I love a good enemies to lovers romance, and if you make it witchy, I'm probably sold! That said, this one had some hang ups for me that didn't allow for full marks.
The romance was spot on, I loved the magic system, but some of Reggie's resistance to believing in magic just felt forced.
Of course I think anyone would be surprised that magic suddenly exists in their lives, but the mental gymnastics were just a bit much for me and it didn't really do much for the plot after the first couple "they shouldn't encourage this poor old woman's delusions". This, in combination with the fact that she had to constantly be reminded by others not to believe her parents would ever change just made her seem really unlikeable and flat at times, which I don't think was the author's intention. I understand that a component of this comes from the fact that Reggie is inspired by Rey and that Rey wasn't nearly as well written as any of us would like in at least one of the three movies in which she appeared, but I think that this could have been remedied by being a bit more willing to move away from the canon/ head-canon sphere and more into the original space. This is remedied in the sequel where, even as a side character who only comes up a couple of times, Reggie feels more like her own character.
Otherwise I really enjoyed the plot, the other characters, the romance, and the humor of the story.
I'd recommend it to someone looking for a good witchy read, or to someone who likes Reylo and wants to read some pretty directly adapted fanfic.
Flaws of characters a main focus? It's complicated
2.5
This one was a fairly neutral read for me. Tessa Dare doesn't really "miss" for the regency romance reader, or at least she never misses for me, but this one wasn't my favorite of her books.
It reads as being pretty stock standard for a smutty regency, with the standout elements occurring mostly at the beginning of the book. I liked the characters fine, Amelia and Spencer were fun to read about, but I'd had about enough of Amelia's over-attached relationship with her brothers early on and it made it harder to enjoy the book on the whole.
There was almost too much going on and the plot turned into regency romance soup if not regency romance bingo between the murder, politics, financial hardships, potential social ruin, actual social ruin, etc. etc. etc.
At the end of the day it's a fine book, but nothing to write home about.
Flaws of characters a main focus? It's complicated
4.0
4/5 I actually liked the sequel better than book one! That's a rarity for me when it comes to romance series.
The enemies to lovers energy in this one was real and well done. The relationship development between Willem and Penny was handled well and the book did a great job balancing the plot with the spice. The stakes of their agreement felt real and the HEA feels earned and it was all around fun to read.
If Go Hex Yourself was not exactly what you wanted, I recommend giving What the Hex a shot because it's giving a lot of the same positives with far fewer faults.
The perfect monster romance novella. It's got the humor, the spice, the strong independent woman, jealousy, and protectiveness. It's all that and a bag of chips talking sword. What more could you want?
Bestill my death-positivity-movement-loving romance-obsessed heart, The Dead Romantics is a ghost romance I can get behind!
Normally "he's dead, she's not, they're in love" is not my cup of tea (blame all the vampire stories that were in vogue during my teen years) but enough positive reviews and the promise of a HEA was enough to get me to try this one, and I am so glad that I did because I needed this book.
Between the subtle star wars fandom references and the sweet and saucy moments of this novel, I found the messages of self-love (particularly valuing yourself more than what you can offer to others) and forgiveness to be particularly impactful.
Ultimately I found The Dead Romantics to be a fun, reflective and positive read with just the right amount of spookiness!