Romance

The Naked King by Sally MacKenzie


I didn’t intend to read two books in a row with essentially the same plotline, but that’s a disadvantage of the Kindle – it’s much harder to read the “back cover” and pick what book you want to read next. This one was a slight improvement but still not great.

The Naked King by Sally MacKenzie
(2011, Regency Historical)
Grade: 3.5

When Lady Anne Marston is out walking her dog, she finds herself tangled up with Stephen Parker-Roth – and somehow they end up engaged. She is only in London to help her sister with her first season – at 27, Anne considers herself on the shelf, especially after a bad experience in the past – but Stephen is determined to find the real woman underneath the guarded exterior.

This had the makings of an excellent Regency – a rakish hero (with a great sense of humor), a wallflower heroine, a forced betrothal. However, as this is a Regency historical and not a Regency, the author included a lot more sexual content. Some of it was worthwhile – the heroine’s past was handled very well and added some depth to this fairly light story, and the love scenes were spicy, if a bit out of place at times. But I really didn’t need a minute-by-minute update on the status of the character’s… body parts. The author spent far too much time on the hero and heroine lusting after each other. After a while, it got tedious and repetitive and detracted from the story.

I read an email recently that called this phenomenon “Instant Lust Syndrome”. Maybe it’s to be expected in a book called The Naked King. However, it’s infecting far too many books lately – I’m reading a Jade Lee book at the moment that has the same problem. It’s hard to object without sounding prudish, but it takes away from the other elements of the book and gets very tedious after a while.

Karen Wheless

I've been reading romance since I discovered Kathleen Woodiwiss at age 12. I love all kinds of romances, especially emotional and angsty stories. I finally cut back my TBR pile from 2000 books to only 400, but I still have lots of books left to read!

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