Imaginary Worlds - Swept Away by Romantasy

Episode Date: June 19, 2024

The hottest trend in fantasy novels – in fact the hottest trend in publishing overall – is fantasy romance or romantasy. These stories take place in worlds with dragons, faeries, vampires and were...wolves but the driving plot is romance with a guaranteed happy ending. For many fans of traditional fantasy novels, the fact that romantasy exists may be surprising news. But romantasy is a cultural and economic juggernaut. Dartmouth professor Marcela di Blasi and cultural critic Kayleigh Donaldson explain where romantasy came from and how it became so popular. Fantasy authors C.L. Polk, and J.D. Evans talk about why they came to romantasy and how fans have had to create their own spaces. And Katherine Zofrea gives me a tour of The Ripped Bodice, a romance bookstore with an ample fantasy section. Plus, we hear readings by actress Tanya Rich. In the episode, we heard about some of the most famous romantasy authors like Sarah J. Maas and Rebecca Yarros. Professor Marcela di Blasi is working on a non-fiction book about BIPOC romantasy authors, and she also recommends these books. Anna Marie McLemore’s When The Moon Was Ours Zoraida Cordova's Hollow Crown Duology Analeigh Sbrana's Lore of the Wilds Kimberly Lemming's That Time I Got Drunk and Saved a Demon Sabaa Tahir's An Ember in the Ashes series Gabriela Romero LaCruz's The Sun and the Void Mikayla D. Hornedo's Blood and Brujas Claire Legrand’s Lightbringer trilogy. Today's episode is sponsored by ShipStation, Henson Shaving, TodayTix and Babbel. Go to www.shipstation.com and use the code IMAGINARY to sign up for your free 60-day trial. Visit www.hensonshaving.com/imaginary and enter IMAGINARY at checkout to get 100 free blades with your purchase. You must add both the 100-blade pack and the razor for the discount to apply. Go to TodayTix.com/imaginary and use the promo code IMAGINARY to get $20 off your first Today Tix purchase. Get up to 60% off at Babbel.com/imaginary Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:00 You're listening to Imaginary Worlds, a show about how we create them and why we suspend our disbelief. I'm Eric Malinsky. When I walk home at the end of the day, I pass by a bookstore in my neighborhood called The Ripped Bodice. It's a romance bookstore. And sometimes there are lines around the block as people are waiting for author signings or other events. I stopped by recently to talk with the manager, Catherine Zofri. Hi. Hi, I'm Eric. Hi, I'm Catherine. So nice to meet you. Hi, nice to meet you.
Starting point is 00:00:29 How's it going? I asked Catherine to bring me to the section on fantasy romance. It's a big section. They labeled it fantasy and paranormal, but the term that is most widely used is romanticism. I mean, definitely the big seller is A Court of Thorns and Roses. I'm sure you will hear that one come up time and time again. Looking at a couple different ones, you have Fourth Wing. That's another one that is very popular by Rebecca Yaros. Oh, could you also describe them? What is Fourth Wing?
Starting point is 00:01:02 very popular by Rebecca Yaros. Oh, can you also describe them? Like what is Fourth Wing? So Fourth Wing is about a girl named Violet who goes to a basically dragon riding college. But basically she's like learning some different things about the society that she lives in that maybe she didn't really know about before, all while learning to ride dragons.
Starting point is 00:01:25 Yeah. Cool. So what are some other ones then? I'd say a really popular one is actually a really fun title. It's called That Time I Got Drunk and Saved a Demon by Kimberly Lemming. It's a really fun, I describe it as like a rom-com type fantasy romance. So it's very fun, very funny. So that one is definitely a popular one for sure.
Starting point is 00:01:48 Romanticy is extremely popular. Half of the best-selling books in any genre this year are romantic novels. And the author that you're going to hear people mention a lot is Sarah J. Moss. She wrote A Court of Thrones and Roses, among many other books, and so far she is the best-selling author of 2024. Not just the best-selling fantasy author, she's the best-selling author overall. Here is the actress Tanya Rich reading from A Court of Thorns and Roses. The main character has been transported to the Fey Realm, a place that she spent her whole life being afraid of without really knowing what was there. Everything about the stranger
Starting point is 00:02:30 radiated sensual grace and ease. High Fey, no doubt. His short black hair gleamed like a raven's feathers, offsetting his pale skin and blue eyes so deep they were violet, even in the firelight. They twinkled with amusement as he beheld me. A half-smile played on his lips. What's a mortal woman doing here on fire night? His voice was a lover's purr that sent shivers through me, caressing every muscle and bone and nerve. I took a step back.
