Romance Novel



A genre of Literature that has become popular starting in the early 20th century. While romantic subplots have existed in fiction since fairly close to the beginning, romance as a focal point and driving force hadn't really been explored in depth until the last few centuries. Romance novels as an industry started in The Thirties with the company of Mills and Boon releasing hardcover romance novels. The genre changed significantly with the distribution of The Flame and the Flower, which is noteworthy for showing that buyers of romance novels are more than happy to read about sex. The genre has since evolved over time, gaining a number of subgenres in the process.

While subversions, aversions, deconstructions, and parodies are prevalent, most romance novels are fairly idealistic and end Happily Ever After.

A couple of companies such as Harlequin (Mills and Boon in the U.K.) have started a business model of releasing relatively short (~55,000 words), Strictly Formula paperbacks. These are known as "category" or "series" romances because they are divided into series, each of which has its own requirements for setting, tone, and level of sensuality and is visually distinguishable by consistent cover design. It's usually these that most people think of when the genre is brought up. Almost all listed authors of such books are female, although many are written by men using female pseudonyms, since the reader base expects the author to be a woman. Also, the main character is usually female - romance stories featuring a male main character are either rare or non-existant.

"Single title" romances -- those released as standalones rather than associated with a category -- are usually longer, sometimes come out in hardcover, and have more overlap with mainstream fiction. Particularly successful series romance writers often move up to writing books of this type.

The genre has always had a bit of a stigma to it, generally getting critically dismissed as "not literature" for most of its existence. They are often derisively known as "bodice-rippers" (particularly the historic ones) or "trashy romance novels" though it's obviously a stereotype that they all have gratuitous sex scenes. Some cynical souls have observed that the stereotypical 'romance' book or movie shares a trait with most porn fiction, in that both stories end before the point where the natural consequences of the foolish or irrational choices and actions of the characters would arise.

For tropes popular within Romance Novels, see Romance Novel Tropes. Paranormal Romance is a subgenre.


 * The Age of Innocence
 * The Alien Series
 * A Match Made in High School
 * Anita Blake
 * Anna Karenina
 * Atonement
 * A Walk to Remember
 * Barriers of a Broken Soul
 * Beastly
 * The Bedwyn Saga
 * Black Dagger Brotherhood
 * Blood and Chocolate
 * Bloodsucking Fiends
 * The Blue Castle
 * The Blue Lagoon
 * The Bridges of Madison County
 * Bridget Jones
 * The Chesapeake Bay Saga
 * Cheri
 * Count and Countess
 * The Dark Hunter series by Sherrilyn Kenyon
 * Dark Visions
 * Doctor Zhivago
 * Earths Children
 * Emma
 * The English Patient
 * Faking It by Jennifer Crusie
 * The Frog King
 * The Gargoyle
 * Gentlemen Prefer Blondes
 * Gigi
 * Girl Vs Boy by Yvonne Collins and Sally Rideout
 * Grave Mercy
 * The Guardians by Meljean Brook
 * High Fidelity
 * The House of Night
 * The Host
 * Howards End
 * I Capture the Castle (an example of a work that has romance as an major theme, but also contain other elements)
 * If I Have A Wicked Stepmother Wheres My Prince by Melissa Cantor
 * Immortals After Dark
 * Jane Eyre
 * The Last Song
 * Liseys Story
 * Love in A Nutshell
 * Mara Daughter of the Nile
 * Memoirs of a Geisha
 * Mortal Instruments
 * Nick and Norahs Infinite Playlist
 * Night World
 * North and South
 * Outlander
 * One Day
 * Of Human Bondage
 * Parasite Eve
 * The Parasol Protectorate
 * Persuasion
 * Pride and Prejudice
 * The Princess Diaries
 * A Promise of Roses
 * Redeeming Love
 * The Scarlet Pimpernel
 * Sense and Sensibility
 * The Sharing Knife
 * The Sheik
 * Sholan Alliance
 * Shopaholic series
 * The Silver Kiss
 * The Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants
 * The Sookie Stackhouse Mysteries
 * Most books by Danielle Steel.
 * The Sound of Waves
 * Tairen Soul
 * Tales of the Five Hundred Kingdoms
 * The Thorn Birds
 * The Time Travelers Wife
 * This Must Be Love by Tui T. Sutherland
 * Troubleshooters
 * Twilight
 * Vampire Academy
 * Waiting to Exhale
 * Warm Bodies
 * Wicked Lovely
 * Wolves of Mercy Falls Series