
Inside London’s first romance-only bookshop, Sarah Maxwell stands within the “smut hut” – a piece devoted to her retailer’s extra erotic titles.
Surrounded by cabinets stacked with brightly colored paperbacks – with titles together with Simply For the Summer time, Swept Away and The Friendship Fling – younger ladies are milling round, chatting and flicking by means of books.
Sarah says she needs to problem the critics of romance fiction – usually males – who diminish what she describes as “actually high-quality writing” by saying “it is simply smut”.
“A number of these books have sturdy world-building, wonderful character improvement and a extremely good plot,” Sarah says.
A surge in romance and fantasy gross sales final 12 months pushed UK fiction income above £1bn for the primary time, in keeping with a report launched final week.
As its recognition grows, some readers and business consultants say attitudes in direction of romance are altering for the higher, however others imagine sexism retains the style from the mainstream.

Romance fiction spans a dizzying vary of sub-genres and moods, all centred round heady love tales with a assured fortunately ever after – or HEA to followers – lending the books a comforting, cosy ambiance.
Romantasy – a mix of romance and fantasy – has turn out to be a dependable fixture on best-seller lists, largely because of the cult-like following it has gained amongst TikTok’s studying neighborhood, BookTok.
Main sequence like Fourth Wing and A Court docket of Thorns and Roses see feminine protagonists enter high-stakes relationships set towards magical, incredible worlds.
Many readers choose what to learn primarily based on tropes comparable to “enemies to lovers” and “second-chance romance”, with books marketed beneath these banners.
A e-book’s “spice stage” – or how a lot intercourse might be discovered between the covers – can also be a significant component, usually centered on feminine pleasure, energy and emotional connection.

‘Some individuals flip their nostril up’
“I am into cowboys in the mean time,” says Sky, 23 from London – a reference to “cowboy romances”, a rising sub-genre whose books happen in a western setting – usually the American frontier.
Sky and one other fan, Chantelle, 24 describe themselves as “very proud romance readers”. They hint their love of the style to studying fanfiction beneath their desks in school, and now get their suggestions by means of BookTok.

However Sky and Chantelle admit not everybody reacts positively once they speak about their favorite books.
“Some individuals do flip their nostril up, roll their eyes typically,” says Chantelle, “however I simply do not actually care”.
Caroline, 29, admits she “sneered a bit” at romance in her early twenties.
“I used to learn romances after I was a young person,” she remembers, “however I received away from it and began studying stuff I assumed was actually good.”
Then final 12 months, Caroline picked up Emily Henry’s bestseller E-book Lovers – an “enemies to lovers” story a few literary agent and a e-book editor, set in a picturesque small city.

“I realised I hadn’t consumed one thing guilt-free in my studying for a extremely very long time,” Caroline says, “and it was simply actually enjoyable”.
She’s since devoured the complete sequence of A Court docket of Thorns and Roses, a stalwart of bestseller lists and lots of readers’ first style of romantasy.
“It is good to really feel all the emotions with one thing that is simply going to essentially entertain you,” Caroline says.
Victoria, 31, has lengthy learn each romance and fantasy for much-needed escapism: “Generally I feel all of us want just a little little bit of a fortunately ever after in life.”
She says “chick-lit” stigma continues to be sturdy, however thinks attitudes are beginning to change as individuals converse brazenly about their love of the style on-line.
“We’re speaking about it another way,” Victoria says. “Responsible pleasures? Do I have to really feel responsible for loving one thing?”
‘These are the Swifties’
Each romance and fantasy noticed report gross sales final 12 months, according to data gathered from greater than 7,000 UK booksellers.
Romance & Sagas, as they’re formally categorised, elevated from £62m in 2023 to £69m in 2024, whereas Science Fiction & Fantasy noticed an excellent larger bump – from £59m to £83m.
Each classes have seen these numbers skyrocket because the pandemic, rising year-on-year – again in 2019, romance’s gross sales sat at £24m, and fantasy at £29m.
Ladies beneath 35 years outdated make up greater than half of romantasy purchases, figures present.
Literary agent Rebeka Finch, 28, says the “voracious” urge for food amongst this demographic, largely pushed by BookTok, displays broader client habits.
She likens romance readers to Swifties – Taylor Swift followers – identified for proudly owning a number of copies of the identical album and desirous to really feel a tangible connection to their favorite artist.
“They’re the individuals which are so obsessive about books that they are going to purchase a Kindle version, they are going to have a tough again version, they are going to have a paperback version.
“They are going to have so many various volumes of the identical e-book as a result of they like it a lot.”

Bookshop proprietor Sarah Maxwell says the demographic gave her the arrogance to open Saucy Books in the course of a excessive avenue downturn that has seen many impartial bookshops undergo.
“Folks have this notion that is it isn’t good enterprise,” Sarah says, however the neighborhood is “sturdy” and the authors prolific, offering loads of inventory.
“Millennial ladies have probably the most disposable earnings,” she provides. “Romance is severe enterprise.”
Regardless of this business development, Rebeka says broader attitudes stay derisive – notably in the case of “spicy” titles.
“‘That is fairy porn’ – the quantity of instances that I’ve heard that!” Rebeka exclaims.
“A part of me needs to be like, ‘So what?’ This business has been made for the male gaze for thus lengthy.
“It is such a small share of the e-book and really… it is largely portraying pretty wholesome sexual relationships.”
‘It boils all the way down to cash’
Throughout the publishing business, attitudes are altering however primarily for business causes, in keeping with Katie Fraser, who writes for publishing journal, The Bookseller.
Romance has been a “maligned style” inside the business that “some individuals simply did not need to be related to,” she says. However as romance readers turn out to be an “financial power,” publishers have needed to take it extra severely and make investments.
“Publishing is an business, so that is what it finally boils all the way down to,” Katie says.

Creator Bea Fitzgerald, 28, says she benefitted from this business shift, promoting her younger grownup fantasy rom-com Lady Goddess Queen on the peak of the romance increase.
“That type of area opening up is what allowed me to maneuver into the market,” she says.
Bea beforehand labored in publishing, and remembers seeing “lots of books that might have been printed as romance [instead] printed in different literary genres as a result of they assume that it’s going to not enchantment to a sure sort of viewers”.
The style is nothing new, she quips, having lengthy been “championed” by publishers comparable to Mills & Boon. The distinction now’s that younger individuals “like issues actually unapologetically”.
“They will not simply learn a romance, they will go shout about it on-line, after which they will go to a romance conference, and so they’ll discuss to their associates about it.”
Whereas the neighborhood has grown, Bea thinks essential appraisal of the style continues to be missing.
“Will we see broadsheets reviewing romance books? No. And they’re simply as necessary, literary books.”
Bea believes that is each as a result of “the great majority” of the readers are ladies, and just because the tales are blissful.
“It goes in keeping with this type of tutorial elitism that for one thing to be severe, it must be a Shakespearean tragedy,” she says. “Whereas if it is blissful, it isn’t severe, it hasn’t received literary advantage. It clearly does – after all it does.”