Books
fromSFGATE
4 days agoAt this new San Francisco shop, 'happily ever after is guaranteed'
A romance-only bookstore in San Francisco pairs genre-and-trope browsing with a tea and wine bar to help readers find specific happily-ever-after stories.
Alyssa started the video highlighting how Kennedy, who has also written MLM romance, responded to a message on X from a reader asking her when they can expect her to dabble in WLW, or sapphic, college romance. @_alyssaslibrary_ a lot of people have been recommending/reading the off campus series by elle kennedy recently so i wanted to make a video about it. this is specifically about the lesbophobia present in her books but she has many other issues as well. if you want a full breakdown go visit expertbooksmuggler.com "what's the deal with elle kennedy". its very informative and goes over everything about her #booktok #ellekennedy #offcampus
I love reading romance novels whole-heartedly. Knowing the general beats of what is going to happen, and that there will definitely be a happily ever after, is comforting to me. I love reading about yearning and love and sex, too. The books I read are not "closed-door romances"-they're pretty smutty with racy sex scenes. The particular book she was reading does start out very "casual" and before it turns more serious, though all with consenting adults.
Each week we cut through the noise to bring you smart, practical recommendations on how to live better from what is worth buying to the tools, habits and ideas that actually last. The Guardian's journalism is independent. We will earn a commission if you buy something through an affiliate link. Learn more. When it comes to Valentine's Day, I'm nostalgic for candy hearts and childhood crushes.
Henry's summer romance books often approach love with a sense of honesty and fun that the genre needs to thrive. Her characters may be enemies who find themselves living next door to each other or best friends who are scared to risk it all for something more, as is the case in "People We Meet on Vacation," which has been turned into a film set to debut on Netflix on January 9.
The notion of honesty, or the lack thereof, is, when you stop to think about it, a uniquely human concept. Few animals are capable of true deception, making the human capacity for lying one of our most dangerous features. Science fiction loves exploring this concept, especially when it comes to concepts of telepathy. In Alfred Bester's 1953 classic novel, The Demolished Man (and the first novel to ever win a Hugo award), a world of telepathy makes premeditated crime impossible.
Sisters Bea and Leah Koch, owners of The Ripped Bodice, recognized a gap between romance novels and independent bookstores, creating a special community in Park Slope.