For almost twenty years, I ran All About Romance, one of the genre’s essential institutions: a place where romance was taken seriously without anyone having to pretend we were all swooning over the latest unreadable Booker Prize winner. I’m not sure how many romances I’ve read—2,000? 3,000?—but it’s a lot. A lot a lot.
I don’t read much romance anymore. The genre has moved away from my tastes, and my tastes have changed too. Still, I think romance novels are the bomb. They lift readers up—I’m a big fan of aspirational fiction—and at their best, they can be excellent in all the ways great books are excellent: thrilling plots, characters you’d love to meet, and prose that makes you gasp.
I’m often asked which are my favorites.
Here, in no particular order, here are my top ten.
The Everlasting by Alix E. Harrow
Bench Player by Julianna Keyes
Dukes are Forever by Bec McMasters
My Lord and Spymaster by Joanna Bourne
Off the Edge by Annika Martin
Uncommon Passion by Anne Calhoun
His at Night by Sherry Thomas
Reckless by Anne Stuart
The Duke of Shadows by Meredith Duran
I Kissed an Earl by Julie Anne Long.
note: this list may change with time as most things do
and
a contemporary romance coming out in October—Bad Words by Rioghnach Robinson—will replace Reckless by Anne Stuart
