The 25 Best Selling Romantasy Books of All Time

The best selling romantasy books blending epic fantasy with swoon-worthy romance. From Fourth Wing to ACOTAR, the genre taking BookTok by storm.

2026-02-16·18 min read
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The best selling romantasy books have exploded from a niche subgenre into one of the dominant forces in modern publishing. Romantasy -- the fusion of epic fantasy worldbuilding with central, often steamy romance plotlines -- has been propelled by BookTok virality, passionate fandoms, and a generation of readers who refuse to choose between swords and love stories. The genre has existed in various forms for decades, but the term "romantasy" crystallized around 2020 as readers needed a word for books that gave equal weight to magic systems and romantic tension. What separates romantasy from traditional fantasy romance is ambition. These are not romances with a fantasy backdrop. They are full-scale fantasy novels with intricate political systems, morally complex characters, and world-ending stakes -- where the romantic relationship is not a subplot but a load-bearing pillar of the narrative. This list collects the 25 best selling romantasy books of all time, from the series that defined the genre to the debuts that are shaping its future.

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What Makes a Great Romantasy Book?

A great romantasy book demands excellence on two fronts simultaneously. The fantasy worldbuilding must be immersive enough to stand on its own -- detailed magic systems, convincing political structures, and stakes that feel genuinely dangerous. The romance must be equally compelling -- characters with real chemistry, emotional arcs that earn their payoffs, and tension that builds across hundreds of pages before delivering satisfying resolution. The best romantasy authors understand that these two elements are not competing for space but reinforcing each other. The political alliance that requires a forced proximity. The magical bond that creates emotional vulnerability. The war that forces lovers onto opposite sides. When worldbuilding and romance are woven together so tightly that removing either would collapse the story, that is romantasy at its finest. Pacing matters too. Readers expect slow-burn tension, explosive set pieces, and emotional gut-punches timed with precision.

The Best Selling Romantasy Books of All Time

1. A Court of Thorns and Roses by Sarah J. Maas

A Court of Thorns and Roses cover

Sarah J. Maas's retelling of Beauty and the Beast set in a world of dangerous faeries launched the modern romantasy movement. Feyre Archeron, a mortal huntress, kills a wolf in the woods and is dragged to a magical land as punishment by the beast-like High Lord Tamlin. What begins as a fairy tale retelling deepens into a complex story about trauma, power, and choosing your own path. The book sold millions of copies and spawned a five-book series that grew progressively darker and more ambitious. Maas understood something her competitors missed -- that readers wanted heroines who fought with weapons and fell in love with equal ferocity. ACOTAR became the gateway drug for an entire generation of romantasy readers.

2. Fourth Wing by Rebecca Yarros

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Rebecca Yarros's 2023 release about a war college for dragon riders became the fastest-selling romantasy debut in publishing history. Violet Sorrengail, physically fragile and originally destined for the quiet Scribe Quadrant, is forced by her commanding general mother to enter the brutal Riders Quadrant, where students bond with dragons or die trying. The love interest, Xaden Riorson, is the son of a rebel leader -- which means trusting him could be as fatal as the dragons themselves. Yarros brought the intensity of her contemporary romance background to fantasy, delivering a book that reads at breakneck speed. BookTok made it a phenomenon, but the book's genuine strengths -- compelling characters, lethal stakes, and electric romantic tension -- sustained the momentum.

3. From Blood and Ash by Jennifer L. Armentrout

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Jennifer L. Armentrout's dark fantasy romance follows Poppy, a Maiden chosen by the gods, who has been sheltered her entire life and forbidden from being touched. When a new guard named Hawke arrives, Poppy begins to question everything she has been told about her world, her duty, and the mysterious Dark One who supposedly threatens everything she loves. The book is thick with forbidden-touch tension and builds to a twist that reframes the entire narrative. Armentrout, already a juggernaut in paranormal romance, brought her massive readership into the romantasy space, helping to expand the genre's audience. From Blood and Ash spawned a multi-book series that has collectively sold millions of copies worldwide.