Starting point is 00:03:11 My friends brought me. The drumming was increasing in tempo, building to a climax I didn't understand. It had been so long since I'd seen a bare face that looked even vaguely human. so long since I'd seen a bare face that looked even vaguely human. His clothes, all black, all finely made, were cut close enough to his body that I could see how magnificent he was, as if he'd been moulded from the night itself. And who are your friends? He was still smiling at me, your friends. He was still smiling at me, a predator sizing up prey. Two ladies. I lied again. Their names? He prowled closer, slipping his hands into his pockets. I retreated a little more and kept my mouth shut. When it became apparent I wouldn't answer, he chuckled. You're welcome, he said, for saving you. I bristled at his arrogance, but retreated another step. I was terrified of him,
Starting point is 00:04:18 but I wasn't about to let him know. Kaylee Donaldson is a cultural critic who's been covering this phenomenon. I think what makes Romanticy really interesting is to see how incredibly quickly it became commodified and how very quickly the chasing of the trend became. We went from suddenly, oh, there's this writer called Sarah J Ma Moss who was rising when I was a blogger, to suddenly every book wants to be Sarah J. Moss. Bloomsbury Publishing used the term romanticism to market Sarah J. Moss's books. They didn't invent the word, but they popularized it. What really made her work take off were the book influencers on social media, otherwise known
Starting point is 00:05:05 as BookTube, BookTalk, and Bookstagram. Not every writer likes the term Romantasy, partially because it's so trendy. Some of them prefer to describe their work as fantasy romance. That way you know it's not just a romance novel with a fantasy backdrop. You're going to get a lot of the world-building that you'd expect in a fantasy novel, but struct going to get a lot of the world building that you'd expect in a fantasy novel. But structurally, it is still a romance novel. The basic definition of a romance novel is it has to have a love story in it and it has to have a happy ending. Often when people think of classic fantasy, the love story is usually a subplot or it's like a reward for the hero. It's not really the driving emotional or thematic stake of the story.
Starting point is 00:05:50 Whereas to compare it to something like Sarah J Maas' books, which are all about the relationship, I would argue far more than the world building or any of the kind of narrative heft. Same with something like Rebecca Yaros' Empyrean series, which is all about a school for people training to be dragon riders. So much of that is about not even just necessarily the romance, but the sex, the sexual tension. I think that's another thing that is really driving the current romanticity trend is there is a really big focus on spice, to use the kind of euphemistic term.
Starting point is 00:06:21 In fact, some of Sarah J Maas' fans have jokingly referred to her work as fairy smut. Catherine Zofri at The Riff Bodice says some authors will market their books based on the level of spice. Yeah, yeah, people definitely use that. So does that play out differently with fantasy romance when you have a spicy scene and one of them is a vampire or a werewolf or a zombie? Like, does it play out differently in particularly interesting ways? It can, especially in terms of werewolves or vampires. They may have some different ways to express that. There's a really great book called Bride by Allie Hazelwood. She both does fantasy as well as contemporary romances. And that one is about a werewolf and a vampire. So a lot of those things, a lot of the anatomy tends to come into play, which can be really fun.
Starting point is 00:07:20 That story is about an arranged marriage to broker a peace between warring vampires and werewolves. This war of ours, the one between the vampires and the wares, began several centuries ago with brutal escalations of violence culminated amid flowing torrents of berry-colored blood and ended in a whimper of buttercream cake, on the day I met my husband for the first time, which, as it happens, was also the day of our wedding. I did try to arrange a meeting, suggested to my people to suggest to his people
Starting point is 00:08:01 that we could grab lunch the week before the ceremony, coffee the previous day, a glass of tap water the morning of, anything to avoid a how-do-you-do in front of the efficient. He is an alpha, Miss Lark, too busy to meet. Busy with his pack, Miss Lark. I pictured him in a home gym, tirelessly working on his abs and shrugged. Ten days have passed and I have yet to meet my groom. Instead, I've become a project, one that requires a concerted effort from an interdisciplinary crew to look weddable. A facialist smacks my cheeks with relish, and a make-up expert paints a different face on top of mine, something interesting and sophisticated and zygomatic. This is art, I tell him, studying the contouring in the mirror.
