Navigating the world of supernatural espionage and good old-fashioned monarchy, Royal Gambit by Daniel O’Malley pulls readers into an aristocratic whodunnit where sharp wit and absurdity are the rule, not the exception. Picture James Bond, and then throw in British high society’s most eccentric house rules, and behold! You have a captivating book that sometimes stumbles over its own ambition.
Meet Your Unusual Heroine, Lady Alexandra Mondegreen
Our main character, Alix Mondegreen, is no typical heroine. She’s a Lady (a peerage title) with a knack for shattering bones with just a touch. Unless, of course, you’re a member of the paranormal intelligence agency, the Checquy, where nepotism is viewed with a stegosaurus-sized side-eye. In case this story is not quite exciting enough for you, one of her coworkers can transform into a dinosaur.
Thrown into the deep end of palace drama, Alix is tasked with solving the murder of her childhood friend, the Prince of Wales. But this isn’t just about untangling sinister plots; it is also about elbowing her way past skeptical colleagues, stoic royals, and bureaucratic obstacles to prove she belongs in the mix. Alix’s blend of awkward earnestness and relentless drive is both endearing and infuriatingly relatable. We all have that co-worker who takes garden-lunch politics way too seriously.
Monsters in Royal Gambit
O’Malley balances the supernatural thriller vibes with hilariously mundane workplace satire in Royal Gambit. Secret agents with bizarre abilities navigating office politics? A truly fresh take. One chapter has you grappling with existential questions about betrayal in the royal family, and the next has you slapping your knee over a tree-shaped agent arguing about sick leave. The result? A tone that’s as dry as British humor goes, though the pacing occasionally feels as tranquil as an English summer morning during a bank holiday.
Where It Shines and Where It Falters

O’Malley’s world-building is equal parts gripping and infuriating. While the unique mix of royal pomp, paranormal agents, and clandestine murder investigation is undeniably fascinating, the novel sometimes boggs readers down with overly intricate mythology. Between the aristocratic titles, supernatural quirks, and palace intrigue, it could feel like you need a family tree, flowchart, and a cup of tea just to keep up in Royal Gambit.
The biggest hurdle? A bloated cast that makes it hard to keep track of who’s who. By the time you remember which colleague doubles as a tree and which cryptic Duke has issues with dinosaurs, the story’s best plot twists have already become background noise.
Final Verdict
Royal Gambit is not without its flaws, but it delivers captivating magic alongside biting humor. Sure, O’Malley bites off more than he can chew plotwise, and the ending ties things up a bit too neatly. But for fans of dark humor, chaos, and murder mysteries served with a side of eccentricity, Royal Gambit is a read worth losing sleep over.