4. The Cruel Prince by Holly Black

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Holly Black's faerie political thriller follows Jude Duarte, a mortal girl raised in the treacherous High Court of Faerie after her parents were murdered by a faerie general who then adopted her and her sisters. Jude is constantly belittled and threatened by the fae, especially the cruel and beautiful Prince Cardan, and she responds by fighting her way into the political power structure through cunning, violence, and sheer stubbornness. The romance between Jude and Cardan is enemies-to-lovers executed at the highest level -- both characters genuinely despise each other before their feelings shift, and the power dynamics between them are complex and constantly evolving. Black's faerie world is genuinely dangerous, not whimsical, and the political scheming rivals any adult fantasy novel.

5. Serpent & Dove by Shelby Mahurin

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Shelby Mahurin's debut pits a witch in hiding against the witch hunter she is forced to marry. Louise le Blanc, a runaway witch, and Reid Diggory, the church's most zealous hunter, are bound together in an arranged marriage that neither wants. The setup is irresistible -- she is everything he has sworn to destroy, and he is everything she has been raised to fear. Mahurin builds a richly detailed world inspired by pre-revolutionary France, with a magic system rooted in the balance between giving and taking. The slow-burn romance crackles with the tension of two people who are lying to each other about everything. The book became a New York Times best seller and established Mahurin as one of the genre's most inventive voices.

6. Kingdom of the Wicked by Kerri Maniscalco

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Kerri Maniscalco transported readers to a dark, seductive version of nineteenth-century Sicily where witches live in secret and the seven princes of Hell walk among them. When Emilia's twin sister is murdered, Emilia summons one of the Wicked -- Wrath, the prince of the sin of anger -- to help her find the killer. The deal she strikes pulls her into a deadly game among the demon princes, each of whom wants something from her. Maniscalco's Italian setting is lush and atmospheric, and the chemistry between Emilia and Wrath burns with restrained intensity. The book leans into gothic romance territory while maintaining the genre's expected fantasy worldbuilding. The series grew darker and more ambitious with each installment.

7. House of Salt and Sorrows by Erin A. Craig

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Erin A. Craig's retelling of the Twelve Dancing Princesses reimagines the fairy tale as a gothic horror romance. Annaleigh Thaumas is one of twelve sisters living in an isolated estate by the sea, but their number keeps shrinking -- sisters keep dying under mysterious circumstances, and Annaleigh begins to suspect that something supernatural is at work. When the surviving sisters start sneaking out to magical midnight balls, Annaleigh must unravel the mystery before she becomes the next victim. The book blends atmospheric horror, romance, and fairy tale elements into something that feels entirely fresh. Craig's prose is evocative and eerie, and the seaside gothic setting gives the story a texture distinct from the medieval European settings that dominate the genre.

8. The Bridge Kingdom by Danielle L. Jensen

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Danielle L. Jensen's enemies-to-lovers romance is set in a world of island kingdoms connected by a strategic bridge. Lara has been trained since childhood to be a weapon -- she will marry the King of the Bridge Kingdom and then destroy it from within. But when she arrives and discovers that the kingdom she was taught to hate is not what she expected, her mission collides with her growing feelings for her new husband. Jensen excels at political intrigue, and the Bridge Kingdom's unique geography -- a series of islands connected by a bridge that is both an architectural marvel and a military chokepoint -- gives the story a strategic dimension that many romantasy novels lack. The romance is slow-burn and deeply earned, with both characters forced to choose between duty and love.

9. Daughter of the Moon Goddess by Sue Lynn Tan

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Sue Lynn Tan's debut draws on Chinese mythology to tell the story of Xingyin, the daughter of Chang'e, the moon goddess imprisoned in the Celestial Kingdom. Raised in secret on the moon, Xingyin eventually enters the service of the celestial emperor to free her mother, concealing her true identity while navigating court politics, magical challenges, and a complicated relationship with the emperor's son. The book is notable for its gorgeous prose and its deep engagement with Asian mythology, offering readers a romantasy world far removed from the European-inspired settings that dominate the genre. The romance is tender and slow-building, and the magical set pieces are cinematic in scope. It marked an important expansion of whose stories the romantasy genre could tell.