Starting point is 00:08:56 You should be a Guggenheim fellow. I know, and I'm not done, he reprimands, before dipping his thumb in a pot of dark green stain and swiping it over the inside of my wrists, the base of my throat on both sides. My nape. What's this? Just a bit of colour. What for? A snort. I pulled strings and researched wear customs. Your husband will like it. Another way Romandacy novels are marketed is based on the tropes. Enemies to Lovers is a popular one. Another one is Grumpy Sunshine, where maybe a plucky heroine will fall for a dark and brooding man. There's actually a wide variety of tropes and subgenres, but there's one thing every Romandese book has to have,
Starting point is 00:09:48 a happily ever after ending. But the books don't feel formulaic. Formula gets a lot of hassle from a lot of critics, a lot of, even a lot of readers, they don't like the predictability of that. But I think they confuse a trope for laziness, the idea, well, there's no tension in a romance because you know what's going to happen. No, you can do plenty of things in between those other 300 pages before you get to the ending.
Starting point is 00:10:17 I mean, you could say the same thing about superhero movies. You're not really in suspense as to whether the hero is going to defeat the villain. What's interesting is how you play with the formula and defy expectations. Now, I've tried reading romantic novels, and I'll get hooked because the writing is very good. But after a while, I realized this genre is not really for me. But that is totally fine. I'm actually very happy that people are really into them. In fact, when something is popular in a sci-fi fantasy realm, and I don't quite get it, that only makes me more curious. Who is excited about this, and why? And in this case,
Starting point is 00:10:55 those questions overlap with larger issues like gender and sexuality. And given the fact that Romandacy is just dominating the charts of sci-fi fantasy novels, I wanted to figure out, is this a trend? Is this a publishing bubble that's going to burst? Or is it a game changer for fantasy as a whole? In the world of fandoms, the word shipping refers to an active imagination among fans who are rooting for characters in a fictional world to get into a romantic relationship, even if the writers are not going to make it happen. Unfortunately, shipping in the real world
Starting point is 00:11:38 is not as exciting. If you own a small business or if you're an artist or writer selling your work, If you own a small business or if you're an artist or writer selling your work, a lot of your time may be spent on the very unromantic task of shipping your work to your customers. Well, it's time for you to have a meet cute with a tall, handsome stranger named ShipStation. ShipStation can be the website of your dreams. They're a multi-carrier shipping solution that integrates whatever you sell online to streamline your schedule so your business can keep growing even when you're on summer vacation. They have an easy to use dashboard where you can manage orders, smooth label printing, and handle customer service. And you can save thousands on shipping costs with discounts up to 89% on UPS, DHL Express, and USPS rates. They can also integrate your shipping with Amazon, Spotify, Etsy, eBay, or TikTok.
Starting point is 00:12:32 Work less and ship more with ShipStation, the innovative tool that helps you turn your shipping challenges into opportunities for growth. Go to ShipStation.com and use the code IMAGINARY to sign up for your free 60-day trial. That's ShipStation.com, code IMAGINARY. The first thing I wanted to figure out is where did this come from? And why did it take off in the last few years?
