![]() ![]() ![]() Because honestly, the story completely won me over despite not loving the male narrator. In this case, I am going to judge the story without the narration, and will discuss the narration further at the end. I realized it was a different narrator after finishing both! They did a great job on continuity, because I can't believe I didn't realize. In the second book, I figured he must have grown on me because he didn't bother me. He sounded kind of old to me and I usually find British accents sexy. In the first book, The Prince & The Player, he was so not sexy. At first, I had some trouble with the male narrator. It is told by the female in one couple and the male in the other which is strange, unique, and it worked once I got the hang of it. ![]() Interestingly, this is about two couples. ![]() The Dirty Player's Duet is billed like this: "Cinderella meets Ocean's Eleven in this ADULT CONTEMPORARY ROMANCE featuring secrets, lies, royal high jinks, scams and double-crosses breathless, swooning lust, cocky princes, dominant alpha future-kings, and crafty courtiers, who are not always what they seem. I realized reading this duet that I still love that type of excitement in my romances. Let me tell you, this duet gave me so much more than I bargained for! Back in the 90s, I was into the mystery/lawyer, exciting crime books a la John Grisham's The Firm. I am going to review both The Prince & The Player and A Player for a Princess by Tia Louise together since they make up the Dirty Players Duet, and can not be read without each other. ![]()
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