10. The Jasmine Throne by Tasha Suri

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Tasha Suri's epic fantasy draws on the history and mythology of India to create a world of crumbling empires, forbidden magic, and dangerous political alliances. Malini, a princess imprisoned by her fanatical brother, and Priya, a maidservant hiding her connection to an ancient magical order, form an alliance that gradually becomes something deeper. The Jasmine Throne is romantasy on a grand scale -- the worldbuilding is dense, the political stakes are continental, and the magic system is tied to the land itself. The sapphic romance between Malini and Priya is written with restraint and intensity, and Suri refuses to simplify the power imbalance between a princess and a servant. It is one of the most literary entries in the genre.

11. Iron Flame by Rebecca Yarros

Iron Flame cover

The sequel to Fourth Wing arrived with one of the largest first printings in recent publishing history and immediately became a global best seller. Violet Sorrengail returns to Basgiath War College, but the revelations at the end of the first book have changed everything. Trust is fractured, new threats emerge, and the relationship between Violet and Xaden is tested by secrets and conflicting loyalties. Yarros expanded the worldbuilding significantly, introducing new dragons, new magic, and a broader conflict that raised the series from school setting to continental war. The book polarized some readers with its cliffhanger ending, but the commercial performance was staggering. It cemented the Empyrean series as the defining romantasy franchise of the 2020s.

12. A Court of Mist and Fury by Sarah J. Maas

A Court of Mist and Fury cover

Many readers consider the second ACOTAR book to be the best in the series and one of the finest romantasy novels ever written. After the traumatic events of the first book, Feyre finds herself bound to Tamlin in a relationship that has become suffocating. When Rhysand, the mysterious High Lord of the Night Court, calls in a bargain, Feyre is pulled into a new world of powerful allies, dangerous missions, and a love story that redefines everything she thought she wanted. Maas executed one of the boldest moves in genre fiction -- dismantling the love interest from book one and rebuilding the romance from scratch. The result is a book about recognizing toxicity, finding strength, and choosing a partner who treats you as an equal.

13. Bride by Ali Hazelwood

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Ali Hazelwood, already a best selling contemporary romance author, made her fantasy debut with Bride, a paranormal romantasy set in a world where vampires, werewolves, and humans coexist in uneasy political alliances. Misery Lark, a vampyre outcast, is traded to the werewolf pack as a political bride, bound to Alpha Lowe Moreland. But Misery has her own agenda -- she is searching for her missing best friend -- and Lowe is hiding something too. Hazelwood brought her trademark wit and scientific-minded heroines into the fantasy space, creating a book that felt fresh even within well-worn paranormal tropes. The forced-proximity romance between two characters who are supposed to be enemies crackles with tension and humor.

14. House of Flame and Shadow by Sarah J. Maas

House of Flame and Shadow cover

The third book in Maas's Crescent City series brought together characters from all three of her fictional universes -- Crescent City, ACOTAR, and Throne of Glass -- in a crossover event that sent her fandom into overdrive. Bryce Quinlan, trapped in another world, must find her way back to Midgard while uncovering ancient secrets that connect all of Maas's series. The book is sprawling, ambitious, and packed with the romantic payoffs and emotional moments that Maas's readers expect. It represents the far end of what romantasy can achieve in terms of narrative scope -- a shared universe of interconnected fantasy romances spanning dozens of books and millions of words.

15. Powerless by Lauren Roberts

Powerless cover

Lauren Roberts's debut, originally self-published on Wattpad, became a viral BookTok sensation before being picked up by a traditional publisher. Set in a world where everyone possesses magical abilities, Paedyn Gray is powerless -- an Ordinary hiding among the gifted to survive. When she is forced into the Purging Trials, a brutal competition that tests both magic and combat skills, she must rely on wit and deception to stay alive. The love interest, Kai Azer, is a prince and her most dangerous competitor. Roberts built the book around the tension of a heroine who is faking her way through a deadly game, and the enemies-to-lovers dynamic is sharpened by the fact that discovery would mean death. It is a Cinderella story with a body count.

