Book Riot's Read Harder Challenge discussion
2019 Read Harder Challenge
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Task #16: An historical romance by an AOC
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Cristy
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Dec 27, 2018 10:04AM

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The titles I have read by Alyssa Cole all have at least two sex scenes, some have quite a few more. An Extraordinary Union was one of the more sexy & explicit.

Thanks for the suggestion! I think I will choose this one as well. Romance is not my thing, but this book was actually already on my radar.

For categories I dread, I'll pick graphic novels or children's books, as long as the task description doesn't exclude them. There are a lot of graphic novels written by authors of Asian descent.
But for this one, I'm going to read either Indigo (set during the Underground Railroad) or Like Water for Chocolate (set during the Mexican Revolution).

Mya -- You are right! I was thinking of Piper Huguley. Not sure how I came to be confused, since I don't usually read her.

If you stretch the historical to include fantasy you could read Ash (a Cinderella re-imagining) or Huntress (a prequel to Ash).
The very few queer historical romances I can think of are all written by white people.

I'd like to give some context to this task and the fact that there are always romance tasks on the RH challenge (and likely always will be). The fact that so many of you are commenting that romance is "drivel" or that you hate romance as a whole category is precisely why romance likely will always be included. While I understand that not every genre is for everyone, including romance (and comics - this is a criticism I get for comics tasks too), the ENTIRE POINT of RH is to encourage you to stretch yourselves and your reading lives. Romance novels have a very defined criteria: a Happily Ever After or Happily For Now ending. Whatever happens prior to that in whatever context is only partially the point. Romance is a wide and varied genre and I encourage you to seek out sub-genres to fulfill these tasks. (But for the record The Color Purple is NOT romance.) Book Riot will be providing recommendations specifically for this task early in 2019 but there are a huge number of resources on Book Riot and elsewhere online that can help.
Romance readers are not less than or somehow stupider than the average reader. Romance novels can be complex and well-written and heartbreaking and full of complicated characters, energizing plots, and beautiful language. If you automatically dread all romance tasks, I'd ask you to examine why, especially if you're doing so without even attempting to find something that might appeal to you. Romance by authors of color are particularly underrepresented in publishing, historical romance by authors of color even more so. My hope by including these kinds of tasks is that you'll, yes, find a book or an author you may not have otherwise picked up that you love, but also to tell readers of all kinds and publishers of romance in particular that this is a niche worth filling.
I take into consideration the feedback I receive about RH every year when I'm designing the new task list. I'm open to all constructive criticism. But criticism that I shouldn't include romance because you don't like the genre is not criticism I'm going to listen to, particularly not when the feedback from the other direction -- that readers have discovered that they love romance after "being forced" to read it for RH -- is so overwhelming.

Titles I've come across that may fit (some I've read; others I have yet to):
Remains of the Day (Ishiguro); In the Skin of a Lion (my favourite Ondaatje novel); Call Me By Your Name (if 1983 can be considered historical, though I'm sure it can't but read the book anyway; it's beautiful.)
And if you want something more hefty subject-wise, maybe consider authors from an array of countries around the world, where romance and politics (and history... or historical fiction) often overlap (as an added bonus it could be translated by a woman, for a double-up):
Eva Luna (Allende)--there are plenty of others to choose from her
Love in the Time of Cholera or One Hundred Years of Solitude (Marquez)
A Suitable Boy (Seth)
A Riot of Goldfish (Kanoko Okamoto)
A Change of Skin (Carlos Fuentes)--and others probably fit this category
Like Water for Chocolate (Esquival)
My Name is Red (Pamuk)
The Map of Love (Ahdaf Soueif)


