![]() ![]() These enemies to lovers books also include rock star romances, office romances, fake relationship romances, fantasy romances and second chance romances to name a few. There are contemporary romance books, historical romance novels, MM romance books, new adult romance books and young adult romance books as well. In this book list of my most favorite enemies to lovers books, you’ll find books that span different romance book genres and those that include other romance book tropes as well. It’s also fun to read enemies to lovers books that are based more on a healthy dose of competition rather an all out hate stirring up the relationship. I’m partial to the romance novels where there is true animosity between the main characters due to a misunderstanding or an incident that occurred when they first met, setting their relationship off on the wrong foot. The saying is that there is a thin line between love and hate, and that couldn’t be more true when it comes to romance books in this popular trope. This initial animosity often leads to great banter between characters as the sparks inevitably fly and as those feelings begin to turn from hate to love. The relationships in these books always start off with a bit of hate stewing between the main characters. There are a lot of romance book tropes that I love to read (and I few I don’t) and enemies to lovers stories is one trope that never disappoints. She lives outside of Washington DC with her family and two bratty cats.If you’re a fan of enemies to lovers books, then you’re going to want to add each of these books to your must read list! Why Enemies to Lovers Books are the Best Liz Lawson is the author of “The Lucky Ones, a Kirkus Reviews Best Book of 2020, and the upcoming YA mystery The Agathas, which she co-wrote with NYT Bestselling author Kathleen Glasgow. ![]() ![]() Support local bookshops by buying your contemporary romances at. Honorable mentions: Spanish Love Deception by Elena Armas, The Layover by Lacie Waldon, A Pho Love Story by Loan Le. Plus, it features one of the most endearing best-friendships in recent memory. Henry doesn’t shy away from tackling hard subjects, putting her characters in painful situations that allow them to grow even outside of the burgeoning central romance, while also providing the reader with amply witty banter. Henry’s adult debut is voicey, heartwarming, and will grab you from the very first page and not let you go. Full of banter and fun, the book also touches on deeper issues as Emma struggles to figure out the best way to come out as bisexual to her family, and Sophia deals with the aftermath of her parents’ divorce.īeach Read by Emily Henry Emily Henry is well on her way to becoming a household name, and Beach Read is one of the prime reasons why. I Think I Love You by Auriane Desombre Um, a Sapphic, YA, modern-day retelling of Much Ado about Nothing? Sign us up.ĭesombre’s debut is dual-POV and set during a NYC summer against the backdrop of an independent film festival. In recent years, thanks in large part to social media, the trope has come back with a vengeance, and we’re here to bring you ten of the best examples of it in contemporary romance novels. Perhaps the most famous example of this is Pride & Prejudice, but the trope existed well before Jane Austen’s time-think about Shakespeare’s Much Ado About Nothing and The Taming of the Shrew. Since the beginning of time (or at least, modern literature), humans have loved stories centered around couples who initially hate each other but slowly, and usually because of circumstances outside of their control, fall in love. ![]()
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