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𝔸ℝℂ ℝ𝕖𝕧𝕚𝕖𝕨 𝕠𝕗 𝕋𝕙𝕖 ℂ𝕠𝕦𝕣𝕥𝕚𝕟𝕘 𝕠𝕗 𝔹𝕣𝕚𝕤𝕥𝕠𝕝 𝕂𝕖𝕒𝕥𝕤, 𝔹𝕪: 𝕄𝕒𝕣𝕪 𝔼. ℙ𝕖𝕒𝕣𝕤𝕠𝕟

𝕋𝕣𝕠𝕡𝕖𝕤:
* romantasy
* enemies to lovers
* magic realism
* he falls first and harder
* whimsy
* high stakes
* fae, gods, monsters
* mystery
* multiple morally gray characters
* court intrigue

Synopsis:
Bristol is doing her best to hold her sisters together after the deaths of both their parents. Things are turned upside down when mysterious letters start arriving at their door with offers that are too good to be true, and Bristol is swept away to a Fae world where nothing is as it seems.

I was over the moon to revive Pearson’s adult romantasy debut after enjoying her previous YA works. 𝘛𝘩𝘦 𝘊𝘰𝘶𝘳𝘵𝘪𝘯𝘨 𝘰𝘧 𝘉𝘳𝘪𝘴𝘵𝘰𝘭 𝘒𝘦𝘢𝘵𝘴 had me feel reminiscent of 𝘛𝘩𝘦 𝘊𝘳𝘶𝘦𝘭 𝘗𝘳𝘪𝘯𝘤𝘦 and 𝘌𝘮𝘪𝘭𝘺 𝘞𝘪𝘭𝘥𝘦’𝘴 𝘌𝘯𝘤𝘺𝘤𝘭𝘰𝘱𝘦𝘥𝘪𝘢 𝘰𝘧 𝘍𝘢𝘦𝘳𝘪𝘦𝘴 with it’s whimsical setting and traditional take on fantasy.

𝘛𝘊𝘖𝘉𝘒 followed Pearson’s previous writing style with a perfect balance of descriptive writing and dialogue. The world building within became a bit bogged down in the middle but was overall easy to follow.

I enjoyed watching mystery being unraveled and the main relationship develop. I will admit that the multiple POVs threw me off. I felt the story would have been a bit smoother if we had only the fmc and mmc’s POVs instead of the two plus random side characters once in a while.

I was unaware that this was to be a duology and should have researched it a bit before hand because I was surprised by what felt like an abrupt conclusion.

I was left with unanswered questions and look forward to finding out how the story continues in the future sequel.

Overall if you have read Pearson’s previous works you will love 𝘛𝘩𝘦 𝘊𝘰𝘶𝘳𝘵𝘪𝘯𝘨 𝘰𝘧 𝘉𝘳𝘪𝘴𝘵𝘰𝘭 𝘒𝘦𝘢𝘵𝘴.

⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️
🌶️🌶️🌶️

Pub date: 11/12/24

Thank you NetGalley, Mary E. Pearson and Flatiron book for an E-arc copy of this title in exchange for an honest review.

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Bristol Keats is trying her best to make a tough situation work. After losing her mother a year ago and the sudden passing of her father - she has to work hard and try to keep her family afloat the best that she can. When letters start showing up letting Bristol know that her aunt from her father's side wants to meet her she's skeptical, but decides to hear her out. After that initial meeting Bristol is caught up in the Fae world where nothing is as it seems. She soon discovers that her father wasn't who he said he was and he might be alive after all. Will Bristol be willing to help the fae and in turn try to find her father, who everyone assumes is dead?

I was really excited to read Mary E Pearson's adult romantasy novel especially after really enjoying Dance of Thieves. While Dance of Thieves was well thought out and the story itself was told beautifully I felt like The Courting of Bristol Keats was not as cohesive. I never really felt that connection between Bristol and Tyghan even though their banter was enjoyable. I felt like there were too many things thrown at us and too many points of view to make it cohesive.

I'm bummed, because I really wanted to love this book more than I actually did.