Starting point is 00:13:02 A lot of people have pointed to the pandemic. I did an episode last year about how gothic novels were making a comeback. That was because of the pandemic. The sense of isolation was so spooky, people felt like they were haunting their own homes. Romance is the other half of the equation, the yearning to connect. Marcella de Blasi is a professor at Dartmouth, and her interest in romanticy began during the pandemic. I was pregnant with my second child. I had a toddler who was at home because we were in lockdown and daycare was closed. And I am a tenure-track professor trying to put together a book project,
Starting point is 00:13:43 and the idea of doing academic work in those conditions was just like laughable, like completely laughable. And so I found myself reading really widely in a way that I hadn't really since maybe grad school. And that's when she discovered fantasy romance novels. In fact, she ditched the academic book that she was working on to write a different academic book about romantasy. Her book is called Love and Other Worlds. And I think that I had underestimated the value of accessibility, and I'd also underestimated the importance of pleasure and escape and love, right? Because in the pandemic, also, people were sick and elders were dying and we didn't know what the future held. There was incredible uncertainty. And I
Starting point is 00:14:32 think in the midst of all that uncertainty, romance, fantasy, and romantasy were all really comforting, right? Because in fantasy, you know what good is, you know what evil is, and you know that good is going to win. With romance, you know there's going to be a happily ever after. With romanticism, you get both. Marcella says you can draw a line from romanticism back to Gothic novels of the 19th century, and even further back to classic tales from thousands of years ago. But she says it's not a coincidence that a lot of Romanticy writers are millennials. The pop culture they grew up on was full of paranormal romance. The fact that we're also the Harry Potter generation is significant, right? So
Starting point is 00:15:14 we were, by and large, readers of Romanticy now were part of the Disney Renaissance, right? With The Little Mermaid and Beauty and the Beast. But like magic has been an important touchstone in a lot of our cultural products. And so I don't think it's surprising that that leads up through like Buffy and Twilight and arrives at Romantasy, really. C.L. Polk writes fantasy romances, among many other novels. They think that Romantasy also came out of the YA boom of the mid-aughts and 20-teens. That's why a lot of Gen Zers are buying Romantasy novels. YA books very often have a character who is contending with a romantic attraction while they are going on with whatever it is that they're happening in the
Starting point is 00:16:06 in the book like the hundred games is pretty is pretty famously like this trilogy this this epic trilogy about this terrible dystopia and these awful things happening but Katniss has boy trouble while it's all happening and that's just normal And all of these YA readers in the teens are older now. They're adults now. And when they went to, say, adult fantasy and they weren't getting what they expected, what they had been taught to expect, what they actually genuinely enjoyed, it kind of turned them off of it. But fantasy romance gives them what they were reading in YA. But CL says it was ultimately romance fans who pushed it over the edge. It is the romance readers' enthusiasm and their eagerness to keep reading because they are voracious and they are fast.
Starting point is 00:17:06 what they came to when they went into fantasy and science fiction places were a lot of people who were very eager to tell them how romance plots were trash and unnecessary and terrible and you girl cooties let's just get down to it and so they just kind of went okay fine then and they left and the science fiction and fantasy crowd didn't even really notice that they were gone. And it's kind of sad to me. I have often felt like I had to kind of hold my tongue around people who were like, but then it got into the kissy bits and it's just kind of like, come on, like, can't people have a romance? Like, is that not allowed? Can't people have a romance? Like, is that not allowed?
Starting point is 00:17:47 Thinking back five or ten years ago, the pop culture zeitgeist of fantasy and sci-fi was dominated by Game of Thrones and Marvel. If there was romance in these superhero films, it was secondary. In the grimdark sword and sorcery worlds, it was sometimes abusive or tragic. Fantasy fans who wanted to see more romance and healthier relationships were making that happen with fan fiction. In 2017, I did an episode about the popularity of fan fiction. And CL says fan fiction was the final factor in
Starting point is 00:18:20 explaining why romandacy eventually took off. Ciel was writing fanfiction before they began writing fantasy romance novels. And what I discovered was that when I finally got up the gumption to write something that was longer than 10,000 words, I kind of chafed against some of the restrictions of fanfiction. Because a lot of people say fanfiction is great because you can do whatever you want. And that's true, but it's not true. You can explore all kinds of people say fan fiction is great because you can do whatever you want and that's true but it's not true you can explore all kinds of things in fan fiction but fan fiction is not necessarily overly concerned with say a story that reads like a novel and conforms to a novel's expectations and they are also very concerned with making sure that the characters that you are writing about in your fan fiction ring true to the canon. So I stopped writing fan fiction and started writing originals
Starting point is 00:19:15 because I knew that what I wanted my characters to do were not necessarily what readers would accept from a fan fiction of the characters that started me thinking about that. Kaylee Donaldson says there's also a perception among fans of traditional fantasy genres that if you have too much romance, the stakes will go down, as if the need to save the world will take a backseat to if these characters are going to kiss. But Kaylee says that is a misunderstanding of how romanticity works. People call them page turners for a reason.
Starting point is 00:19:49 Many years ago, there was this survey done about the best on-screen kisses in film. And the number, the top three were like Scarlet and Red and Gone with the Wind.
Starting point is 00:20:00 It was the kiss on the beach in From Here to Eternity. And it was Rick and Elsa kissing as France pulls. In Casablanca. Kiss me. Kiss me as if it were the last time. And they're all tied together by this, you know, terrible danger and life-changing events happening in the background. You know, it's war, it's destruction.
