Category - Fiction / Fantasy
Format - Paperback
Condition - New
Listed - 10 days ago
Views - 118
Wishes - 16
Ships From - Delaware
Est. Publication Date - Jan 2022
Seller Description
From BookTok sensation Emily McIntire comes a dark and delicious fractured fairy tale in her fan-favorite Never After series. She doesn’t belong to him…she belongs to the crown. Prince Tristan Faasa was never destined for the throne. That was always his brother, Michael. The same brother responsible for both Tristan’s tormented childhood and the scar that mars his face. When their father dies, Michael is set to assume the throne, and Tristan is set to steal it. The leader of a secret rebellion, Tristan will stop at nothing to end his brother’s reign. But when Michael’s new betrothed, Lady Sara Beatreaux arrives, Tristan finds himself in the middle of a new kind of war. The kind that begs the question of what’s more important, the crown or the woman about to wear it. Sara has one plan. Marry the King and eradicate the Faasa line, even at the risk of her own peril. But she never expects the Scarred Prince. He’s dangerous. Forbidden. And one of the men she’s been sent to kill. But the line between hatred and passion has never seemed so thin, and as secrets come to light, Sara grows unsure of whom she can trust—torn between vengeance and the villain she was never supposed to love.
Additional Information
Scarred: A Never after Novel
ISBN: 9798985138023
Publisher Description
Once Upon A Time, There was a king who passed. He left behind two sons, one beloved and one outcast. The older of the two was set to take the throne, but before he could, he had to find a queen to cal...
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What readers are saying about this book
Summarized by Pango AI
PangoBooks readers have mixed opinions about this book. Some readers praise its use of popular romance tropes like enemies-to-lovers and forbidden romance, and appreciate the interesting reinterpretation of Disney and Shakespearean elements, particularly its engaging and morally complex characters. Others criticize the book for its slow pacing and lack of substantial world-building, finding it problematic in terms of whitewashing and other sensitive issues. Despite these flaws, many found the book entertaining, often calling it "good cringe" or an enjoyable guilty pleasure, although not necessarily high-quality literature. A few readers, however, were unable to finish it due to its sluggish pace and underwhelming villain character.