Title: Soulmated (Joining of Souls #1)
Author: Shaila Patel
Publishing: January 24, 2017
Publisher: Month9Books
Pages: 300
Find it: Goodreads | Amazon | B&N | TBD
Two souls. One Fate.Eighteen-year-old Liam Whelan, an Irish royal empath, has been searching for his elusive soulmate. The rare union will cement his family’s standing in empath politics and afford the couple legendary powers, while also making them targets of those seeking to oust them.Laxshmi Kapadia, an Indian-American high school student from a traditional family, faces her mother’s ultimatum: Graduate early and go to medical school, or commit to an arranged marriage.When Liam moves next door to Laxshmi, he’s immediately and inexplicably drawn to her. In Liam, Laxshmi envisions a future with the freedom to follow her heart.Liam’s father isn’t convinced Laxshmi is “The One” and Laxshmi’s mother won’t even let her talk to their handsome new neighbor. Will Liam and Laxshmi defy expectations and embrace a shared destiny? Or is the risk of choosing one’s own fate too great a price for the soulmated?
Excerpt
CHAPTER 1 – LIAM
They’re calling this a test?
Not even a ping grazed my mind as the five Elders tried to slip past my mental blocks and into my emotions. A sheen of sweat over William’s lip proved he wasn’t faring as well. Of all the cousins now come of age, William and I were the last to be sitting before the Elders. I’d have felt guilty for his not doing so well had he ever shown an interest in leading the family. But, we all knew he’d rather have his head in a library. Now his heart was with his wife Colleen. He at least seemed to have a choice about his fate.
I sighed. Not so for me.
“Are we boring you, Prince Liam?”
I snapped my eyes up to Elder Adebayo. He wore his trademark bow tie with a traditional fila atop his head. In the fraction of a second it took me to untangle the meaning from his heavy Nigerian accent, I’d blanked my expression and sat upright. The Elders sat along one side of an antique conference table, facing William and myself. The manor staff had rearranged the study to hold both the testing and signing-over ceremonies. Gone were the leather club chairs and stained glass lamps normally dotting the large space, giving it the air of a posh library. Now it seemed more an election-night headquarters, like the sort you saw on the telly, with bright lights and a gathering of family strewn about, waiting for the results. A photographer hung out in one corner, camera in hand. Not far from him stood a team of solicitors guarding rolling briefcases that were no doubt stuffed with legal documents for the victor to sign.
My throat-clearing echoed in the now silent room, and my cheeks warmed. “No, sir, not at all. Although, uh … I’d like to know when it is you’ll begin with me.” I pasted on an oh-so-innocent smirk and watched William shake his head and smother a grin. I shrugged at him, hoping to lighten the mood.
Four of the Elders cocked an eyebrow—all except for Elder Claire Brennan, our lone Irish representative. She leaned ever so slightly forward from where she sat at the center of the group.
So much for having a bit of craic.
The familiar knocking on my brain—like the distant sound of drums—told me someone had got past my first line of defenses with their probe. The rest of my mental blocks held up though. The corner of Brennan’s lip stretched upward. Toying with me, was she? I leaned back with a matching smile and loosened my tie. Mum and I were the only ones in the family who’d mastered the skill of probing and manipulation. A handy skill that, especially when the burden of the entire clan’s financial success might well be resting on my shoulders.
As if sensing the end of the ritual, Mum whispered to the house staff and pointed toward the main doors, directing them to begin preparations, most likely. She turned and nearly ran into a Mediterranean-looking man with a grotesque mole on his left cheek. He wasn’t a relation or a solicitor, so I assumed he was a council minister. Their stances were stiff, and despite being too far for me to hear, I sensed Mum’s replies seemed short and clipped. He moved around her, and on his way out, his eyes met mine. He lifted his lips in a smirk.
Arse.
My attention darted to Mum. She was smoothing out the front of her dress, and her shoulders heaved a time or two before she turned back to face the room. I mentally sent her my curiosity, but she ignored me with a smile. She did at least send me her love before she weaved herself into the crowd.
Within a few minutes, Elder Brennan squared her shoulders and opened the portfolio in front of her. The rest of the Elders relaxed back in their seats and passed her folded slips of paper.
Jaysus Christ. Thank you. This bleedin’ muck-up was about done.
After tallying the results, she stood with the help of a finely carved cane. Rumors about her age had always been entertaining—the last one I’d heard was that Claire Brennan was well over 140 years old. Apparently, documents as to her history had disappeared. Her regal manner and piercing blue eyes—the sort that’d make a gutless gobshite piss his pants—set her apart from the rest of the Elders. She now set those sights on me.