Starting point is 00:20:24 I think there is an element of that in Romantasy as well. You know, oh, we have to save the world. We have to stop society from crumbling. We have to ride this dragon off into the sunset and make sure war ends. But also, there is an undeniable tension between us and we have to explore that. You know, Ray Stakes is very much the name of the game for a lot of this. that. You know, raise stakes is very much the name of the game for a lot of this. In fact, Romanticist writers have said the way to make a sex scene really spicy isn't as much about what happens during the scene. It's about building as much tension as you can before that passion explodes. And with fantasy, you can raise the stakes to otherworldly levels.
Starting point is 00:21:02 You can raise the stakes to otherworldly levels. One of my least favorite parts of my morning routine is shaving. I'm always worried about getting nicks or cuts on my face, especially if I'm about to go on camera for an interview. It's amazing how flimsy mass-produced blades can be, considering how expensive they are. Henson Shaving came up with a high-tech solution. Think of razors like diving boards. The longer the board, the more it wobbles. And those tiny little wobbles are what leads to nicks and cuts. Henson solves this by minimizing blade extension
Starting point is 00:21:37 to the point where their blades extend less than the thickness of a human hair. And most important to me, they're affordable. Once you own a Henson razor, it's only about $3 to $5 a year to replace the blades. It's time to say no to subscriptions and yes to a razor that will last you a lifetime. Visit hensonshaving.com slash imaginary to pick the razor for you and use the code imaginary to get two years worth of blades free with your razor. And use the code IMAGINARY to get two years worth of blades free with your razor. Just make sure you add them to your cart. That's 100 free blades when you head to h-e-n-s-o-n-s-h-a-v-i-n-g dot com slash imaginary and use the code IMAGINARY.
Starting point is 00:22:25 From what everybody has told me, the majority of people who write and read Romantici are women, and the main characters are mostly female. And that's often spoken about as a positive thing. But one criticism, which everybody I spoke with agrees with, is that the characters are all still predominantly white, hetero, and cisgender. C.L. Polk was one of the early writers who were breaking new ground with her 2018 novel, Witchmark. My first book, Witchmark, was always on lists for queer fantasy. Always, always, always. Because there weren't that many to choose from. Now, there are so many you get to curate. You can be very specific. You can drill down into subgenre and situation and all of that. There is a very healthy variety of these books. Is it ever going to be like enough? No, that's why we got to keep writing them.
Starting point is 00:23:14 That's part of the fun. Witchmark takes place in a fantasy world that resembles early 20th century England. The main character is trying to keep his magical abilities a secret until he finds himself investigating a murder. Here's the actress Tanya Rich reading a scene where the character meets a handsome stranger. You want me to get to the point? Mr. Hunter leaned on my filing cabinet. Hunter leaned on my filing cabinet. I need to know why Magic is dying. I stilled.
Starting point is 00:23:49 Magic dying? It wasn't. He was wrong. Blast. He'd shocked me with his pronouncement. I scrambled to make up for it. I see, I said. How am I supposed to know the answer? I want you to help me find it.
Starting point is 00:24:06 You and Nick Elliot are the only witches I've met in Eiland. Mr. Elliot is dead, but here you are, alive and free. Mr. Hunter wanted to help, but he knew too much about me already, too many of my secrets. I had no choice but to deny it. Too many of my secrets. I had no choice but to deny it. You want my help in finding out who poisoned Nick Elliot, and knowing will lead you to… No, it's insane. I can't help you. You can, Sir Christopher. And I can help you. My breath caught in my throat. This was worse than blackmail. I had been found.
Starting point is 00:24:49 Run, I told my useless legs. Run. You're afraid, he said. Don't be. I'm in as much danger as you are. Mr. Hunter raised one hand, clenched in a fist. The edges of his fingers glowed red, and he opened his hand to show me a tiny light. The core of it glowed brighter than a candle, brighter than gas lamps, nearly as bright as ether. If he told the truth, it could only mean two things. He was a low-born witch in fine clothing, or he was a runaway mage like me. He offered me this show of magic as a token of trust. He could report me, but I could report him back. I just basically went on the assumption that, of course, this man gets to have a romance with a man that he likes. Like, why wouldn't he?
