Jump to content
  • Join Gay Authors

    Join us for free and follow your favorite authors and stories.

    W_L
  • Author
  • 1,510 Words
  • 1,197 Views
  • 12 Comments
The content presented here is for informational or educational purposes only. These are just the authors' personal opinions and knowledge.
Names, places, characters, events, and incidents are based on the authors' lives and experiences and may be changed to protect personal information. Any resemblances to actual persons (living or dead), organizations, companies, events, or locales are entirely coincidental.
Note: While authors are asked to place warnings on their stories for some moderated content, everyone has different thresholds, and it is your responsibility as a reader to avoid stories or stop reading if something bothers you. 

WL's Mainstream Gay Book Reviews - 4. Red, White & Royal Blue by Casey McQuiston

https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/41150487-red-white-royal-blue

 

Modern “Social Media”-Driven Narrative, Gay, Social commentary, Comedic, and Political, so pardon my language, but Fuck Yes, it’s everything I want in a gay fiction novel. I’ve tried my hand at doing social commentary, social media driven stories, and politics as an amateur author, but it never felt quite so right as how this story melded all those elements together. This story is to me equivalent to Aaron Sorkin’s American President from 1995 meets Sorkin’s The Social Network from 2010, a modern 21st century political comedy in the age of instant news cycle. I know not everyone liked this novel: the comedy is too modern, the scandal is too “vogue” (an UK Royal having a homosexual affair with an US President’s child, I am just waiting until the odds make this a reality), and the characters are too perfectly imperfect to be real (This aspect is what reminded me of Sorkin-style characters, too perfectly imperfect). However, essentially, the most popular types of stories come from such elements.

In this novel, the focus is on Alex Claremont-Diaz, the son of first female US President Ellen Claremont from Texas and California US Senator Oscar Diaz. He has a reputation as a playboy with celebrity girls and actresses, but has never considered anything about his sexuality. He was rivals with UK prince, Henry.

FYI, Henry’s long last name included Windsor, so I assumed this is a fictional version of current Royal family with elements of various royals embedded in the character. I honestly must admit, I’ve read more than a few Prince Harry Fan-fictions as a closeted gay teen, so I am used to the storyline of closeted royal prince falling in love with an American. I am not sure if Casey McQuiston intended to be nostalgic about those old internet fan-fiction stories, but if she is, Kudos to her.

After a highly public incident involving a very expensive wedding cake, Alex and Henry are forced into a “pretend” friendship by their mutual political handlers. Photo-ops, tweets, and all the glamour of twentysomething political dog and pony show glosses over something real developing between them. Henry opened up to Alex about his false public image, his family issues including his sister’s drug abuse after their father’s death, and ultimately his seemingly unrequited love for Alex with a secret kiss. Alex went from confident millennial playboy to questioning to accepting bisexual after a few chapters of soul searching, realizing some of his own past boyhood experiments were more than just “fun”, and began understanding himself.

At this point in the story, I was hooked to the storyline due to the dynamic characters and plot setup. Henry is a closeted gay prince, who has to maintain a false image of being straight, but is suffocating underneath the false imagery concocted to be “socially acceptable”. Alex, on the other hand being bisexual comes with a different set of issues, he can hide who he is throughout his life without a second thought, because it was simplest route to reach his final aims of pursuing a career in politics, even as a progressive Liberal Democrat among a family of progressive. Both had expectations, Henry’s expectations were thrusted on him by his background, Alex’s expectations were self-inflicted by trying to exceed. Add to the fact, these two guys were public figures with a constant stream of media events, interviews, and political socialites. Everything done by them was magnified a hundred-fold in importance, which reminds me so much of Sorkin’s films, alongside the speedy wit of characters speaking being almost akin to a West Wing episode.

Throughout their budding relationship we have amazing Romantic comedy elements, I’ll just list a few of my favorites:

           1. Turkey Vengeance: I get why Alex did it and he’s being very fiscally responsible in his actions. However, as a New Englander who has gobbled my fair share of the bird, Turkeys can be aggressive. Interesting animal fact, Young Turkeys like to dominate others, who they view as subordinate to them. Alex, darling those birds pegged you for a bottom from the moment they laid eyes on you and as a reader, I cannot disagree. :P

2. 2. The Karaoke party: If you want drunken debauchery with friends and partner, there’s nothing like a few rounds of drinks, campy costume glam, and wild sing-a-long.

