

What would follow is something wholly and completely unexpected. The two, Alex and Henry, come to an agreement that they can’t have their families in the media’s limelight for too long so they opt to appear as chummy friends who had a small falling out. As we’ve come to suppose, damage control is something that the world’s governments adore, and it always seems to be in hand’s reach in their lofty arsenal. Thus, they have to work together to ensure the world that Alex and Henry aren’t actually enemies. As one can expect, the respective royal families don’t much like how things are shaping up. It doesn’t take long for the tabloids, media, and everyone and their mothers to get pictures of Henry and Alex’s confrontation when the two got into a bit of a scuffle.

All of their intentions, aims, and wishes, are thrown the deep end once word gets out that Alex doesn’t much like how the United Kingdom’s Prince Henry acts. The Clash From the Startīy himself, Alex is a beautiful young man, full of qualities, enthusiastic, genius at times, and he is one charismatic youngster! With these things in mind, the White House comes to see Alex as a chance to market him to the world. Once his mother became the POTUS, Alex began to be revered as a kind of royal person. A Tame, normal life was what Alex Claremont-Diaz was accustomed to living right up until his mother was inaugurated as the President of the United States of America. The main characters in the story are Alex Claremont-Diaz and Henry. It was published merely a year ago, in 2019.

With all of that said, what we’d like to do now is to give our book review.Īuthoress Casey McQuiston’s wonderful novel is one of the greatest romances of our time. At the present moment, Casey resides in New York City, New York.

The favorite books of Casey are the following – The Importance of Being Earnest, by Oscar Wilde The Seven Husbands of Evelyn Hugo, by Taylor Jenkins Reid and, Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban, by J. Casey also utilizes both the ‘they’ and the ‘she’ pronouns, elaborating that she is very left-leaning, in terms of politics. Casey, herself, is an openly professed bisexual person, sometimes even going so far as to call herself queer.
