Saturday, January 15, 2022

Awesome start to the year with Madhuri Tamse's books

I have started the new year with a bang. In the first 11 days itself, I have managed to wrap up three books which has been that most I have read in 10 days in forever. But, it helps when the books are sweet, romantic easy reads. The three books I wrapped up are all by the same author, Madhuri Tamse. The books in question are Royal Vows, No Wedding Bells and Marriage Bubbles; in the order that I read them but the correct order should actually have been reverse. Although they were standalone stories but they had a few common characters.

Royal Vows

The story was sweet and readable but to a lot of extent unrealistic. A painter being hired by a Royal Family to teach the prodigal son painting and then accommodating her within the Royal Palace when her work would probably not stretch beyond an hour every day... If this was unrealistic, imagine the painter volunteering to act as the Nanny for her student's daughter and even travelling on trips and staying in the same suite with the father and daughter. Having said that, the book was leisurely paced and the characters of Ruhi and Raunak were well-etched enough to keep one hooked. I had not heard of the author at all and had been intrigued by the book summary while browsing through Amazon. The fact that the book encouraged me to pick another one, and yet a third one later should say something.

No Wedding Bells

I picked this book when, at the end of the previous book, I read that this was Avni and Aryan's story; Avni being Ruhi's sister who had briefly appeared in the previous book along with Aryan. I was intrigued so I picked it up immediately after. The story was, like the previous one, easy to get hooked to. The only part that irked me was Aryan stalking  Avni.

Marriage Bubbles

This book is Advay and Jiya's story and these characters had appeared off and on in "No Wedding Bells" and again I was intrigued. The book is a standalone part of the "Accidental Marriage" series meaning the characters get married accidentally at the outset itself. Advay is Aryan's cousin and I am not sure why the Bohra brothers consider stalking their women is okay? However, despite the accidental marriage part being stupid (aka the Bollywood movie "Ek Main Aur Ek Tu"), the rest of the story was still believable; much like people falling in love in arranged marriages. On the contrary, the end ruined the experience for me.

The common thing about the books which I enjoyed the most is that all three books are about the journey of couples falling in love. In none of the books, there is one Eureka moment where the character realises that he or she has fallen in love (except in case of Aryan). And that experience makes these books pleasurable.

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