Thursday, 13 February 2025

Review: The Prince and the Player

The Prince and the Player The Prince and the Player by Nora Phoenix
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

Two and a half stars.

This is clearly part of a series where young royalty go undercover for a year to 'find themselves'.

Prince Tore is fourth in line to the Norwegian throne, he had a chance of playing professional football (soccer) for the Dutch team Ajax but his father forbade him, saying his duty was to the throne and country. However, (don't ask, plot hole) he has now persuaded his father to allow him to attend college in the USA at Hawsley College for one year - a college which happens to have a pretty good soccer team.

Farron is the soccer captain and a year above Tore. His father was from a wealthy family which disowned him for marrying Farron's mother. Then when his father died they washed their hands of Farron, his mother, and his siblings. Life has been tough, Farron has had to work to support his family, and act as a father figure to his siblings. You could say he has a chip on his shoulder about rich people.

When Tore joins the soccer team Farron is beyond annoyed that this rich kid just waltzes in and snags a spot. Even worse, Tore plays European football where he can rove the field looking for opportunities whereas the Hawsley team play strict positions, leading him into clashes with Farron.

Soon, inevitably, the smouldering looks of hatred turn to lust and after a particularly heated argument they kiss, despite both of them believing up until that point that they were heterosexuals. Yeah, not so keen on the 'gay for you' vibe.

Anyway, they try to get it out of their systems but are just falling for each other for real. But no-one knows Tore's true identity and that secret is going to bite him in the posterior.

So this gave me The Prince and Me vibes (loved the film), but a bit too much. The soccer descriptions seemed okay but frankly there wasn't much more than Tore running, passing and scoring. I'm not sure we know more than two other players on the team (and them only because they share a room with either Farron or Tore). Also the writing felt stilted, I get that Tore speaks 'posh' with an English accent but Farron also had the same tone of voice.

As a devotee of all things Alexis Hall, I would say this is not in the least bit comparable, the characters had no depth. Am okay read.

I received an ARC from the publisher via NetGalley.

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