“Prince Liam, please stand. It is our unanimous decision that the Royal Empath House of O’Connor will now be led by you, Prince Liam Joseph O’Connor-Whelan, on this day, the
sixth of June, in the year 2015.” Flashes from the camera punctuated every other word, and spots began to form in front of my eyes. “You have proven your worth to lead your clan by exhibiting the strength of your empath skills to the satisfaction of the presiding group and by extension, the Council of Ministers.”
Brennan rattled on about allegiances and legal mandates, all of which bore down on me like the weight of history, dry and inescapable, yet … a bit liberating. Now we could stop our search and stay in Ireland—better of two evils and all that. I could make that happen now.
An explosion of clapping hands, and thumps on my back from a relieved-looking William, forced me to plaster a smile on my face.
Mum hurried over with open arms. “Darling! We’re so happy for you.” Da and my older brother Ciarán, a non-empath, followed, both decked out in a suit and tie. After her hug and kiss and Da’s pat on my back, they congratulated William on his effort and made room for the Elders to come around with their well-wishing. Ciarán smirked and punched my shoulder. The strobe-light effect of the flashes had me squinting.
Elder Santiago from Spain shook my hand. He sported a thick mustache and proudly wore his Catalonian flag pin on his lapel. He’d been wooing our clan for support in Catalonia’s bid for secession from Spain. Ciarán had thought it a good cause to be getting behind—especially if we beat another royal clan from doing so first. We had several holdings in Barcelona, after all. Now that it was my call to be making, a hasty decision didn’t seem wise. Santiago always had the look about him of a tapas dish drowning in olive oil.
He sidled closer. “Your strength is most impressive. And at the age of eighteen too. It is not hard to believe you will be the next soulmated empath, in truth. Some have doubts though, eh?”
He wants to discuss this now?
Da pointed to his own temple, stabbing at an unruly black curl. “No need for doubts. If I’ve seen it, it’s as good as true.”
I resisted rolling my eyes. Admitting I had my own doubts about Da’s visions wouldn’t be wise. “Time will tell, yeah?” No point kissing Elder arse.
The other Elders came one by one, congratulating me and posing for photos. Brennan was last. The crowd dispersed enough to give us a bubble of privacy. She tipped her head back and studied my face.
Without being able to read her blocked emotions, her body language was all I had to go on. A smile like before tugged at her lips.
I leaned in. “So were you toying with me earlier?” My bold question would either be living up to the liberties given to the heads of the four remaining Irish royal houses, or it’d be taken as the yipping of a whelp learning to growl. I hoped for the former and straightened up just in case.
“The test need only be as strong as the weakest candidate.” She curved her gloved hand around the crook of my elbow and turned me to face the patio. “Come now. Walk me outside.”
Leading an Elder outside for a private conversation wasn’t as nerve-racking as I’d thought. With her hand resting on my arm, she exuded an unexpected grandmotherly warmth. The stone patio ran the length of the building on this side of our manor home. It overlooked the meadows of our property—now mine—and with the cloudless days we’d had of late, the scent of heated earth surrounded us. I inhaled deeply. Definitely better here than returning to the States.
The few who lingered outside turned and meandered back to the study once they spotted us. Elder Brennan patted my arm, then released it, flattening her palms upon the balustrade, her ever-present white gloves in sharp contrast to the weathered stone.
Her gaze floated over the view. “It seems you are to have a very interesting future ahead of you.”
“Possibly.”
Her features relaxed with another one of her enigmatic smiles. “When will you be returning to America?”
“I’m thinking to stay here,” I said.
A disapproving frown appeared, and she tapped a sole finger on the stone.
How the hell was this any of her bloody business? I forced my expression to remain neutral and unclenched the hands I’d not realized I’d fisted. If only Da had kept his mouth shut over the years.
“Choices are a funny thing, Prince Liam. We often treat them as black and white, but rarely are they.”
I pocketed my hands. What was I meant to say? Yes, Zen Master Brennan.
A breeze picked up and coaxed a few strands of her silver hair across her cheek. She tilted her face into the wind and closed her eyes. “You should return to your search.” She turned and pinned me with a stare.
“What? Why? Are you trying to boot me from Ireland? Away from the estate? Is something happening you’re hiding from me?”
She held up her hand. “The demesne will be in capable hands. Go now. Enjoy your celebration. Congratulations and happy eighteenth birthday.” With a nod, she summoned two of her gendarmes, who came to her side and escorted her down the patio.
Mum must have been watching because she rushed outside. “What did she want?” Her concerned gaze scanned my face as if to get a read on my emotions, but as usual, I had them blocked.
I rolled my shoulders and took a breath. “She wants us to go back to the States.”
