The Cursed Princes
Angsty gaslamp royal romantasy with subverted fairy tales
Another World’s Stars
Star-crossed lovers with magic portals, a circus performer and a cursed prince
Born with a shard of ice for a heart, supernatural circus performer Tryxan is doomed to a loveless, unfeeling life. They tour Australia with their troupe, resigned to their cold existence, until an opportunity arises: participate in a magic show that will either cure their shard – or kill them.
But the show does neither. Instead of plunging to death or salvation, Tryxan is dragged through a portal to another world, where they meet a prince who longs to dance but is cursed to never step foot in a ballroom.
Tryxan teaches the prince to dance in secret, and together, they find a peace neither thought they could have. But the magic in the prince’s world is dangerous, and if Tryxan can’t solve the prince’s curse, they’ll lose not only their newfound feelings, but possibly the love of their life.
Another World’s Stars is a portal fantasy romance with secret dancing and winter solstice vibes. It is a prequel to the Cursed Princes, a series of quick romantasy reads with angsty happy endings, and is best read first.
Tropes & Themes
enby/m romance • portal magic • circus vibes • dancing lessons • cursed prince • time differential • war • hurt/comfort • Sleeping Beauty meets Snow Queen
Another World’s Stars is a novelette written in present tense, first person, single point of view with Tryxan as the main character.
Kissing only
The Rose Ball Rebels
Forbidden romance with a conscientious objector and a soldier bent on revenge
Eliott, Prince of Iris, is trapped. He and five other Princes of the Floral Realms are locked in a tower, kept as collateral for a treaty in a war that will never end.
Desperate to do something, the princes sneak out every night, meeting other conscientious objectors, dissenters and deserters to dance in defiance of their monarchs’ warring. Suspicious, the Queen of Iris sends spy after spy to find out why the princes’ shoes are always worn to nothing.
Every spy fails until the Midsummer Masquerades, when a masked stranger appears, and Eliott is drawn to her despite his wary caution. Every Realm is at war. She can’t possibly be on his side.
But when it’s love, there are no sides, and Eliott falls. The stranger, Nina, does too… except she has another mission, one that could cost them everything: love, the Rebels, and their freedom.
Tropes & Themes
queer m/f • forbidden romance • love at first sight • masquerade • ballroom dancing • music • brotherhood • war • betrayal • forgiveness • found family • Twelve Dancing Princess retelling
The Rose Ball Rebels is a novella written in present tense, first person, single point of view with Eliott as the main character.
Kissing, undressing, sensual nakedness, implied oral sex
As I Command
Whirlwind romance with an ambitious businesswoman, an exiled prince and a pirate lord
Sworn off love, Marguerite Baccata was set to be Calya’s first female business leader – until her father decides to marry her off to a provincial Floral Realms royal instead. The worst part is he’s right; the trade partnerships such a marriage will provide are worth much more than fighting her way up the corporate ladder alone. Reluctantly, Marguerite agrees.
But instead of courting a handful of eligible royals, she meets the scarred and exiled Jules. Ousted from his war-torn land, Jules can’t offer Marguerite anything except a sharp education in what her business – weapons and gunpowder – will do to the Floral Realms if her marriage goes ahead.
Then there’s the enigmatic Lord Lucien Sigaro, who traded his naval career for piracy when he was betrayed by his commander. Marguerite should follow her father’s wishes and do what’s best for the company, but the more she learns about these two wounded men, the more she realises she can’t just walk away from her father’s warmongering ways. Someone has to fight back.
But family loyalty runs deep, and old ambitions are hard to let go of. If Marguerite truly wants to change the world, she has to first trust her heart to lead her in the right direction – even if that means following an exile and a pirate.
As I Command is a polyamorous FMM romantic fantasy full of feminine rage. It is the second book in the Cursed Princes, a series of quick romantasy reads with angsty happy endings. Each title is a standalone romance but the books are best read in order to understand the series arc.
Tropes & Themes
poly f/m/m • romance of defiance • feminine rage • ambitious businesswoman • magical fairy island • scarred prince • pirate lord • am I the villain • Cinderella retelling
As I Command is a novella written in present tense, first person, single point of view with Marguerite as the main character.