Starting point is 00:25:49 And then if anybody asked me, I would say, well, why wouldn't he? And then I would make direct eye contact with them until they went away. about people who are falling in love in same-sex relationships in our world up until relatively recently. There's a lot of baggage attached to that. And I didn't want it in my book. So I just basically said, you know, a lot of people have same-sex romances, but they don't marry because of this other thing that's happening in the book. You know, that's interesting, though. I was just thinking as you're talking about, like, I think that's probably what's so liberating about writing in a fantasy romance with a queer relationship. Basically, all the baggage, the cultural, political, historical baggage, you're like, well, this is another world. And this is just
Starting point is 00:26:35 an accepted fact. And this is just life in this other world. And that must be kind of liberating as a writer. Yeah, you have a scale, then you can say like, there's absolutely no problem with this whatsoever. Why would there be? Or you can slide it and make it a little bit heavier. If this particular piece of baggage is something that you really want to talk about thematically in your story, you have full freedom of choice. One of the things I find so interesting about Romantici is that the writers come from so many different places. J.D. Evans writes fantasy romance novels that take place in a mythical past. Her previous career was in the military. I kind of bounced around between Doha and Qatar and Jordan and Beirut, Lebanon, and I was at the embassy in Beirut.
Starting point is 00:27:23 That inspired the fictional kingdom in her series of books, Mages of the Wheel. Lebanon itself has this incredible, fascinating history because it's been in the middle of all of the empires, right? So it's just an incredible place, and it just captured my imagination. The main character in the first book, Rain and Ruin, is a princess with political ambitions in a palace of intrigue and magic. Then she meets a dashing prince. She had seen men without their caftans, in the fields, at the docks. But this was wholly different.
Starting point is 00:28:00 He was different. A warrior, attested to by the hashwork of scars on his golden skin. Naime wondered at them, a thin one across his chest, a thicker, short line over his ribs, and a long, curved one that disappeared into his salva. Do you have clothes? Naime said, appalled that she'd been so preoccupied ogling him that she hadn't considered the fact she was lurking in an archway with a half-naked man. I am wearing clothes, he said. More clothes?
Starting point is 00:28:38 Naime tried not to sound desperate, but the weak timbre of her voice gave her away. I do. In the future, wear them, and refrain from such inappropriate displays. Naime managed to find some composure once she wasn't looking at him. What exactly do you consider an inappropriate display, Sultana? Tamar is a place of restraint and decorum, Agassi. You are more than welcome to spar with the guardsmen as long as Commander Iron oversees it, and I would expect that you would not humiliate yourself by doing so half-clothed again.
Starting point is 00:29:15 Only in a place full of weak-bodied, self-important pacifists would sword practice count as humiliating. You find me offensive, he said. Fine. There are few things I find more tiresome than someone who puts too much stock in pageantry and pretense. And you worship at the altar of pretense. Jen, and she actually told me to call her Jen, grew up in a military family.
Starting point is 00:29:48 When she was a kid, they moved around a lot. It wasn't easy making friends, so she became a big reader. Now, military science fiction is a thriving subgenre. I actually did an episode about it years ago. But she wasn't drawn to those books. No.
Starting point is 00:30:04 If there was a female character that was considered like a heroine, she was, we call them stabby in the romance, in romance parlance, you know, like very kind of male coded, masculine coded, very strong, probably had a filthy mouth, not very emotional. And so that was kind of what I was aspiring to. And I went into the military and I did my thing. And I think instead of becoming like really into that, I went the opposite way. And I'm like, you know, this is not exactly who I want to be. And so I went the other way, the softer way. Although not entirely, there's a trope that she fights against in her work. The trope is called, I'm not like other girls. It's used in movies and
Starting point is 00:30:53 books a lot where you have your main character who is, she's not catty. She doesn't like makeup. She won't wear pink. She won't, you know, she's strong and fast and doesn't hang out with the popular girls and is often disparaging of people that like those things. And that particular trope, I don't like it. And I've talked about it before that I'm actually recovering not like other girls because I grew up in an environment where it was very much things that are classically considered feminine are weaker or less than. And so that not like other girls trope, if you will, plays into that a little too much for my taste. I feel like the only strength in the world is not being able to wield a sword or run faster or lift heavier things or curse like a sailor or be emotionally distant, right? Those don't have to be the only ways that we are strong in the world.
Starting point is 00:31:52 And so the not like other girls I feel is a bit lazy. I really love going to theater. And I recently saw a hilarious show called The 20-Sided Tavern. It was a live D&D experience where the audience used an app on our phones to vote which characters the actors played and what decisions they made. And I bought the tickets using another app on my phone, Today Tix. Today Tix is the best night out you haven't had yet to amazing things going on all around you. Getting tickets on their site or their app is just as easy as ordering takeout. You can check out with a few taps and get your ticket sent right to your phone. TodayTix also gives you access to exclusive pre-sales, lotteries, and specially priced tickets.