16. Throne of Glass by Sarah J. Maas

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Before ACOTAR, Sarah J. Maas launched her career with Throne of Glass, the story of Celaena Sardothien, the kingdom's most feared assassin, who is pulled from a death camp to compete in a tournament to become the king's champion. The book began as a Cinderella retelling posted on FictionPress when Maas was a teenager, and its evolution from web fiction to a seven-book best selling series traces the entire arc of romantasy's rise. The early books blend romance, court intrigue, and tournament competition. The later books expand into epic fantasy warfare on a continental scale. Throne of Glass proved that readers had an enormous appetite for fantasy heroines who could fight and love in equal measure.

17. The Priory of the Orange Tree by Samantha Shannon

The Priory of the Orange Tree cover

Samantha Shannon's standalone epic is one of the most ambitious romantasy novels ever attempted. At over 800 pages, it weaves together four storylines across a world inspired by a mix of Western and Eastern mythologies, building toward a confrontation with an ancient draconic evil. The central romance between Queen Sabran and her secret protector Ead is sapphic and deeply intertwined with the political and magical stakes of the narrative. Shannon wrote the book as a feminist response to the male-dominated tradition of dragon-centric epic fantasy, and the result is a world where women hold power, wield magic, and shape the fate of nations. It is romantasy that aspires to the scale and ambition of Tolkien.

18. A Touch of Darkness by Scarlett St. Clair

A Touch of Darkness cover

Scarlett St. Clair's retelling of the Hades and Persephone myth set in a modern world where Greek gods walk among mortals became one of the best selling self-published romantasy novels of all time. Persephone, a journalism student trying to live a normal life, walks into a nightclub owned by Hades and her fate is sealed. St. Clair's version emphasizes the romantic tension between a god of death who is unexpectedly tender and a goddess of spring who is stronger than she appears. The book tapped into the enormous market for Greek mythology retellings and proved that romantasy could thrive in contemporary as well as medieval settings. The series has sold millions of copies across multiple formats.

19. Graceling by Kristin Cashore

Graceling cover

Kristin Cashore's 2008 debut predates the romantasy label but embodies everything the genre would become. Katsa is Graced with the ability to kill, which her uncle the king exploits by using her as his enforcer. When she meets Po, a prince Graced with combat skills, their partnership evolves into a romance built on mutual respect and physical equality. Cashore wrote one of the first fantasy novels with a heroine who explicitly does not want marriage or children, and whose love interest respects that completely. The worldbuilding is clean and functional, the action sequences are visceral, and the romance avoids every damsel-in-distress cliché that plagued earlier fantasy romances. Graceling was ahead of its time.

20. An Ember in the Ashes by Sabaa Tahir

An Ember in the Ashes cover

Sabaa Tahir's debut draws on ancient Rome to create a brutal military fantasy world where an empire built on conquest and slavery is beginning to crack. Laia, a Scholar whose brother has been arrested, goes undercover in the empire's most elite military academy. Elias, the academy's finest soldier, secretly wants to desert. Their paths collide in a story that balances political revolution, personal sacrifice, and a slow-burn romance across four books. Tahir does not flinch from violence, and the stakes feel genuinely dangerous -- characters die, plans fail, and victory always comes at a cost. The romance earns its emotional power precisely because it exists under such extreme pressure.

21. Sorcery of Thorns by Margaret Rogerson

Sorcery of Thorns cover

Margaret Rogerson's standalone romantasy is set in a world where books are alive -- literally. Great Libraries house magical grimoires that can transform into monstrous creatures if not properly maintained. Elisabeth, a foundling raised in one such library, discovers a conspiracy to unleash these dangerous books and is thrown together with Nathaniel Thorn, a sorcerer with a sharp tongue and a demon companion. The romance between Elisabeth and Nathaniel is warm and witty, with the kind of banter that makes readers turn pages for the dialogue as much as the plot. Rogerson's worldbuilding is wonderfully inventive, and the central metaphor -- that books are powerful, dangerous, and worth protecting -- resonates deeply with the bookish readers who make up the romantasy audience.