3. 3. All the text and emails: Yes, this blew up in Alex and Henry’s faces due to a hack of the White House servers, but I am really glad they communicated like this organically throughout the story. There were many funny quotes from a variety of sources from English authors to US Historical figures. Funny snippets of historical exchanges between potential LGBT lovers in undisclosed affairs really brighten up the narrative, it adds a timeless flavor to the story.

If Wikileaks were to ever release something like this, sure you can spin it as “gay agenda” or whatever, but honestly when reading their story through texts and emails, I was mesmerized by their simple love story. I hope if a scandal like this were ever to break, people will read the actual material rather than a “curated” version of the truth.

4. 4. The Powerpoint Sex-Ed from President Mom: OMG, I felt so bad for Alex throughout this scene. He had just come out to his mother earlier that day, so she took him into a conference room alone, ordered cartons of Chinese food and made a presentation about having a love affair with a foreign head of state. When she asked point blank, “Did you make gay booty calls with taxpayer money?” I was rolling on the floor laughing. It’s the type of scene you won’t find anywhere, except this novel.

5. 5. The Hotel Room and Closet Scene: Comedic genius, I could not stop laughing imagining this scene. The White House Chief of Staff walking into the First Son and his Gay lover, a Prince of England no less, in a hotel, where the Democratic National Convention was, and in the middle of a public relations disaster when the opposition had scored a major endorsement from a gay Progressive independent. If this book becomes a movie, they had better make this scene right, because it is by far the best comedically timed and toned scene in the entire book.

Beyond the comedic situations, I have to say I love the supporting cast:

June Claremont is a complicated woman, who wants to report news and present reality for our information generation, but is overshadowed by politics. Ellen Claremont is trying to keep her Presidency in tact and run for a second term, while still trying to be a good caring mother for her children. Oscar Diaz, who is divorced from the sitting US President and a US senator, is a delightful supportive father, who wants his children to embrace who they are fully not just what is most acceptable according to Pollsters, in his eyes Alex’s bi-sexuality and bi-racial status should not be hidden or submerge for Politics.

Other characters: Nora is a wonderful bisexual character, she’s the nerdy best friend and open free thinker, who Alex can turn to, not to mention she was one of his ex-lovers. She’s also the person who eventually saves Alex and President Claremont’s political life after the scandal broke through “proactive” investigation. While it’s true modern Conservatives are very tech savvy, despite professing aversions to scientific theory, it is also true their dogmatic routine hamper creativity; Nora is a modern data scientist archetype as long as you use logic to rationalize your actions you can’t escape her ability to seek out the source. An old axiom that Politicians use, “Knowledge is power” is very true in the information age, but it is not the full truth. Nora represents something Liberally-minded intelligent individual should emulate and Conservative tech backers should fear, my corollary to the political theory is that “the source of knowledge is weakness”. That’s a lesson that should be learned from this character.

Another character with remarkable staying power, Rafael Luna, an openly gay independent senator, who was playing the long game to bring down a sexual predator, who turns out to be the Republican nominee for President. His story is interesting and very subtle, it took me two reading to understand it and his long game. He also has an interesting love of Skittles.

Finally, the story was amazing from the references to the banter. The relationship was fun and the conflicts between Alex and Henry were very grounded despite who they were, as a reader, I completely understood their predicament.

Rating: 5 out of 5 from me, it’s one of my favorite novels and represents both Gen Y/Millennials and Gen Z/Post-Millennial, who enjoy modernity and ideas about communication, relationships, and sexual variability.

-----------------

I have heard rumors of a movie deal being done on this, for fans of this book for the last 2 years, it would be amazing. I wonder who would be cast as

Alex and Henry.

https://deadline.com/2019/04/red-white-royal-blue-novel-amazon-studios-berlanti-productions-win-novel-auction-1202593251/

Copyright © 2021 W_L; All Rights Reserved.
  • Like 1
  • Love 3
The content presented here is for informational or educational purposes only. These are just the authors' personal opinions and knowledge.
Names, places, characters, events, and incidents are based on the authors' lives and experiences and may be changed to protect personal information. Any resemblances to actual persons (living or dead), organizations, companies, events, or locales are entirely coincidental.
Note: While authors are asked to place warnings on their stories for some moderated content, everyone has different thresholds, and it is your responsibility as a reader to avoid stories or stop reading if something bothers you. 
You are not currently following this story. Be sure to follow to keep up to date with new chapters.