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The Courting of Bristol Keats by Mary E. Pearson is the first book in a duology. It is a fantasy with a romantic subplot. Bristol and her two sisters live in Bowskeep and they've lost both parents in the past year. Bristol is struggling to keep them afloat and she has received a couple of letters from a long lost aunt implying she can help. But, Bristol does not believe they have a long last aunt and this is just some sort of scam. But, Bristol goes to the meeting and she discovers that everything she thought she knew about her parents and their families is a lie, and that her father may be alive but in Elphame - another realm. Bristol agrees to go to this realm to help King Tyghan save his kingdom but she wants his help to search for her dad. This realm is full of gods, fae and monsters and Bristol will be training with a small group of other recruits to help save the kingdom. I liked the story and the romance, but Bristol herself reads like a YA character in an adult fantasy. She is too immature. The romance is fine, but there is an ick factor component - two men important to Bristol have a conversation about this relationship and it's just gross. It's gross on every level. And, the author has set up a zero sum scenario in this story - I'll be interested to read book two to see how she solves it. I'm hoping the answer is not just pure effing magic. That would be disappointing. I gave this book 4 stars and I want to thank #netgalley and Flat Iron Books for my e-arc and MacMillan Audio for advance audio book. The narration was excellent.

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This book had so much potential. The idea of a portal fantasy romance with enemies to lovers sounds exactly like a lot of my favorite books, so I expected to really enjoy this one. Unfortunately, it just fell flat for me. I find myself quite bored throughout most of it, and every time I stopped reading I never felt a sense of urgency to pick it back up, to flip through the pages and find out what happens next.
I have not read Kiss of Deception, so I cannot say if this lives up to that for the readers. I do hope that this book finds its fanbase.

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The Courting of Bristol Keats is a thrilling ride. A nice combination of mystery, fantasy, and steamy romance makes this a worthy read. If you're a fan of Pearson from her other work, you'll enjoy her characters and the adventure she plots out for our heroine.

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This book started off very good. I enjoyed getting to know the characters and learning about this world the book takes place in. The middle of the book was a little slow with a lot of world building, but I was completely sucked in by the end.

It felt like the book ended in the middle of a story. I know there is going to be another book coming out and the story is going to continue, but I didn't feel even a little bit satisfied with the ending. I read mostly Fantasy series, so I am familiar with books that end on cliffhangers and have books that continue the story. Unfortunately, there wasn't really a cliffhanger at the end and really nothing was resolved. The book just ended. It felt like my book wasn't supposed to end and was missing the last few chapters.

With all that being said, I am very much looking forward to continuing the series with the next book and will definitely be reading it as soon as I can get a copy because I need to know what is going to happen with these characters.

I did read the ebook while listening to the audiobook. I highly recommend this immersive technique for reading books. The audiobook for The Courting of Bristol Keats was great!

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This book was seriously something special. I absolutely love Mary Pearson‘s writing. I think she has such a beautiful whimsical way with words. I definitely feel like this was an homage to older more classical fantasies. I loved the multiple point of views and how the world building was unraveled through mystery versus an info dump. The plot kept me on my toes the entire time I loved the romance and watching these two characters build a relationship together.

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This audiobook was a lot of fun and perfect for fans of fae romantasy. Bristol, our FMC, is a mortal girl with a very mysterious family past. She finds herself in the world of Elfhame on a quest to uncover the truth about her parents and her own magic. Her journey involves intense training, court politics, and a romance with the fae king Tyghan. Tyghan basically lies to her throughout the entire story, and I kind of felt like Bristol just easily overlooked that, but its a romantasy so I kind of expect our FMCs to be too forgiving at this point.

The audiobook narration was well done and kept me engaged through the 17 hour audiobook. While parts of the romance felt rushed and the overall pacing a bit slow in the middle, the world and characters were intriguing. I would definitely continue this series to see what happens in the next book. I would recommend this if you like easy and fun romantasy 👍🏻

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Overall the book was enjoyable enough, with how long it is I was able to move through quickly so it certainly wasn't boring. I thought the world was really interesting and would have loved even more world building!

