A romance novel is a novel from the genre currently known as romance. The genre has two strict criteria:
If a novel does not fulfill those conditions, fans of the genre are likely to claim that it belongs to a related genre, such as women's fiction or chick lit, or that it is just a mainstream fiction novel.
Some romance novel readers would claim that the genre has additional restrictions, from plot considerations such as the hero and heroine meeting early on in the story, to avoiding possible themes, such as neither hero nor heroine committing adultery in the course of their relationship developing. However, these are not hard-and-fast rules, and some writers deliberately write stories that may put off some readers in order to push the genre's boundaries.
Romance novels can also trace their roots back to gothic novels, if not to the idea of the "roman" itself through the romance (genre), a heroic prose and narrative form of medieval/Renaissance Europe.
Ann Radcliffe's gothic novels influenced writers ranging from Jane Austen (who parodied it in her Northanger Abbey), Charles Dickens, and the Brontës.
Category romances are further divided among different lines. A line is a series of books with a distinct identity. The books in a particular line may share similar settings, time periods, levels of sensuality, or types of conflict. Publishers of category romances usually issue guidelines to authors for each line, specifying the unique elements necessary in to each line.
Category romances have a finite print run, and they stay on the shelf only until they are sold out or until the next month's titles within the same line take their place upon the shelf.
As of 2005, Harlequin is the only "major" player in category romance, though Avalon, Avon and other publishers are slowly gaining momentum, publishing dozens of titles per month in ten-plus different lines, ranging from squeaky-clean stories geared to the Christian reader, to super-spicy, semi-erotica. Some publishers of Regency romances and ethnic romances also publish in monthly series.
'Single Title' is a publishing term, as authors frequently write several interconnected books ranging in number from trilogies to long-running series. Such sets of books often have similar titles. Publishers may release them over a shorter space of time for sales velocity and publicity reasons, but on average authors publish two titles a year.
The following are the largest publishers of single title romance novels, in term of the number of titles published in 2002:
Harlequin also publishes some single title romances under its HQN, Signature, Silhouette, and Mira imprints.
Sub-genres of romance frequently draw on other genres — romantic suspense draws on mysteries, crime fiction and thrillers, and futuristics are romances in a science fiction mode.
Romantica (a blend of romance and erotica) is often named as a sub-genre; the term is a trademark owned by growing electronic publisher Ellora's Cave. The common non-trademarked term for the sub-genre is erotic romance. Erotic romance includes romance novels from all the other romance sub-genres, as these books are predominantly romance novels that are characterized by strong sexual content. See also List of romantic novelists
Many of these terms, and more, were created and or popularized at All About Romance (www.allaboutromance.com).
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"Romance novel".
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