Starting point is 00:32:40 And they don't just cover New York. They have tickets to shows around the world. If you live in Melbourne, you can use Today Tix to see Top Dog Underdog. It's a great play. I saw it on Broadway last year. And if you're in Los Angeles, you can use Today Tix to see Joshua Bell, who is my mother's favorite classical musician. He's playing at the Hollywood Bowl in August. And if you go, my mom will be jealous. Go to todaytix.com slash imaginary and use the promo code imaginary to get $20 off your first Today Tix purchase. That's promo code imaginary at todaytix.com slash imaginary. Todaytix.com slash imaginary. Despite all the success that Romantici has had in the publishing world,
Starting point is 00:33:31 it still doesn't get a lot of critical respect. Marcella de Blasi says that's especially true in academia. If you think about where the scholarship is, there is a lot of attention to science fiction. And then when we talk about romance as a whole, there is very little scholarship going on about any kind of romance. There is more scholarship on pornography than there is about romance. You know, the accusation that people lob against romance is that it's mommy porn. Actually, I hadn't heard that phrase before. Oh yeah, this is definitely a thing, especially in the context of the scholarly attention that pornography gets.
Starting point is 00:34:07 I find this so revealing that when you have a genre that's written by women that takes a look at the world we live in through the relationships we have. And then when we add to that the fact that this is also a genre that can talk about women's sexual desire and that it's still dismissed as unimportant or not serious. Yeah, I think that that's really revealing. Jen says even readers of romance novels, conventional romance novels, sometimes judge romanticist readers when they show up in their online spaces. Because they're like, we don't want dudes with bat wings here. You have to go somewhere else, right? There's no dragons in this space. So I think it's, you know, people, they want a group where they're in essence kind of the same. And so there are always going to be
Starting point is 00:34:59 people within genres that are like, we don't do that here, please get out. And I'd argue that in many cases, that's less true in romance circles, because women are kind of used to getting made fun of for wanting to read romance. So they're less likely to be harsh, but there are a few. At the Ripped Bodice, they try to make the decor really playful to create an atmosphere of non-judgment. They suspend open books from the ceiling as if the books magically flew off the shelves and then stopped in midair. One thing we really wanted to focus on is making this space really bright, really airy, really not filled with the kind of shame that had been put on romance in the past. A lot of the times romance books would be put in a dark corner of the bookstore. Have you had people visiting from out of town or even like international
Starting point is 00:35:54 tourists who are like, we saw this and we wanted to come here? Oh, yeah. We have people who come from all over, which is just kind of crazy to think about. We have people who come from Texas. We have people who come from Texas. We have people who come from Wisconsin. We've had people who come from Australia and they're like, yeah, we're here because we saw you on BookTok and we really wanted to make this part of our New York trip. Another place that Romandasy fans gather is at conventions. I'm not talking about San Diego or New York Comic Con. I mean, they both had panels about Romanticy last year, but the real
Starting point is 00:36:32 action is at ApollyCon every year in Washington, D.C. ApollyCon covers all types of romance novels, but Romanticy is a big part of it. And that's because the event was created by a Romanticy writer named Jennifer Armentrout. There are book signings, cosplay, panel discussions, and parties. Marcella de Blasi was thrilled she got to go. It's a hot ticket. Yes, it is really hard to get tickets to ApolloCon. I think they sell out in a matter of minutes. And fans will walk around with as close to a wheelbarrow as they can get, essentially. And they are filled with books. And some of them I know are brought from home because they want authors to sign books that
Starting point is 00:37:17 they already own. But a lot of them are purchased there. There will be special editions of really popular series that are released every, I want to say every few years or by various different entities. So, you know, there are different subscription boxes. Maybe one of them will come out with a special edition of Throne of Glass by Sarah J. Moss. And then, you know, readers who are fans of these series will collect all of them, as many of them as they can. And I was talking with some fans who collect multiple languages. They want first editions in as many languages as they can get. Languages they don't even speak, presumably. Yeah. And so there's a lot going on. But fans, not all of them, but many of them really go all
Starting point is 00:38:00 out with the cosplay. It's extraordinary. Romanticism is still a hard sell for some people, but Jen says they should have an open mind. I think there's a mistake. I think they think that women are reading this for titillation, but really they're in it for the emotional impact. So the plot is about a woman being successful in whatever she wants to do and the man in there is putting her needs first it is about women getting pleasure whether that is um in intimacy or in fulfilling whatever their dream is but it not being taken away from them by this other character right this other character is participating in that i I mean, real talk. Yeah. Again, C.L. Polk.