There are a lot of characters to keep track of, but overall it wasn't too difficult for me. There were some nice reveals and I liked how the fae and mortal realms were tied together in so many different ways. This was a unique book in my opinion, with lots of groundwork laid for the next book, I'm curious to see where it will go.

I typically LOVE more than one POV but the POVs in general in this book were kind of confusing to me. It seemed like it switched around mid chapter from third person to third person omniscient, and didn't just focus on certain characters. I would have appreciated a chapter header telling me which POV I was getting rather than figuring it out myself every time. I also thought that, as the reader, knowing so many of the secrets and lies for so long before the MC found out diminished how much I enjoyed it, especially the relationship aspect. I spent too much time feeling for the MC, who never really got a moment to shine fully. I'm expecting some big things for Bristol in book 2!

I can safely say I've never read an ending quite like that, and it definitely caught me off guard!

3.5/5. Thank you NetGalley and Flatiron/Macmillan for the ARC!

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is nobody else as mad as I am about that ending??? Like, hello??? This was one of my most anticipated reads of the year. I’d heard a lot of amazing things about DOT by this author, and I love to pick authors secondary works after they’ve become comfortable and cemented themselves in the publishing world. It was going great at first, then started getting less great, then got okay, and then you get to the end and it just nosedives. The world building was good and unique, which is impressive with how many different fae novels exist nowadays, but this is one of those books where stuff is happening and yet nothing actually happened, ya know what I mean? Characters were introduced with no description, our main characters were very “copy-paste” and not super likable, and there was a severe plot hole (the portal in the study… how could it have been there for that long and Tyghan never heard the girls doing laundry or just.. living???). There’s so many questions that pile on top of pre-existing questions, and literally not a SINGLE thing gets answered. You’re just as clueless at the end of the book as you were in the beginning. Not even a smidge of something to let readers hang on to. Anyway, thanks to NetGalley for the ARC.

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I enjoyed it but not as much as I wanted to. I felt it was predictable but still a wonderful storyline

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Thank you NetGalley for the ARC.
I first discovered Mary E. Pearson through her Dance of Thieves duology, so once I saw this was coming out I was very excited! This was a fun read, I enjoyed our main character and the journey she had to go on. The fae world that she included was a fascinating concept that I enjoyed. Looking forward to whatever Mary writes next!

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For fans of ACOTAR, this is New Adult style romantasy—adult in terms of the level of spice and the length, as well as the tropes, but with a heavy influence of YA (young naive main character must go on a journey of self-discovery to save a parent, text that very explicitly explains all of the twists, sometimes more than once, to ensure that the audience understands what is happening). There is some action, a lot of betrayal, lies, intrigue, and romance. I personally had a hard time buying into the romance due to all of the extra POV chapters which gave so much more context to the situation than the FMC had, including how much the MMC was lying to her and manipulating her. Still, I suspect a lot of readers will be totally fine with it, given his tortured back story. For me personally, I wanted a lot more resolution/apology/working through their issues.

I knew this was the first in a series but I found the cliffhanger at the end so abrupt I actually checked my file to make sure I wasn’t missing a chapter.

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Rating: 3.75 stars
Spice: 🌶️🌶️

Tropes:
🦟Betrayals and secrets
🦟Reluctant allies
🦟Enemies to lovers
🦟Slow burn
🦟He falls first and falls harder
🦟Forbidden love
🦟Hidden powers
🦟Morally grey characters abound
🦟Court intrigue/politics
🦟Found family
🦟Fae/Fae adjacent
🦟Zombies/Undead

This book promised to be one of my top reads of 2024, by an author I’d grown to absolutely love with her Remnant Chronicles and Dance of Thieves books. And while for the most part this book did live up to the hype I gave it in my own mind, it’s not without its problems.

