Red, White & Royal Blue Review
| Published | 2019-05-14 |
| Series | Standalone |
| Genre | Romance, LGBTQ+ Fiction, Contemporary Fiction |
| Language | English |
| Publisher | St. Martin's Griffin |
| ISBN-10 | 1250316774 |
| ISBN-13 | 9781250316776 |
πRed, White & Royal Blue β My Honest Review
Written and reviewed by Shadab Alam. The opinions and rating in this review are my own.
Summary:
The son of an American president and a British prince turn a public rivalry into a secret relationship with international consequences. Alex's ambition and Henry's constrained public role create a romance where private honesty carries real political risk. What follows is a story concerned with identity, public duty, family, ambition, monarchy, politics, privacy, and the right to choose a life, told through pressure on trust, identity, and ordinary decisions.
β What I Liked
I was most engaged by the emails, playful banter, ensemble friendships, and optimistic fantasy of institutions bending toward openness. Alex's ambition and Henry's constrained public role create a romance where private honesty carries real political risk. The combination gave Red, White & Royal Blue warmth, tension, or unease exactly where it needed it.
β What Could Be Better
I had trouble with the fact that the politics are simplified, the cast is crowded, and the final campaign arc is deliberately wishful. A little more restraint or development around identity in Red, White & Royal Blue would have made the emotional result more convincing.
The son of an American president and a British prince turn a public rivalry into a secret relationship with international consequences. What interested me was the gap between the rule of the story and the private price of identity, visible most clearly in the emails.
My main reservation is that the politics are simplified, the cast is crowded, and the final campaign arc is deliberately wishful. This is where I could see the author's plan around identity more clearly than the character's need.
I became most involved through the people caught in identity, especially around the emails. Alex's ambition and Henry's constrained public role create a romance where private honesty carries real political risk. This is where my sympathy became complicated rather than automatic, because public duty carries a real cost.
The sections I enjoyed most involved the emails, playful banter, ensemble friendships, and optimistic fantasy of institutions bending toward openness. Those sections find a rhythm that suits the book's interest in public duty.
The larger subject is identity, public duty, family, ambition, monarchy, politics, privacy, and the right to choose a life. I appreciated that identity is tied to money, family, work, and the emails rather than left as an abstract idea.
I also noticed how often identity appears through routine while public duty remains unspoken.
My rating is 4.4/5. The ending left me with identity, not with a neat sense that every problem had been solved.
πShadab's Rating
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