
Content levels
Trigger warnings
Positive tags
Hero archetypes
Heroine archetypes
Protagonist archetypes
Tropes
Synopsis
Princess Flian finds herself the unwilling object of desire of three royals. Is the one she wants a villainor a hero? Waking up in a strange place, Flian Elandersi at first doesn't know who she is. One wicked prince tells her she is secretly engaged to an even more wicked king who wants to marry her right away. But before that happens, yet another wicked prince crashes through a window on horseback to sweep her off her feet. Memory returns, and Flian realizes that all any of them seem to want is her considerable wealth, not her pleasant-but-ordinary self. She longs to escape the barracks-like, military atmosphere and return to civilization and her musical studies. Who is the villain? Prince Garian Herlesterlanguid, elegant, sarcastic? Prince Jaimhe of the dashing horsemanship? Or King Jason Szinzar, whose ambiguous warning might be a threat? Flian decides it's time to throw off civilization and take action. -- from Amazon website.
Is The Trouble with Kings appropriate for my child?
Suitable for most readers 13 and up.
Princess with amnesia navigates political intrigue and multiple suitors seeking her wealth. Light fantasy adventure with mild peril but no graphic content or mature themes.
What to know going in
This book has mild violence, no sexual content, and clean language. Content notes include kidnapping and amnesia.
Who'll love this
Teens will enjoy the witty heroine solving the mystery of which prince is trustworthy while reclaiming her own agency.