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How Did You Get Into Reading Romances?
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Lisa Kay, Tinker Bell
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Sep 01, 2015 09:54AM

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Exactly like you said, Amanda! For me was the same!!!
First the fairy tales and then all the rest! LOL
I've always read romance and I never stopped! But I love all the other genres: I grow up when Fantasy was born, so I can truthfully say that for me Fantasy = Romance+Intrigue+warriors+magic! The same is for SF.
Basically I think that if a book is fincion, then in most genres you'll find romance woven into! It's unavoidable!
Even the classics are romance! Think Shakespeare! Who would twitch nose to his work!?! And shall we talk about Tolstoy? The snobs never read Anna Karenina?? Or Doctor Zhivago by Pasternak, or Great Gatsby...
Or Asimov, or Heinlain ... there're so many!!!!
So when people snob my romance books always say them that!
And look what happened with Gone With The Wind: when I was in elementary school it was considered romance, but nowdays it is an obligatory read in school!
So, my romantic friends, I'm happy to say to all that I read and love reading romance in all forms! And that means ALL boooks! :)

I remember when I first discovered romance books , I was 15 , I was spending summer holidays at my grandmother’s . One afternoon I was so bored I didn’t have anything to do ( no internet back then :) ) , I decided to go and look into my mom’s and aunt old room, I went through their old stuff and then I found a collection of harlequin books, I picked one out of curiosity and I started reading and I couldn’t stop. I was hooked on romance since then, especially the HEA ones, I believe that everyone deserves a HEA , it’s not a realistic thinking but I really hope so :)

There's just this aura surrounding the entire romance genre that for some reason still makes people avoid the genre or hide it when they read it. I think that the advent of ereaders has really helped this. People feel that they can now read whatever they'd like in public with noone the wiser because there's no cover for people to see.

I have a kindle but I still feel uncomfortable reading smut in public , I always check if people are looking at me ( as if they know :D )
Thanks God for the privacy of the eareders!



Don't get me wrong, technology has it's place, but "back in the day" we walked across the street and spoke to our friends face to face, or like you said, went to the favorite hangout spot to whisper secrets, discuss hopes and dreams, or just joke around and be together. I don't think our kids get that opportunity as often as we did.
Anyway, thanks for sharing such a happy memory!

My pleasure, Becky! I smile whenever my mind goes back there-- happy times.:)

Yes, Becky, sometimes I wonder about it all. Thinking of taking a "tech free week-end" one of these days. Probably would be good for my soul.




What got you on the journey to reading romances?
For me, as a younger woman, I saw an ad in a newspaper from Harlequins. The book covers caught my attention, it wa..."
I too got into reading romance through Harlequinn. I used to pick up the books from my local thrift store for 25 cents each. I loved them all through high school and a little bit afterward until I started moving on up to full novels.

I totally can't resist sharing on this one haha!
So I luuurved R.L. Stine books as a kid, specifically Fear Street. When I was 9, I ran outta FS books to read. I'd read them ALL. Dead serious.
Sooo my sister (11 years older) took me to the public library and introduced me to my first romance novel, Silver Angel. That summer, I read every single Johanna Lindsey novel I could find. Also dead serious.
And here I am 22 years later tee hee.
٩(๑•◡-๑)۶ ⒽⓤⒼ ❤,
Ann

I totally can't resist sharing on this one haha!
So I luuurved R.L. Stine books as a kid, specifically Fear Street. When I was 9, I ran outta FS books to read. I'd read them ALL...."
Awesome!

I watched the movie "Love Comes Softly" on the Hallmark Channel, and loved it. While the credits were rolling I saw it was based on a book by Janet Oke, and that began my foray into reading Christian fiction, especially romance.
The Michael Landon Jr. film adaption is much better than the book, because Clark's daughter Missy is about 10 years old in the film, and her interactions with her new stepmother Marty are priceless! Where in the book you miss all those because Missy is just an infant.
I was a Christian at that time, but these days I am a Naturalist- believing nothing exists outside the natural world. I still prefer "clean" reads, but not the god-talk/religious proselytizing, anymore.
I enjoy how I can relive the fun, and excitement my husband and I shared through lighthearted romance stories, if they are not full of ANGST and book-length ridiculous misunderstanding! Especially love witty banter and teasing.


Most of my life I've been a non-fiction reader, particularly history. I read every biography in my school library when I was in elementary school and particularly enjoyed the ones that were US History related. In high school, I discovered a love of literature courtesy of two wonderful English teachers, Alice White and Barbara Hughes. In college I read a mixture of non-fiction, as a history major, and literature since it was my minor, mostly reading classics (Poe, Hawthorne, Melville). For the next 35 years as a history teacher, I was mostly history related non-fiction. I am a Civil War reenactor and taught Civil War studies so the majority of my reading was in that time period.
When I retired I embarked on a writing career intending to write historical fiction. After 100,000 words of a Civil War Era trilogy, I started looking into the publishing and how to market my novels. I discovered that romance novels are the most popular genre in fiction. What I had already written had a very strong romantic element to it and I decided that it could be considered a romance novel. So I began researching the genre.
Last November I took the NaNoWriMo challenge and wrote the first 50,000 words of a contemporary romance that is now the prequel (in a weird sort of out of historical order kinda way) to my trilogy. I have been reading romance novels as fast as I can when I'm not writing since then.
My mother read romance all her life and I had always dismissed it as not real literature. But I think romance as a genre has come a long way and encompasses such a broad range of subgenres that it is far more complex than it used to be. I now love reading romance novels as much as I love writing them. I'm working on publishing my first novel, a contemporary second chance story that features a hero and heroine that are over 50, something I think is lacking in the current offerings.
So hopefully you all will enjoy reading my novel, "We Will Ne'er Be Younger" when it is released on November 10th of this year. In the meantime read on and keep the reviews coming. It helps those of us new to the genre winnow the chaff and get to the good stuff!

About a year ago I found a contemporary romance on NetGalley. It was so out of my normal reads but I gave it a chance. I've graduated to actually buying inexpensive Kindle romance books, all contemporary, but I like the ones with little to no sex and I like it if they have some aspects of a literary story-line. Ultimately, I like the ones that end mostly feel-good

I have stepped out of my comfort zone this year and read lots of contemporary. I think its good to try something new now and then.

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Silver Angel (other topics)The Other Side of Midnight (other topics)
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