Heavy kissing/touching, voyeurism, ripping upper body clothing off, light bondage (no sex)
Sorrow for Thorns
Second-chance romance with a curse-hunting witch and a desperate assassin
Mirabelle has only ever wanted her obscure magical specialisation – curse-adjusting – to mean something. When she approaches the infamous Blacklily Castle, surely hiding all sorts of secret curses, she hopes she can prove herself to the Witches’ Guild.
Before she sets foot on the front step, a vicious wolf attack leaves her bedridden and in the care of Raphael, lord of Blacklily: taciturn, mysterious – and cursed. Raphael begs Mirabelle to leave, but she can’t even walk down the stairs, let alone to the next town. And Mirabelle wants to know what curse the lord of Blacklily is hiding.
As Mirabelle recovers, she’s plagued by dreams of her past lover, her estranged mother, and the sense that Raphael is in grave danger. Then she understands why Raphael wants her to flee: if she can’t get the lord to trust her and adjust the curse in time, it will kill them both.
Sorrow for Thorns is a queer MF/sapphic endgame second-chance romance. It is the third book in the Cursed Princes, a series of quick romantasy reads with angsty happy endings. Each title is a standalone romance but the books are best read in order to understand the series arc.
Tropes & Themes
f/f & queer m/f (it’s both at once, same couple, it makes sense, I promise) • second chance romance • secret identities • stubborn witch • brooding lord/assassin/prince/PRINCESS • dire curses • howling wolves • enchanted castle that tries to help • horrible mother who does not help • sapphic endgame • Beauty and the Beast retelling
Sorrow for Thorns is a novella written in present tense, first person, single point of view with Belle as the main character.
Kissing and non-erotic nakednes
The Virtues of Kings
Arranged marriage romance with a fallen hero and a pragmatic princess
Prince Gabriel is a fallen hero. Once the darling of Peony Realm, a surgeon-general and an accomplished dancer, he spends his days hiding from the court, drinking too much wine and avoiding the scorn of his people.
Fed up, the King gives Gabriel an ultimatum: return to the army or marry. The King doesn’t understand. Gabriel can’t do either. He is plagued with nightmares of killing a man, and he can’t share intimacies with another person any more than he can pick up a sword or a scalpel.
But the realm needs allies, and Princess Elvire is an excellent match, despite being cold, unpleasant and up to something that might amount to treason. The more Gabriel learns about the Princess, the more intrigued he is. Still, it doesn’t change the fact that he can’t let her see the wreck of a man he’s become. To be a Peony prince, after all, is to be valorous.
As the threat of war looms closer and the need for allies becomes desperate, Gabriel and Elvire must find a way to share their secrets and redefine what it means to be heroes.
The Virtues of Kings is a queer MF arranged marriage romance. It is the fourth book in the Cursed Princes, a series of quick romantasy reads with angsty happy endings. Each title is a standalone romance but the books are best read in order to understand the series arc.
Tropes & Themes
queer m/f • arranged marriage • surgeon-general • PTSD • pragmatic princess • fallen hero • judgemental wallpaper • heroism doesn’t win wars • Princess and the Pea retelling
The Virtues of Kings is a novella written in present tense, first person, single point of view with Gabriel as the main character.
Open door consensual sex with explicit description (two scenes)
Ridiculous I Love Yous
Friends-to-lovers with a rake, a loyal bodyguard, a cruel curse and high-stakes card games
Price Patrice is a rake, which is all fun and games until he gets himself cursed to be forgotten by every lover he takes to bed unless he finds his true love. Desperate to end the painful curse, Patrice and his loyal bodyguard traverse the realms looking for a curse-breaking witch. Then Patrice is given a risky offer he can’t refuse – but to accept may mean losing his chance at true love forever.
Ridiculous I Love Yous appears in the anthology To Steal A Rogue’s Heart.
Tropes & Themes
mm • royal rake • bodyguard • curses • only soft for him • card games • tending wounds • Frog Prince retelling
Ridiculous I Love Yous is a novella written in present tense, first person, single point of view with Patrice as the main character.
Open door consensual sex with explicit description (one scene)
