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After our GREAT discussion of A Court of Roses and Thorns we realized we wanted to talk a lot more about romance: about the so-called “boom” and what’s fueling it, of course, but also about various tropes (sick bed, forbidden romance, grumpy protagonist), race and cultural specificity, the level of “spice” and how it shows up on the page, and how to manage your own romance reading behavior. Melody heard Nisha Sharma speak at Romance GenreCon last year and knew she was the person to address so many of your questions. Whether you’re new to romance like me, don’t read it but are interested in why other people do, or have immersed yourself in the genre for years, I promise there’s something in this conversation that’s going to stick in your head for days.
Show Notes:Nisha Sharma!!!! Follow her on Instagram and TikTok, and here’s links to all her recent books and upcoming events
You can pre-order The Letters We Keep and Marriage & Masti at Bookshop.org— promo code CULTURE gets you 10% off
Or for pre-order swag, order from Doylestown Bookshop
Maya Rodale’s Dangerous Books for Girls: The Bad Reputation of Romance Novels Explained
“Canon building is empire building”
Janice A. Radway’s Reading the Romance
Lee & Low Books Diversity Baseline Survey
MONSTER THEORY
A very fun round-up of Fabio romance novel covers, by the numbers
A 2018 piece on cartoon covers “tricking” people into reading romance
AND NOW, A LIST OF EVERY BOOK RECOMMENDED IN THIS EPISODE
The Proposal by Jasmine Guillory
For Real by Alexis Hall
The Candid Life of Meena Dave by Namrata Patel
You Made a Fool of Death with Your Beauty by Akwaeke Emezi
The Roommate by Rosie Danan
The Partner Plot by Kristina Forest
Queen Takes Rose by Katee Robert
Destiny’s Captive by Beverly Jenkins
Double Exposure by Rien Gray
Beach Read by Emily Henry
Bride by Ali Hazelwood
That Prince is Mine by Jayci Lee
A Rogue by Any Other Name by Sarah MacLean
Say You’ll Be Mine by Naina Kumar
Rock Hard by Nalini Singh
Butcher & Blackbird by Brynne Weaver
Power Play by B. P. Gilmore
Collide by Bal Khabra
Out on a Limb by Hannah Bonam-Young
Chloe Liese for disability representation
Kimberly Lemming for cozy monster romance
Morning Glory Milking Farm by C. M. Nacosta
Sydney Sweeney (and Gen-Z Stardom)
Learning to craft / make things / hobby-around-the-house
Trad wives, featuring a co-host who used to be one
For our continuing series on romance novels: QUEER ROMANCE and ROMANCE BOOKSTORES
Artificial Intelligence (we’re gonna see if we can figure out an actually interesting theme here, so send us your weirdest or most mind-boggling questions)
The economy, a.k.a. why is everything so damn expensive right now (my dream here is like an Odd Lots guest who doesn’t have private equity brain, please let us know if you have suggestions!)
Contemporary ideas of self-care
Buy Nothing groups and/or the current state of the secondhand market
Anything you need advice or want musings on for the AAA segment
You can submit them (and ideas for future eps) here (and here’s the subscriber-only priority form)
By Anne Helen Petersen4.6
671671 ratings
After our GREAT discussion of A Court of Roses and Thorns we realized we wanted to talk a lot more about romance: about the so-called “boom” and what’s fueling it, of course, but also about various tropes (sick bed, forbidden romance, grumpy protagonist), race and cultural specificity, the level of “spice” and how it shows up on the page, and how to manage your own romance reading behavior. Melody heard Nisha Sharma speak at Romance GenreCon last year and knew she was the person to address so many of your questions. Whether you’re new to romance like me, don’t read it but are interested in why other people do, or have immersed yourself in the genre for years, I promise there’s something in this conversation that’s going to stick in your head for days.
Show Notes:Nisha Sharma!!!! Follow her on Instagram and TikTok, and here’s links to all her recent books and upcoming events
You can pre-order The Letters We Keep and Marriage & Masti at Bookshop.org— promo code CULTURE gets you 10% off
Or for pre-order swag, order from Doylestown Bookshop
Maya Rodale’s Dangerous Books for Girls: The Bad Reputation of Romance Novels Explained
“Canon building is empire building”
Janice A. Radway’s Reading the Romance
Lee & Low Books Diversity Baseline Survey
MONSTER THEORY
A very fun round-up of Fabio romance novel covers, by the numbers
A 2018 piece on cartoon covers “tricking” people into reading romance
AND NOW, A LIST OF EVERY BOOK RECOMMENDED IN THIS EPISODE
The Proposal by Jasmine Guillory
For Real by Alexis Hall
The Candid Life of Meena Dave by Namrata Patel
You Made a Fool of Death with Your Beauty by Akwaeke Emezi
The Roommate by Rosie Danan
The Partner Plot by Kristina Forest
Queen Takes Rose by Katee Robert
Destiny’s Captive by Beverly Jenkins
Double Exposure by Rien Gray
Beach Read by Emily Henry
Bride by Ali Hazelwood
That Prince is Mine by Jayci Lee
A Rogue by Any Other Name by Sarah MacLean
Say You’ll Be Mine by Naina Kumar
Rock Hard by Nalini Singh
Butcher & Blackbird by Brynne Weaver
Power Play by B. P. Gilmore
Collide by Bal Khabra
Out on a Limb by Hannah Bonam-Young
Chloe Liese for disability representation
Kimberly Lemming for cozy monster romance
Morning Glory Milking Farm by C. M. Nacosta
Sydney Sweeney (and Gen-Z Stardom)
Learning to craft / make things / hobby-around-the-house
Trad wives, featuring a co-host who used to be one
For our continuing series on romance novels: QUEER ROMANCE and ROMANCE BOOKSTORES
Artificial Intelligence (we’re gonna see if we can figure out an actually interesting theme here, so send us your weirdest or most mind-boggling questions)
The economy, a.k.a. why is everything so damn expensive right now (my dream here is like an Odd Lots guest who doesn’t have private equity brain, please let us know if you have suggestions!)
Contemporary ideas of self-care
Buy Nothing groups and/or the current state of the secondhand market
Anything you need advice or want musings on for the AAA segment
You can submit them (and ideas for future eps) here (and here’s the subscriber-only priority form)

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