Let’s start with the good. I love the Elphame world Pearson has created here. I love the depth, the varying species of fae and fantastical creatures, the complexities of relationships and politics between those creatures, all of that is excellent. I even loved the glimpses Bristol got towards the middle of the book of just how intermixed her mortal world is with that of Elphame. This really felt like a more fleshed-out, adult Cruel Prince type world, and not only because of the name. I loved the relationship between Bristol and her sisters, and even the love her parents had for each other and their daughters. The found family that develops between Bristol and her team of recruits is lovely. I loved the forbidden romance that blossoms between Bristol and Tyghan (after they’re already established, them getting together was a tiny bit too sudden for my tastes, but that’s minor). I loved the magic and whimsy and yet the underlying current of unease that permeates the whole court and world in general.

Sooo, what didn’t I like then? Well, I think Pearson truly shines as a YA author, and her stories have always leant a little more towards the lyrical, metaphorical style. Those strengths don’t always lend themselves well to a story like this one. At times, both Bristol and Tyghan felt far less mature than they were meant to be, particularly Bristol. This could be partially explained by her own slightly emotionally stunted upbringing, but it also just felt like she was written to be a younger character initially. She made certain decisions that would have a grown adult shaking their head. And the ever-changing POV, from a main character to a side character to a copse of trees, while for sure granting an air of mystery and magic to the overall story, felt like they were spaced too far apart. We’d have so many chapters back and forth between Bristol and Tyghan that I would even forget there were other POVs, and then these shifts would pop back in for a paragraph or two and then dip out, never to be heard from again. It was slightly jarring. And don’t even get me started on how this book ends. We’re in the middle of a somewhat spicy makeup scene when the POV suddenly shifts to a side character outside the room, and then everything just shuts down? That’s it? No resolution whatsoever to any of the plot lines? Not a fan of that.

This is still a great book and I still highly recommend it. I’m so torn as to how to rate it, which is why it’s fallen where it has for me. I enjoyed reading it and I mostly loved the characters, but that ending really sucked a lot of the joy out of it for me. It felt like we were finally getting somewhere and then, bam. Done. It was beautifully written with extremely evocative imagery, and yet it brought very little new to the table. That’s not always a requirement for me in my books, I’m just listing reasons I feel so conflicted. Maybe I’ll come back and change my rating after I’ve had some time to really think on this one. I’ll definitely be checking out the sequel and anything else Pearson puts out. She’s a fantastic storyteller and I have every faith this will develop into a series I’ll have to have about 4 book trophy editions of on my shelves.

Thank you to NetGalley and Flatiron Books for providing me with this free eARC in exchange for my honest review!

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I feel myself getting sucked back into Romantasy now because of this book. O M F G it’s so good! It is literally giving every comfort read vibe possible and I could not put it down.

Bristol is THE FMC we’ve all been waiting for, a young woman just trying to survive in not the best circumstances who tries to make the best out of a ridiculously fantastical situation. Her mother left, then her father is found dead on the side of the road, she’s left holding the pieces together for her two sisters (who you’ll actually care about) in a small town that isn’t quite what it seems. When an unknown aunt sends a letter suggesting a significant ‘inheritance’ , Bristol isn’t shocked to learn it’s closer to a scam as she suspected, but for the sake of her family she takes a leap of faith and enters into a bargain with the fae.

Pearson’s jump into new adult is spot on, everything just hits. At first I think I was trying to compare elements to the big hitters like ACOTAR, FBAA, …Serpent Wings, maybe a lil Hunger Games, but then I realized that it was what was making it perfect. The story takes all of the loved and familiar romantasy high notes and twists them into something fresh and new; an urban’ish fantasy shoved through a portal into a near high fantasy world. Now, I’m just really sad I have to wait for finish the story.

This is definitely one of my top top reads of 2024 and a revitalization of romantasy for me.

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Mary E Pearson won my heart with her YA Romantasy "Dance of Thieves." I was thrilled to learn that she was writing her first adult series and to have the opportunity to read it early. thanks to Flatiron Books and Netgalley. It does not disappoint!

First off, the special first edition is looking absolutely gorgeous! However, I have found that as these beautiful extras become more and more popular, the book itself rarely measures up to the expectations, especially in the romantasy genre. i have been very disappointed recently with some stories that seem to rehash old plots and have the barest of a fantasy world around the two main characters. I am happy to say that The Courting of Bristol Keats stands out above these in some important ways.