Recommended Comments

Chapter Comments

As an elder millennial I enjoyed the vehicles mentioned above that moved the story along - the emails, etc., but overall the story was way too saccharine for me. I didn’t feel like either of the protagonists was realistic or believable. There was a lack of maturity in the writing itself that kept the story from making a real emotional impact for me. I did enjoy several of the supporting characters like his father and mother. I, too, laughed ridiculously at several points like the PowerPoint. But Luna ended up being a big disappointment to me. Overall, 2/5.

  • Like 3
W_L

Posted (edited)

1 hour ago, evlfox said:

As an elder millennial I enjoyed the vehicles mentioned above that moved the story along - the emails, etc., but overall the story was way too saccharine for me. I didn’t feel like either of the protagonists was realistic or believable. There was a lack of maturity in the writing itself that kept the story from making a real emotional impact for me. I did enjoy several of the supporting characters like his father and mother. I, too, laughed ridiculously at several points like the PowerPoint. But Luna ended up being a big disappointment to me. Overall, 2/5.

Like I said, I don't think everyone would like it, there are certain things about the book that are just too perfectly imperfect. It's the Sorkin-esque style that appeals to me, which sort of balances some of the tropes. If a story is fun, inspirational, and can elicit strong emotions, it gets really high score from me.

I've only been to a tack room once in my life without ever considering anything about it. The story has changed my view... :) 

Maturity wise, they're college aged boys, so I'm not surprised about their actions. Some guys don't really sort themselves in college or even after, I was still attending wild house parties until I was around 26/27. You get more mature later in your 20's. Then, you have the social dimension, these aren't normal guys with normal lives. For some reason, the wealthier your background, the less mature it seems people appear to be about their perspectives on life or how to interact with other people.

Edited by W_L
  • Like 1
On 7/9/2021 at 2:39 PM, W_L said:

I've only been to a tack room once in my life without ever considering anything about it. The story has changed my view... :) 

Can’t say I disagree with that :) 

I think I was additionally disappointed because one of my favorite gay authors, Christopher, son of Anne, highly recommended it. I was expecting the emotional impact of A Density of Souls only to be met with Twilight.

  • Haha 2
25 minutes ago, evlfox said:

Can’t say I disagree with that :)

I think I was additionally disappointed because one of my favorite gay authors, Christopher, son of Anne, highly recommended it. I was expecting the emotional impact of A Density of Souls only to be met with Twilight.

Same thing happened with me and Keira Andrews Fight the Tide, I was stoked when I heard there was a sequel to Kick at the Darkness. I was very disappointed.

What kind of books do you like?

  • Like 1
13 hours ago, W_L said:

What kind of books do you like?

I’ll have to read Kick at the Darkness.

I’ll admit I read a lot of sci-fi and fantasy (why am I ashamed to admit that?). And there are certain books I re-read every year. Right now I’m reading the Expeditionary Force series by R.C Bray. Fave sci-fi series is The Expanse. Neither is gay.

I did recently go on a TJ Klune kick and read literally every book he has written - I got started with the Green Creek series and flew through Tales from Verania, then others from there. So gay and most are so so good (I was unimpressed with one of his series, but I won’t name check which one). He has quickly become one of my favorite authors. I don’t think I’ve ever laughed out loud so many times as when reading Tales from Verania.

I also read a lot of shifter novels; good (rare), bad (soooo many) or just messy (mpreg). A lot of them are just unbelievably awful; formulaic and repetitive with extremely tired tropes, no originality. But I read them anyway.

What I would like to read is an unapologetically gay space opera. If you have any recs, I’d love to hear em.

  • Like 1
W_L

Posted (edited)

6 hours ago, evlfox said:

I’ll have to read Kick at the Darkness.

I’ll admit I read a lot of sci-fi and fantasy (why am I ashamed to admit that?). And there are certain books I re-read every year. Right now I’m reading the Expeditionary Force series by R.C Bray. Fave sci-fi series is The Expanse. Neither is gay.

I did recently go on a TJ Klune kick and read literally every book he has written - I got started with the Green Creek series and flew through Tales from Verania, then others from there. So gay and most are so so good (I was unimpressed with one of his series, but I won’t name check which one). He has quickly become one of my favorite authors. I don’t think I’ve ever laughed out loud so many times as when reading Tales from Verania.

I also read a lot of shifter novels; good (rare), bad (soooo many) or just messy (mpreg). A lot of them are just unbelievably awful; formulaic and repetitive with extremely tired tropes, no originality. But I read them anyway.

What I would like to read is an unapologetically gay space opera. If you have any recs, I’d love to hear em.

I guess, you'll like my review of TJ Klune's Lightning Struck Heart tomorrow :o

As for gay space sci-fi, I have one for you:

https://www.goodreads.com/series/121489-dark-space

I'm still finishing up that series, but it's pretty good. It's a bit of a space Opera with a military setting and a good deal of sci-fi background.