Thanks, Rachel.
If I have to read true crime, y'all can snuggle up with a romance. ;)
May I suggest Sherry Thomas? She's an Asian-American author who is one of the best romance writers out there. Her Lady Sherlock series is an excellent mystery series, but her historicals are among the absolute tops. I particularly adore His at Night and Not Quite a Husband.
A few other suggestions:
The Twentieth Wife, book one in the Taj Mahal trilogy by Indu Sundaresan
Courtney Milan's Brothers Sinister series, particularly The Suffragette Scandal
A Summer for Scandal and The Infamous Miss Rodriguez by Lydia San Andres
To Love a Scandalous Duke by Liana de la Rosa
Butterfly Swords by Jeannie Lin
Hamilton's Battalion: A Trio of Romances, a trio of short stories inspired by the world of Hamilton. Two of the three novellas are written by AOC - Courtney Milan and Alyssa Cole.
Agnes Moor's Wild Knight by Alyssa Cole -- it's a short story, only 40 pages or so, and it's the only romance I know of featuring a black woman in the Tudor court.
The Cost of Hope by G.S. Carr
For me, I will probably read the new Ms. Bev, Rebel, and the second and third books in the Loyal League series, A Hope Divided and An Unconditional Freedom.

Thank you thank you thank you Rachel! It makes me sad to see all the hate and dismissiveness heaped on romance readers. If someone has tried romance and not cared for it, fine- just don't be rude about it. If one hasn't tried romance and is being judgemental about it, they're just being a hypocrite- one shouldn't judge what one is unfamiliar with. Romance is not my preferred genre (though I've liked what I've tried), but I've been treated with derision for liking scifi/fantasy, and it's maddening. I'm looking forward to the recommendations, and to stretching myself a bit. Also, it'd be nice to see a little more love for graphic novels and manga- this is about getting out of our comfort zones, folks, embrace it! And if you just can't get through the challenge without complaining about it, you might want to ask yourself why you're doing the challenge in the first place.....


https://www.goodreads.com/list/show/1...


We had an interesting discussion in one of the graphic novel threads last year about how the "hatred" for comics was actually frustration. People who read comics all the time don't realize how much information they're able to quickly absorb from a panel through years of practice. For someone who has only read text-based media, comics can be confusing and even intimidating. You have to learn how to read (and look) in a whole new way. Once that confusion was brought to light, people on both sides of the debate lowered their defenses a bit.
I wonder if something similar might be going on with romance. When I see a veteran romance reader, she's reading at a rate of about 1-2 seconds a page. It seems like she's absorbing the information in a way that I'm just not.
What I'm curious about is how romance readers find tension that makes a romance a page-turner for them. When I know that the characters will resolve their differences and end up together in a HEA, the tension drains from the story for me.
(Hopefully this doesn't come across as complaining or dismissive - I'd genuinely like to know how romance readers approach the genre.)

It's the difference between the journey and the destination. If all you care about is the destination, then knowing it will be a HEA makes it dull. If you enjoy the journey, then the book can be a treat.


Thank you for recommending Sherry Thomas. I found her Sherlock books from last year's challenge so I will be reading her for this prompt this year.

What I'm curious about is how romance readers find tension that makes a romance a page-turner for them. When I know that the characters will resolve their differences and end up together in a HEA, the tension drains from the story for me. "
Speaking for me alone, the tension is not in will they get there, but how will they get there.
For example, the pleasure in a Poirot novel is not "Will Poirot be able to solve this murder?" because of course he will, that's why we love Poirot. And the certainty that he will solve the murder is actually part of the pleasure of reading those books. Unlike real life, when murders are often unsolved, or when people are convicted on hunches, or when families of victims never have answers, in a mystery we have closure and we read for the certainty of that closure. So the narrative or dramatic tension lies not in whether, but in how he will solve the murder. What clues mattered, what are red herrings, who are the wrongfully suspected and who are the hidden criminals? That's why you read those kinds of mysteries.
Similarly, with romance, we know the couple will get together and find their happy ever after/happy for now. That certainty is part of the pleasure of reading romance, part of the fantasy and escapism of the genre. Again, in real life, romantic relationships are not certain, there's always room for doubt, but in romance, the outcome is certain. So the dramatic and narrative tension is not in whether the characters fall in love, but in how the characters fall in love. How do they meet, what are their circumstances, how do they grow and change, how do they come together, what forces tear them apart, how do they overcome and become better partners? That's why you read romance.