Pearson knows how to build tension and world build at the same time. Set in a faireworld at war, Bristol is recruited as a human with potential faire power because of her parentage. Unknown to her, both her mother and father were key players in the fairy realm before her and her sisters were born. She agrees as part of her own quest to find out what happened to her parents. But as she and the king of the Fae become more attracted to each other, he must hide from her his own knowledge about her father and the role he played in the story.

The plotting beautifully builds an impossible situation that takes its time unfolding. As a result, the characters in the story are wonderfully fraught and complex, and Bristol has a heavy burden to carry. While the story takes a bit of time to take off, it is well worth it. The ending will make you long for the next book immediately.

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Cruel Prince lovers unite!!!

We’re so back - dark fae machinations + an enemies to lovers sitch?? Sign me UP.

This book is perfectly paced - I haven’t felt this on the edge of my seat in a looooong time.

You’re gonna want to read this ASAP!!!!

That ending?? Wow

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I have enjoyed every book I have ever read by Mary Pearson, but this one just didn't hit the same as the others. There were several plot points that felt under-developed, and I had difficulty buying in to this fae world.

Content note: the language and content in this book were simply not something I can hand off to a teen reader, and I was really disappointed by that. This is an open door book, with a generous smattering of profanity. While I have shared Mary Pearson's books with teen readers in the past, this one is clearly an adult novel.

I received an arc from netgalley, all opinions are my own.

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Having been a fan of Mary E. Pearson's young adult series, like The Remnant Chronicles (which I still think about), Dance of Thieves, and Jenna Fox Chronicles, I was really intrigued and excited to see Pearson's entry into full-fledged adult fantasy.

Bristol Keats and her sisters are struggling after the loss of both their parents. When Bristol receives letters from an unknown "aunt," she discovers that her family history is a complete fabrication — and that her father may still be alive, kidnapped by creatures from another realm. Determined to find him, Bristol enters a world of magic with gods, fae, and monsters. There, she makes a deal with the fae king, Tyghan, unaware that he’s the one behind her family's troubles and just as intent on finding her father —whether dead or alive.

Because of my familiarity with both YA and adult fantasy and with Pearson's work — I was doubly disappointed here. I'm not sure what the impetus for making the shift to adult fantasy could have been, but I am not sold on it having been Pearson’s intention. The Courting of Bristol Keats retains all the earmarks of a young adult fantasy (particularly those from a decade ago), but with some sex scenes and adult language sparingly peppered about. Bristol herself is only 21 (nay, begging pardon — she turns 22 during the narrative), and yet she still felt every bit as "grown up" as the sixteen-year-old protagonists of typical YA fare. Additionally, there's a lack of freshness, with echos of series that have come before, like Holly Black's The Cruel Prince.

This is one of those books where the story itself is interesting, but the execution doesn't quite able to hold up the weight of the full narrative.

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This was amazing. I love Mary E Pearson’s other books, so I couldn’t wait to read this. This book was fantastic. I read an ARC and also ended up requesting the audiobook ALC as I’m trying to branch out with my audiobook genres and I loved listening to the story even though fantasy can be harder for me on audio.

What I struggle with these days when it comes to adult Romantasy/fantasy romance is finding a book that truly balances both and still makes you root for the couple while also being invested in a million other plot points. I think the author did a tremendous job with the balance in this book. It was a coming of age story about Bristol, a romantic journey, and also an adventure in a new world with conflicts, magic, secrets, and deceit. I felt invested in everything.

This did have open door romance and wasn’t YA. Bristol was in her 20s, but I feel like the way the spice was written could be considered appropriate for younger audiences to some degree. It wasn’t closed door, but it also wasn’t graphic. I got the whole sense of what was happening without it being one of those books I have to turn down when I’m driving in the car. If you’re specifically looking for spice, this isn’t for you. It’s like black pepper, not chili peppers. I think this specific detail is important to know since many Romantasy readers are specifically looking for chili peppers and will be disappointed that this has none and also that the romance does sometimes take a back seat to the plot.

I highly recommend this book! I can’t wait to see what happens next in the series/duology.

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