Edited by W_L
1 hour ago, W_L said:

I guess, you'll like my review of TJ Klune's Lightning Struck Heart tomorrow :o

As for gay space sci-fi, I have one for you:

https://www.goodreads.com/series/121489-dark-space

I'm still finishing up that series, but it's pretty good. It's a bit of a space Opera with a military setting and a good deal of sci-fi background.

Looking forward to the review! 

And thank you for the rec - definitely adding to my list!

6 hours ago, evlfox said:

Looking forward to the review! 

And thank you for the rec - definitely adding to my list!

Your welcome, I hope more people will read and enjoy reading various gay fiction books and since these are mostly small time authors, it's good to put their name out there, even in this little corner of the internet.

I do read a lot :)

  • Like 1
  • Love 1

I am in complete agreement with your review and I’d give this book the same high score. You have only made one omission, that of Henry’s Nigerian pal, Percy Okonjo, the producer of the kimonos. To know now that Greg Berlanti’s outfit might be involved in a movie version has had me singing in the shower. I’m frankly astonished by the amount of negative responses to this book. I have read and reread the story and find something new every time. Every time I read those texts and emails I still laugh aloud especially at Alex’s list of things he likes about Henry. Each time, I feel more and more in love with the two of them. People do know this is fiction, don’t they, a modern day fairytale? I read a long review on Goodreads from someone berating the author for not fully understanding British royal titles, and how dare she call the prince, Henry of Wales. Ah well, goes to show we all have different triggers and tastes. I just wish I could write a book that garnered over 350,000 largely positive reviews on Goodreads.

  • Like 2
2 hours ago, lomax61 said:

I am in complete agreement with your review and I’d give this book the same high score. You have only made one omission, that of Henry’s Nigerian pal, Percy Okonjo, the producer of the kimonos. To know now that Greg Berlanti’s outfit might be involved in a movie version has had me singing in the shower. I’m frankly astonished by the amount of negative responses to this book. I have read and reread the story and find something new every time. Every time I read those texts and emails I still laugh aloud especially at Alex’s list of things he likes about Henry. Each time, I feel more and more in love with the two of them. People do know this is fiction, don’t they, a modern day fairytale? I read a long review on Goodreads from someone berating the author for not fully understanding British royal titles, and how dare she call the prince, Henry of Wales. Ah well, goes to show we all have different triggers and tastes. I just wish I could write a book that garnered over 350,000 largely positive reviews on Goodreads.

True, Percy was very fun as the straight wealthy Nigerian billionaire (A real Nigerian Prince 😛 :o ).

As to negative nitpicks, you'll find we have a few GA members like that, who ignore the concept and pick apart the details, especially when they are defending the British Royals. One of the more peculiar issues I've recognized in reading is that a lot of people who are trying to pick apart popular authors are going after their details rather than their overall story, especially with award winning gay authors.

I finished reviewing Bill Konigsberg's Openly Straight duology with the first book being praised and award winning, while the second book panned and pulled apart. Trying to be something you're not is easier to understand/connect with (and want to slap the Main character a few times on), but dealing with finding your own personal truth without a label for your same-sex interest, it set some readers off to the point of causing him to cancel plans for a third book. I thought the 2nd book was weak due to underdeveloped side-characters and a meandering plot, but I hate it when gay authors are getting attacked by our own community for failing even slightly. Bad books deserve negative reviews based on the story, but the author does not deserve hate mirroring our own experiences of being rejected for expressing our sexuality.

I feel a need to write counter rebuttals to people who attack authors on Goodreads, which is where I go to search for new LGBT titles and book recommendations of various titles, since Amazon/Audible don't have them categorize that well. My rebuttals made me want to do something more, so I started this on GA. I can be harsh, I can be aggressive with my passion, but I try to be as fair as I can be on my tastes. No everyone will like what I do, but I wanted to share it.

  • Like 1

I did find the book a bit over the top at times, but I think its style played very well into the current generation's most beloved habit, which is to be 'so extra'. I'd say 4 out of 5, and I'm among those readers who would never bother with details like how the British Royals were addressed. It was a light read, and it was enjoyable for what it was.

  • Like 2
View Guidelines

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now


  • Newsletter

    Sign Up and get an occasional Newsletter.  Fill out your profile with favorite genres and say yes to genre news to get the monthly update for your favorite genres.

    Sign Up
×
×
  • Create New...