
14 (er, 18) Places for Newbies to Start in Romance
This content contains affiliate links. When you buy through these links, we may earn an affiliate commission.
…according to me.
When people say they don’t like romance, I react the same way I do to people who say they don’t like to read: fair enough, but maybe you just haven’t found the right book for yourself yet.
Romance is an amazing genre. It the only genre dedicated to women and women’s stories. It is the clear leader in number of books published, purchased, and read. Romance fans are dedicated readers, and romance writers are prolific. The stories interweave and a series usually picks up the stories of secondary characters from previous books, which means one character or couple doesn’t have to sustain the whole series. And the writing. Check out the Bad Sex in Fiction Award if you want to see how much skilled is required to write a sexy scene. Even literary greats struggle.
Romance is one of the few literary genres that wears its construction on its sleeve. Romance books allow you to select books based on theme, character type, and setting. Are you a fan of secret baby stories? Reunited lovers? Reformed bad boys? Firefighters? Bluestockings? Snowed-in cabins? Romance lets you seek out a book using all of these features.
But where to start when there is an embarrassment of riches to choose from? Romance is famously a billion dollar industry, is recession-proof, and has cornered the self-publishing ebook market, with new books dropping ALL the time. I’ve got a few suggestions. This is by no means an exhaustive or definitive list, but simply a selection of good romances for new readers looking for a place to start. I’ve used very very broad categories here. Because as mentioned, romance is expansive and pretty much any sub-sub-sub genre of romance can offer you a years worth of reading.
Note: these are my own suggestions for getting into romance. Another reader would give you different list and those are good ones too. Maybe you like more description in your sex scenes? Or only beta heroes? Or stories set on dirigibles? Use this list to help you start drawing your personal profile of what you like in romance, and then come tell me some of your gateway romances.
The Duchess War by Courtney Milan
Three brothers and a sister, all left-handed, find love and adventure in 1860s England. With titles like Talk Sweetly To Me and The Suffragette Scandal, and heroines who insist that their own enjoyment equal their partners, these aren’t romance heroines who will trouble a modern feminist.
A Study in Scarlet Women by Sherry Thomas
This skirts the border of romance, but Thomas is a clear romance writer, with several romance series to her name. This story reimagines that Sherlock Holmes is actually Charlotte Holmes, a woman who finds it even harder to fit into society than awk Sherlock does in the originals. Thomas write Charlotte’s romance with Lord Ingram with the kind of slow burn, tension-building that romance writers do so well.
Chase Me by Tessa Bailey
Roxy is an actress working flexible jobs to make ends meet while she auditions. Louis is a lawyer to whom Roxy delivers a singing ‘gram, while dressed as a giant pink bunny. Romance meet-cute setups are the best.
Hate to Want You by Alisha Rai
You never forget your first Alisha Rai. NPR agrees. Start with Livvy and Nicholas’s second-chance at romance over their families’ grocery store and get ready for some very hot sex positive scenes, family commitments, and Rai’s expert story-handling. Seriously, pick it up.
Historical
An Extraordinary Union by Alyssa Cole
One Good Earl Deserves a Lover by Sarah MacLean
I’m a sucker for a bluestocking. Scholarly Pippa feels out of control with her impending engagement and marriage. So she approaches Cross, one of the owners of London’s worst gaming hell, to help her “research.”Contemporary
The Player and the Pixie by L.H. Cosway and Penny Reid
Truth or Beard by Penny Reid
Have you been wishing for a fun small-town America romance following bearded brothers? Welp, here you go. Also, kudos to whoever is the cover artist. Zowie!The Bollywood Bride by Sonali Dev
Bollywood “Ice Princess” Ria and her childhood friend Vikram get a shot at second-chance love, even after she made the decision to derailed their first-chance. Aunties and mental health struggles abound, as does Dev’s richness of writing.Fantasy Romance
Wrecked by Meljean Brook
Steampunk is such a sensual aesthetic that it seems made for romance and Brook is an absolute queen at writing steampunk romance. “Wrecked” takes the snowed-in cabin trope and traps the hero and heroine inside a steampunk tank in zombie-infested Europe for this novella.Kiss of Steel or Shadowbound by Bec McMaster