission) and a billionaire father. Their "father" has just died, and it's common knowledge that they both stand to inherit billions as long as they spend the next six months getting to know each other.

Although aspects of her situation don't quite add up, Huntley rapidly gets down to business, befriending those closest to the Prince and enjoying the money, cars, clothes, and house supposedly left to her and Ari by their father. The Prince needs all the help he can get - his security is riddled with holes, mostly due to his own love of women and parties, and there are multiple people in his life who might have reason to kill him.

I found out about this book via one of the panels at Book Bonanza 2019 and ended up buying it and getting it signed at the author's table. "YA spy series" sounded like my kind of thing. Now that I've actually read it, I can say that 1) it isn't YA and 2) it's definitely not my kind of thing. I wish the author had marketed it as what it actually is, New Adult, because then I could have avoided it and saved myself some money, brain space, and time.

The things I liked: it was a quick read, and the mystery of X/Huntley's past and plans for her future were interesting enough that I wouldn't mind reading spoilers for the later books. I just don't plan to continue on with the series myself. Oh, and I like the cover.

I knew this book wasn't going to be for me when Huntley hooked up with Daniel, one of the Prince's acquaintances, by page 40. She'd known him for maybe a few hours by that point. The sex wasn't particularly explicit, but it was definitely vigorous and on-page.

After that, Huntley spent most of the book shopping for expensive clothes and accessories, driving one of her new expensive cars, and lusting after whichever hot guy was in her immediate vicinity. Occasionally, she mistook her lusting for actual emotions, which resulted in one of the weakest love triangles I've ever read. There were a few opportunities for her to save the Prince's life, but that was mostly because the Prince was an idiot who'd structured his life around having easy access to hot women, even if that meant having enormous holes in his personal security. Huntley should barely have been a blip on his radar, someone new for him to have sex with and then forget about. However, she played hard to get, which apparently works like an aphrodisiac in this book.

I wasn't fond of the author's use of first-person present tense POV - I don't know if it was intended to somehow humanize Huntley, but instead she was oddly emotionally distant. It was like she felt whatever emotions were convenient for a particular scene and then forgot about them later. This was most noticeable with the "love triangle." When she was with Daniel, she'd feel her heart soften for him, worry that she was falling for him, and fret over the parts of her training that stated she shouldn't get emotionally involved with others. When she was with the Prince, she felt the exact same things, but for him instead, like Daniel didn't exist.

The overall world-building was ridiculous. I could sort of be on board with a school for teenage spy candidates. I was less pleased when it was revealed that

the school was created solely for Huntley, to the point that it was closed after she left - that felt a little too much like the spy story version of "the chosen one."

(spoiler show)

And I downright rolled my eyes at every mention of what life was supposedly like for citizens of Montrovia. In Montrovia, all hotels were 5-star and poverty didn't exist.

It'd be nice to find out what Black X's plans are for Huntley, and I'm morbidly curious about Dodd's plans for the romance aspects of this series (my theory: the Prince and Daniel are out, or will be, and there will be an overarching love triangle involving Huntley, Ari, and William, the 30+ year old hottie British spy that Huntley has had a crush on for years). However, I'm not interested enough to subject myself to more of this.

 

(Original review posted on A Library Girl's Familiar Diversions.)

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text 2019-08-16 12:33
Reading progress update: I've read 278 out of 278 pages.
The Prince - Jillian Dodd

Finished! My final rating is probably going to be 1.5 stars. It was a fairly quick read and occasionally mildly interesting, but unfortunately not very good. I'm still not quite sure what happened with the love triangle at the end. I think they just gave each other to other people, like presents?

 

E-book versions of both this and the second book are available for free (with DRM, which I loathe) - I don't plan on continuing on with this series, though.

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text 2019-08-14 12:59
Reading progress update: I've read 229 out of 278 pages.
The Prince - Jillian Dodd

Montrovia has no poverty, and all its hotels are 5-star. These are supposedly facts about the country, rather than demonstrations of the cluelessness of the book's disgustingly rich characters. Readers are also expected to believe that there may be socialist eco-terrorist elements (everyone is equal, abolish currency, etc.) in the country hoping to assassinate the prince.

 

And I'm pretty sure there's some sort of love triangle, but Huntley's "emotions" are written so oddly it's hard to tell. If a guy is even slightly emotional around her, her heart softens for him and she cares for him. But if he isn't physically near her, she at least 90% forgets about him.

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text 2019-08-13 19:19
Reading progress update: I've read 202 out of 278 pages.
The Prince - Jillian Dodd

"Oh, for gosh sake, give it a rest."

 

The heroine (do I call her Huntley or do I use her real name?):

- Has sex, multiple times, with guys she literally just met (at least one instance of which the author put on-page)

- Is willing to walk around in a tiny thong and nothing else in order to keep the Prince's attention

- Is 100% sure she could kill a trained agent she studied and crushed on when she was in school, although she hopes she could fit in a bit of sex before killing him

- Thinks about sex a lot, in case this wasn't already clear

 

And yet edits her language.

 

Also, I'm still wondering how she could write her senior dissertation on another country's top spy when supposedly no one knows his real name. Like, how do you research someone like that?

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text 2019-08-12 06:53
Reading progress update: I've read 118 out of 278 pages.
The Prince - Jillian Dodd

One of the many books I picked up at Book Bonanza. I started it on Saturday and am plowing through it pretty quickly. Unfortunately, despite being a quick read it isn't actually all that good. The main character, who is currently going by the name "Huntley," has been training to be a spy since she was 12, when she witnessed her parents get killed. She's determined to one day kill their murderer.

 

Or at least she says she's determined. She's now 18 and doing undercover work for the first time, and at least 90% of the book's focus has been on "rich people stuff" (shopping for expensive clothes, driving a fast and very rare car) and sex or thinking about sex. The author was at one of the panels I attended, which was why I became interested in this series in the first place. She advertised it as YA and even talked about the constraints that YA places on writers when it comes to anything to do with sex. There's been maybe two or three sex scenes so far, and I know one of them was on-page - not very explicit, but definitely more on-page and sooner in the overall story than I expected from YA. It'd probably be more accurate to call this New Adult. If I had known that, I probably wouldn't have bought it. New Adult annoys me.

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