Now that is a clever workaround.



Wish we had Like buttons...

👍 :)


Well said!

Just piping in that since Rachel said "Romance novels have a very defined criteria: a Happily Ever After or Happily For Now ending" Ishuguro "Remains of the Day" does not count though it is great.

I think the idea behind this category is to read something that you might find in the Romance genre section of your local library or bookstore. Love in the Time of Cholera, although a great book, is shelved in the general fiction section, not the romance section.
Respectfully to all those trying to find loopholes, I don't understand attempting a reading challenge like this if you are totally unwilling to expand your reading horizons. Life is too short! If you just want to read what you want to read, there is nothing wrong with that - but it's not what Read Harder is designed for. I'm not a manga reader AT ALL, and don't usually enjoy science fiction or horror - but I'll be reading manga this year and read science fiction and horror last year because it was the spirit of the challenge.


I agree that you weren't--someone else threw "loophole" into this thread.
I first read romance for the last year because of this challenge so I was very new too and found it as varied a genre as any. Some of it I loved and some I hated--just like every other genre. I am glad Rachel defined it as HEA--I find that a much more useful definition than what I had thought it was (basically "picture of jacked man on cover").

My comments weren't just directed at you - I apologize if it came across that way! I still don't think Love in the Time of Cholera is really a romance... but it is categorized that way by some Goodreads readers on its page, so YMMV.

New author to me! Thanks Michele!


I'm sorry you feel this way, but these threads are specifically for asking questions and getting feedback. Not all of it is feedback you're going to like, as people don't have a problem saying when books don't meet the challenge tasks. I don't know the correct answer to whether all Latinx writers are AOC, as in your original question. But I do know that in the spirit of the challenge, Love in the Time of Cholera is not a romance.


Try a different subgenre then? Goodreads has lists of genres that include science fiction romance, time travel romance, paranormal romance, western romance, and several others, and I know you can find further breakdowns for genres on wikipedia.
https://www.goodreads.com/genres/romance

(Sorry, apparently I am irritated today.)
But really, it's your challenge. No one is keeping tabs on you. If you don't want to do it, don't do it. *shrug*


My second thought, as I was googling male romance novelists and the books that are recommended for dudes who don't like romance, was that damn, the parameters of this one specifically (must be an AOC, must be historical) limits this one a LOT more than some of the previous challenges have. I've been searching for like 45 minutes and I've found only one male non-white author that also writes romances, but they're not historicals.


I'm in the same boat. This is the only task that I have NO IDEA what to choose. Romance novels tend to bore me immensely and I have yet to finish one, outside of Jane Austen (which I really consider more comedy/satire anyways).

This book does sound like the most interesting premise, to me, out of everything that's been listed. I'll give it a try!

Don't misunderstand. This book IS "romancy." But surprisingly it really held my interest!

I just finished this and it's delightful. I loved Jade's voice, so no-nonsense and matter of fact and unapologetic. It's also written as a diary so it would work for Task #1, for those double dipping.


Frank Yerby wrote a number of historical romances.
Wikipedia has this comment: “In 1946, he published The Foxes of Harrow, a southern historical romance, which became the first novel by an African-American to sell more than a million copies. In this work he faithfully reproduced many of the genre's most familiar features, with the notable exception of his representation of African-American characters, who bore little resemblance to the "happy darkies" that appeared in such well-known works as Gone With the Wind (1936).“
Books mentioned in this topic
A Song for the Stars (other topics)A Song for the Stars (other topics)
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An Extraordinary Union (other topics)
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Authors mentioned in this topic
Alyssa Cole (other topics)Alyssa Cole (other topics)
Alyssa Cole (other topics)
Alyssa Cole (other topics)
Alyssa Cole (other topics)
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