Starting point is 00:38:55 Sometimes I think that the dislike of romance is like basically collectively enforced. Guys don't like romance because if other guys catch them liking romance, that will equal big social trouble. There could be a lot of shame involved. I think those barriers are breaking. And I think they have been breaking for a little while. And I think that we are going to see the whole wall get knocked down really, really soon. And so if you're reading romance novels, you could probably see, if you read enough of them, you could probably get an idea of like the many varied interesting things that the writers of these romance novels who are mostly women are thinking about, talking about, have on their mind, want for themselves, yearn for. If they are reading books about men with bat wings, it's probably not the bat wings they like. You know, it's like something else is in there that appeals to them
Starting point is 00:39:48 and it might be worth it to read it and ask. And I've seen some really interesting social media where men have sat down and read their partner's favorite books with them and learned a lot and almost exclusively have said, yeah, that was worth it. You would think at this point there'd be big budget Hollywood adaptations of Romanticist
Starting point is 00:40:10 books in production. The screen rights were bought, they're in development, but it seems like they're stuck in development. The only headlines I've seen recently are Hulu denying rumors that it gave up on its plans to make a TV show out of Sarah J Maas's books. But in a way, I think it's better. I mean, Hollywood doesn't need the money. The publishing industry does. The generation on TikTok has made books sexy again. That is spicy. And for romanticist readers, having these worlds in their minds gives them a safe space to explore sexuality and relationships without social pressure, judgment, or baggage. They can enjoy what they want and not what they've been told that they should want. So for Romanticist fans, they already have their happily ever after.
Starting point is 00:41:04 That is it for this week. Thank you for listening. Special thanks to Marcella DeBlasi, Kaylee Donaldson, J.D. Evans, C.L. Polk, and Catherine Zofri for giving me a tour of the Ripped Bodice. Do you remember there was a pet store here beforehand? Yes. So we have dogs coming to the door all the time. They remember that it used to be a pet store and are constantly like, no, this is where I got my treats from. And we're still getting treats. And so we definitely have treats behind the counter. Also, thanks to Tanya Rich, who did the readings, and one of my listeners, Maria Rose, who suggested this topic. I mentioned that Marsala de Blasi is working on a book about Romanticism.
Starting point is 00:41:47 It's going to focus on authors of color. She provided a list of recommendations, which I'm including in the show notes. My assistant producer is Stephanie Billman. If you like the show, please give us a shout out on social media, leave a review wherever you get your podcasts, or just tell a friend who you think might like the show. The best way to support Imaginary Worlds is to donate on Patreon. At different levels, you get either free Imaginary Worlds stickers, a mug, a t-shirt, and a link to a Dropbox account, which has the full-length interviews of every guest in every episode.
Starting point is 00:42:17 You can also get access to an ad-free version of the show on Patreon, and you can buy an ad-free subscription on Apple Podcasts. You can subscribe to the show's newsletter at imaginaryworldspodcast.org. Cette episode vous est présentée par Babbel. Babbel is designed by real people for real conversations. The dialogue exchanges they have are voiced by real native speakers, not AI. They have so much personality to them, I feel like they're mini audio dramas. And thanks to Babbel, when I was in France a few months ago, I was able to talk to every cab driver and every waiter and waitress in French. Babbel has a wide range of learning experiences, from casual to intense,
Starting point is 00:43:00 so there's always a way to fit a Babbel session, from self-study app lessons to podcasts to live classes. Babbel has over 16 million subscriptions sold, plus all of Babbel's 14 award-winning language courses are backed by their 20-day money-back guarantee. Here's a special limited-time deal for our listeners. Right now, get up to 60% off your Babbel subscription, but only for our listeners, at babbel.com slash imaginary. Get up to 60% off your Babbel subscription, but only for our listeners, at babbel.com slash imaginary. Get up to 60% off at babbel.com slash imaginary. Spelled B-A-B-B-E-L dot com slash imaginary.
Starting point is 00:43:34 Rules and restrictions apply.

There aren't comments yet for this episode. Click on any sentence in the transcript to leave a comment.