In The Queer Principles of Kit Webb by Cat Sebastian, reformed highwayman Kit Webb and sassy aristocrat Percy team up for a heist but end up stealing each other’s hearts. This queer, slow-burn romance is packed with adventure, humor, and intrigue!

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The Queer Principles of Kit Webb by Cat Sebastian

The Queer Principles of Kit Webb by Cat Sebastian

London Highwaymen #1
June 8, 2021

Read this if you want:

  • Heist
  • Grumpy/sunshine
  • Ex-con
  • Class differences

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Kit Webb had to give up his career as a highwayman, but that doesnโ€™t mean the temptation to thieve is behind him. So when a stranger walks into his coffeehouse with an offer – to steal from the Duke, no less – Kit finds the idea enticing. Mentally, Kit wants to take the job. Physically, his injured leg says otherwise. So Kit offers to teach the stranger how to carry off the theft himself, and soon the stranger is a friend, a sparring partner, a lover. Kit and Percy are opposites in practically every way but falling in love can make a man do strange things, like disregard social norms, question old friendships, and stop burying the past. A fun, queer historical romance, The Queer Principles of Kit Webb is full of adventure, mystery, and sass.

Cat Sebastian always writes such well done queer historical romances, and The Queer Principles of Kit Webb is no exception. Sebastian manages to work multiple tropes into the story, but it never becomes over the top or too much. In Kit Webb, we see no less than seven major romance tropes interwoven into Kit and Percyโ€™s romance: revenge, learning to love, different economic status, and several others that canโ€™t be mentioned without spoiling the plot. All of these tropes come together beautifully, though, making the book hard to put down.

I loved both Kit and Percy as characters. Percy was unabashedly gay with no interest in even producing an heir if it meant faking it with a woman. Kit, on the other hand, was previously in heterosexual relationships and it was sweet to watch him fall so easily into his previously-undiscovered bisexuality. For Kit, the attraction was immediate, and his past relationships didnโ€™t factor into his feelings for Percy. It was a breath of fresh air watching Kit enter his first queer relationship without question or without anyone treating him any differently.

The romance between Percy and Kit was hot, but also a bit of a slow burn. Their courtship took time, interrupted often by revenge plots and blackmailers. They seemed like total opposites, Percy being sassy and loud (in both attitude and attire) and Kit reserved and healing (from his past and from old wounds). But I wanted Kit and Percy to find their happy ending, even if it wasnโ€™t immediately clear that they could even tolerate each other.

Outside of the romance, there was still plenty to keep readers invested. Kit and Percy had a heist to plan, revenge to get, and a blackmailer to expose. In addition to romance, the story is full of intrigue and action, making The Queer Principles of Kit Webb a fantastic queer historical romance for both fans of the subgenre and those who like a little mystery in their historical fiction.

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