22. The Shadows Between Us by Traci Loudin

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Traci Loudin's standalone follows Alessandra, a heroine who is refreshingly upfront about her ambitions -- she plans to seduce the Shadow King, marry him, and then kill him to take his throne. The book subverts the typical romantasy formula by giving readers a protagonist who is a villain by her own admission. Alessandra is manipulative, ruthless, and entirely unapologetic, which makes her gradual, reluctant fall for the Shadow King all the more satisfying. The tone is lighter than most dark romantasy, almost playful in its acknowledgment of genre tropes. It became a BookTok favorite for readers who wanted morally gray heroines and enemies-to-lovers dynamics with genuine teeth.

23. Daughter of No Worlds by Carissa Broadbent

Daughter of No Worlds cover

Carissa Broadbent's self-published debut follows Aefe, a human woman with no magical ability in a world ruled by powerful vampire-like beings called the Hiaj. When she enters a deadly tournament to win a single wish, she must rely on combat training and cleverness rather than magic. Her alliance with a mysterious, powerful Hiaj competitor evolves into a slow-burn romance complicated by the vast power imbalance between their species. Broadbent excels at building tension through vulnerability -- Aefe is genuinely outmatched in every fight, and every victory feels earned. The book gained a devoted following through word-of-mouth recommendations and became one of the most successful self-published romantasy series of its era.

24. These Hollow Vows by Ciara Smyth

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Ciara Smyth's debut drops a human woman into the middle of a faerie court rivalry with life-or-death stakes. Brie, desperate to save her sister from a debt to a faerie lord, strikes a dangerous bargain that pulls her into the Unseelie Court, where two faerie princes compete for her loyalty and affection. The book features a love triangle that actually works -- both love interests are compelling, and the choice between them represents genuinely different futures for the heroine. Smyth builds a faerie world that is both alluring and menacing, where every gift comes with strings and every promise has a loophole. The romance is tangled with political intrigue in a way that makes each kiss feel like a strategic decision.

25. Wings of Shadow by Nicki Pau Preto

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Nicki Pau Preto's phoenix-rider fantasy blends aerial combat, political rebellion, and slow-burn romance into a series that builds in scope and intensity across each installment. The world features riders bonded to phoenixes -- firebirds that are born, die, and are reborn in flame -- and the conflict centers on a civil war between those who would control the phoenixes and those who would protect them. The romance is woven through the larger narrative of war and loyalty, and Preto excels at writing battle sequences that are both thrilling and emotionally grounded. The series represents the best of what romantasy can offer when the worldbuilding is given as much care as the love story, creating a narrative where the personal and the political are inseparable.

Best Romantasy Books by Sub-Category

Best ACOTAR-Like Romantasy

For readers who fell in love with Sarah J. Maas's fae courts and want more, several books capture that same blend of dangerous beauty and emotional intensity. From Blood and Ash by Jennifer L. Armentrout delivers a similar chosen-one heroine discovering her powers alongside a swoon-worthy love interest hiding enormous secrets. Kingdom of the Wicked by Kerri Maniscalco offers the same gothic atmosphere with Italian flair and demon princes instead of fae lords. The Cruel Prince by Holly Black provides fae political intrigue with a harder edge and a heroine who earns her power through cunning rather than magic. These Hollow Vows by Ciara Smyth captures the allure and danger of faerie courts with a love triangle that keeps readers guessing. Each of these books shares ACOTAR's DNA while bringing its own identity to the genre.

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Best Dark Romantasy

Dark romantasy pushes the genre toward morally gray characters, higher stakes, and more intense content. From Blood and Ash by Jennifer L. Armentrout sets the tone with its blend of forbidden desire and brutal violence. Kingdom of the Wicked by Kerri Maniscalco takes readers into the realm of demon princes where nothing is safe and attraction is a weapon. A Touch of Darkness by Scarlett St. Clair reimagines the Hades and Persephone myth with all its inherent darkness intact. An Ember in the Ashes by Sabaa Tahir grounds its romance in a world of slavery, torture, and military brutality that makes every tender moment feel precious. The Shadows Between Us by Traci Loudin gives readers a heroine who openly plans murder, creating a romance that is dark by design rather than by accident. These books prove that romantasy can be as intense and unflinching as any grimdark fantasy.