Her mouth opened and closed.
I knew that look. “Just say it, Mum.”
“Your father had another vision during the night.”
I snorted. “Where now? Alaska?”
“Liam, you used to believe—”
“Do you think we’ll be seeing some actual igloos? We could even go to the North Pole and watch the ice cap melt—”
“What harm could one more year—?”
“Have you tried whale blubber, Mum? I hear it’s a right treat.”
An elderly couple came out onto the patio. With a huff, Mum crossed her arms and broadcast her emotions as clearly as any mother’s scowl would convey. Waves of her irritation registered in my mind like seaweed washing in and wrapping around my toes. I moved a few steps away and leaned over the balustrade, resting my forearms on the sunbaked stone. A good fifty yards out, a hare popped up to scan its surroundings and then chased a second one into the shrubbery.
After a few moments, Mum joined me. “We know this isn’t easy, Liam, but we’re doing it for you. We’ve sacrificed so much. Please understand.”
I ground my back teeth and straightened. So much for making it happen my way. “Fine. One more year.”
I stormed back into the study so the signing could begin, passing by several girls in long glittering dresses, tittering behind their fingers. No doubt my pain-in-the-arse brother had arranged for them to be here.
If the Elders knew about our search, so did the rest of the empath community. Speculation would be flowing like whiskey tonight, but it didn’t change the fact we’d not be finding our target in Ireland.


SOULMATED. International.
Rating: 4 Stars
Cover: ARC; Cover Reveal
“With everyone else, I was someone specific—a dancer, an Indian girl, an American, a daughter—but with Liam, I was no one in particular. I was just me. And for the first time, I had a million colors to choose from.”
P. 159
Can we talk about how great it is that YA literature is making a push for diverse books? I feel it so important to learn about other people’s culture, as well as seeing things from their world, through their eyes. And to have diverse books written by diverse people? Hello, world! We’re making changes! Can we also talk about how this book ripped out my heart at the cliffhanger at the end and is now holding it until Book 2 is out? That’s a real thing.
This book was a ton of fun to read. Shaila Patel’s descriptions are so vivid, I felt like I was there: that the characters emotions and confusion was MY emotions and confusion. I could see the world and could almost touch it. The book is written from both Liam’s and Laxshmi’s points of view, each chapter switching the narration. This was perfect for this story, and I could really understand each point of view and get deeply immersed in each person’s culture and families. It was fun to read Liam’s chapters in his Irish accent, and I even learned some of his language when looking words up. The text was even more interactive than this, though. (What? How could it be? I’ll tell you if you’ll stop being impatient.) Patel has also created a Pinterest board and a music playlist for readers to really dive head first in the story. This is a pretty cool trend happening in YA, but it makes me a little concerned that it will cause the book to lose relevance down the road, as does brand dropping in YA.
Now, I’m not a love-at-first-sight kinda gal, so I appreciate the magical elements behind it, rather than just another cheesy love story. It made it more believable and caused me to root for the characters more. The magical world fit so seamlessly into reality, there was no reason for unbelief. Plus, Liam says kind of cute things when he’s in love: “She needed me, and it gave me hope. The sort of hope that cured diseases and stopped wars” p. 240. But sometimes the scenes between Liam and Laxshmi were just: HELLO, HORMONES!
I love the multi-cultural aspects, including the Indian-American culture of Laxshmi’s family, the Irish culture of Liam’s family, as well as the culture of this magical world that Liam’s family is a part of. The cultural aspects of this book are the foundation that the story is built on and the selling point of the whole book. Throughout Soulmated, Laxshmi and Liam both are struggling to learn how to create their own futures, to fight for their own dreams, while respecting their parents, and their parents’ desires for their children to pass on and live through their cultural norms. This is a typical stage of life for teenagers in high school—boy oh boy, do I remember going through that. Patel makes this very relatable, real experience even more interesting by showing the way it affects a diverse type of teenagers. Teenagers need to be able to see themselves in their books, but they also need to learn how to have an empathetic viewpoint of differences between people of different backgrounds, experiences, dreams, and ultimately, characteristics. Books like these are important.
I am a huge fan of fantasy in YA, specifically because there’s the ability to deal with real things that people go through, but through a lens of the magical, the dangerous, and the stretched imagination. Fantasy and the paranormal allows for ideas to be ideas, allows for the readers to explore different perspectives and experiences, while being engaged through the magical storytelling. Soulmated takes a look at first love, searching for your future, and learning how to relate to your parents as you approach a time in life where you have to make your own decisions, and relating to people who are different than you, all through an engaging lens of magical culture.
Thank you for this amazing review!! I love it! And thank you for being part of my special day!! ❤
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