Best Romantasy Series

The best romantasy series build their romantic tension across multiple books, allowing relationships to develop with a depth that standalone novels cannot match. A Court of Thorns and Roses by Sarah J. Maas remains the gold standard, with five books that evolve from fairy tale retelling to epic fantasy warfare. The Empyrean series by Rebecca Yarros, beginning with Fourth Wing, delivers dragon-riding action and romantic stakes that escalate with each installment. From Blood and Ash by Jennifer L. Armentrout spans six books of escalating revelations and relationship evolution. Throne of Glass by Sarah J. Maas traces a seven-book arc from tournament competition to world-saving war. An Ember in the Ashes by Sabaa Tahir builds its four-book series toward a conclusion that earns every emotional beat through accumulation. For readers who want to live inside a romantasy world for hundreds of hours, these series deliver.

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Best Romantasy Debuts

The romantasy genre has been defined by explosive debut novels that announce new voices with immediate authority. Fourth Wing by Rebecca Yarros arrived fully formed, delivering a world, magic system, and romance that felt like the work of a veteran fantasy author (Yarros was already an established romance writer). Serpent & Dove by Shelby Mahurin built a rich historical fantasy world in her first novel with the confidence of someone who had been imagining it for years. Powerless by Lauren Roberts jumped from Wattpad to the New York Times best seller list on the strength of its Hunger Games-meets-romance concept. Daughter of the Moon Goddess by Sue Lynn Tan brought Chinese mythology into the genre with stunning prose. House of Salt and Sorrows by Erin A. Craig proved that gothic horror and romance could coexist beautifully. These debuts demonstrate that the genre's creative energy shows no signs of slowing.

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Frequently Asked Questions

What is the difference between romantasy and fantasy romance?

The distinction is primarily one of emphasis and scope. Fantasy romance is a romance novel set in a fantasy world -- the romantic relationship is the central plot, and the fantasy elements serve as setting and conflict. Romantasy gives equal weight to the fantasy worldbuilding and the romance. In a romantasy novel, the political intrigue, magic system, and world-ending stakes are as developed and important as the love story. Books like A Court of Mist and Fury and Fourth Wing spend as many pages on battle strategy, magical training, and political maneuvering as they do on romantic development. The romance is essential but so is everything around it. In practice, the line is blurry, and readers often use the terms interchangeably.

Do you have to read romantasy books in series order?

For most romantasy series, yes. The genre relies heavily on ongoing plot threads, character development across multiple books, and relationship arcs that build over hundreds of pages. Reading A Court of Mist and Fury before A Court of Thorns and Roses would spoil major revelations and undermine the emotional impact of the second book. Similarly, Iron Flame assumes complete knowledge of Fourth Wing. Standalone romantasy novels like The Priory of the Orange Tree, Sorcery of Thorns, and Bride can be read independently. When in doubt, check whether a book is labeled as part of a series and start with the first installment.

BookTok thrives on emotional intensity, and romantasy delivers it in concentrated doses. The genre's core elements -- enemies-to-lovers tension, dramatic plot twists, morally complex characters, and satisfying romantic payoffs -- are perfectly suited to the short-form video format. A reader can describe the premise of Fourth Wing (fragile girl forced into dragon-rider death school, falls for dangerous rival) in fifteen seconds and immediately hook an audience. The genre also generates passionate discourse -- ship debates, fan theories, reading order guides -- that fuels ongoing engagement. BookTok did not create romantasy's appeal, but it created the distribution network that allowed books like Powerless to jump from self-published obscurity to the New York Times best seller list in weeks.

What should I read first if I am new to romantasy?

Start with A Court of Thorns and Roses by Sarah J. Maas. It is the genre's most widely read entry point, and the first book is accessible enough for readers new to fantasy while establishing the tropes and tone that define the genre. If you prefer a standalone rather than committing to a series, Bride by Ali Hazelwood or Sorcery of Thorns by Margaret Rogerson are excellent single-volume options. If you want maximum action from page one, Fourth Wing by Rebecca Yarros opens at full speed and never slows down. And if you prefer a darker, more literary tone, The Jasmine Throne by Tasha Suri offers romantasy with the depth and ambition of traditional epic fantasy. Any of these will tell you quickly whether the genre is for you.

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