Romance novel Essays

  • The Form of Romance Novels

    1375 Words  | 3 Pages

    Kensington Cluff Mrs. Miller English 12 11 November 2013 The Romance Novel "It is a truth universally acknowledged..." that romance novels are one of the most popular genres, especially among women. Romance was the top-performing category on best-seller lists in 2012, generating 1.438 billion dollars in sales. The genre that began with Pamela, was epitomized by Jane Austen’s Pride and Prejudice, and has become one of the top-selling genres in the United States, has changed only slightly over

  • Importance Of Romance Novels

    2003 Words  | 5 Pages

    Nora Roberts: Do romance novels give false expectations of love, romance and relationships to women? Although romance novels are considered to be made up and part of the fiction genre, many women alike take them too seriously and they have been blamed for giving women false expectations of love, romance and relationships. Studies show that some women can become addicted to unreal world that romance novels take them to. Many women have admitted to reading up to thirty romance novels a month. Almost

  • Sex in the Romance Novel

    552 Words  | 2 Pages

    fortune, must be in want of a wife.” This is what all romance stories are about, each writer rerunning this idea, moving it to fit into a different time and place, and as our world changes so do our taste in heroes and heroines; possessing a good fortune however doesn’t. But, one of the biggest changes to have occurred in romance writing is the addition of sex, something which in Jane Austin’s day wasn’t thought about, let alone mentioned in a novel. Today sex is more acceptable, and while we tend to

  • I Hate Romance Novels

    930 Words  | 2 Pages

    I Hate Romance Novels Let me get one thing straight from the start: I am a huge believer in romance---in the sex you can't get enough of and the person you can't stop thinking about, in fantasies about sharing the dominatrix whip and then some ice cream afterwards, in being turned on by arguments about Lacan and Freud and fights about existentialism and religious doctrine. That's my idea of romance. I prefer the "give and take" to the "giving of the soul." I prefer the knowledgeable lover

  • The Romance Literature: The History Of The Romance Novel

    758 Words  | 2 Pages

    The history of the romance novel remains lengthy, hotly disputed and obstinately convoluted. This short and thus glaringly incomplete summary will focus on the central works that inspired romance novels, one societal trend that helped the romance novel evolve and gain popularity, and the genre’s emergence into the modern era with the help of Harlequin and Mills & Boon. Regis notes that the romance novel was born of, but not limited to, five notable literary works: Samuel Richardson’s Pamela (1740)

  • How the Novel Rebecca Reflects and Subverts the Conventions of the Romance Genre

    1194 Words  | 3 Pages

    conventions for example, the journey to happy ever after. Conventions of the gothic/horror genre are also found in the novel. The conventions that Rebecca reflects of the romantic genre are those of the characteristics of the hero and heroine (as mentioned above). The heroine is usually innocent and vulnerable with low confidence and low self-esteem. The narrator of the novel also holds these characteristics. The first impression of the hero seems rude, arrogant and insufferable but the heroine

  • Romance Novels and Today's Woman

    1347 Words  | 3 Pages

    Romance and Todays Woman Romance novels have been a place where women have been allowed to fantasize about the perfect and the ideal life. The novels are usually based on super sexy women who are only missing one thing in their life, the perfect man. The hero is also sexy, self-assured, and single minded in their pursuit of the leading woman. In current times, the romance novel has allowed women to step out of heteronormative behavior and explore their sexuality, where anything goes and their actions

  • Comparing Time of the Temptress and Gone With the Wind

    1872 Words  | 4 Pages

    the Temptress and Gone With the Wind In the Harlequin romance Time of the Temptress, by Violet Winspear, the author seems to be trying to write an intelligent story of romance, bettered by its literary self-awareness. She fails on both counts. Winspear appears to recognize that more valued literature tends to involve symbolism and allusions to other works. It seems she is trying to use archetypes and allusions in her own novel, but her references to alternate literature and culture are

  • Essay About Nicholas Sparks

    554 Words  | 2 Pages

    author and one of the world’s most beloved storytellers. He is considered to be in the genre called Romanticism. Sparks is very imaginative and his novels deal different aspects of love. He is able to show his thoughts and ideas by grasping the readers' attention through their emotions. He does this so that the readers' mind is completely focused on the novel and they become part of the story. All of Spark’s eighteen published books have been New York Times bestsellers, with over eighty-nine million copies

  • Sherman Alexie: The Absolutely True Diary Of a Part-Time Indian Essay

    698 Words  | 2 Pages

    condition. Throughout the novel, we learn from Arnold’s fight for a better life. He inspires us and gives us hope. He goes to Reardan where white people live searching for hope. There, he makes new white friends and changes their ideas about Indians. Another inspiration we see in this book is, Mary Spirit, Arnold’s older sister, who leaves her reservation to make her dream come true. She goes to Montana, gets married and starts focusing more on writing her romance novels rather than focusing more

  • The Two Main Characters as Opposites: "Flipped" by Wendelin Van Draanen

    632 Words  | 2 Pages

    Think for a moment if you will that you are an author – Wendelin Van Draanen, to be exact. You have just finished your 212 page young adult romance novel and are deciding what to title it. You know you’ve got to come up with an original, attention-grabbing one, as titles play a main factor in whether or not someone picks up your book at all in the book store. Suddenly, it comes to you: Flipped. It’s perfect, because it relates directly to the plot and conflict in a way that is easily understandable

  • Trust, Romance, Friendships And Death In The Novel 'Looking For Alaska'

    1546 Words  | 4 Pages

    Looking for Alaska The themes that are picked out in the novel are: Trust, Romance, Friendships and Death. The novel opens with Miles’s going away party, which only his neighbors attended. With no true friends from his old school, Miles moves to Culver Creek. At first Miles is hesitant with his friendships but he slowly learns to be himself around his new friends. We learn that Miles values his new friendships by the way that he strictly adheres to the Colonel’s “no ratting” policy and shares both

  • Free Essays - A Farewell to Arms as Historical Romance

    538 Words  | 2 Pages

    A Farewell to Arms - Historical Romance The novel "A Farewell to Arms" should be classified as a historical romance.  Many people in reading this book could interpret this to be a war novel, when in fact it was one of the great romance novels written in its time.  When reading this book you notice how every important event of the war is overshadowed by the strong love story behind it. The love story is circled around two people, Frederic Henry and Catherine Barkley.  Frederic is a young American

  • Visual Essay Analyzing and Interpreting of Ralph Lauren Romance a Love Story, A Fragance Ad

    683 Words  | 2 Pages

    In the September 2013 issue of Vogue magazine Ralph Lauren Romance A love Story featuring women’s fragrance by Ralph Lauren displays in a series of photographs the stages of falling in love. Analyzing the contents of the photographs the images are presented in a form of puzzles which at first seem jumbled and at the end it materializes as a whole construction of a life that they have built together. In observing the photographs, it depicts the typical conventional manner in which boy meets girl and

  • Danielle Steel's The Ring - A Thin Line Between Fiction and Reality

    1562 Words  | 4 Pages

    between fiction and reality. This is proved in Danielle Steel's The Ring, where she has used common characters and placed them in realistic situations, facing everyday realistic issues. The Ring gives the reader a sense of realism in a fictitious novel. In fact, Danielle Steel does a really good job, portraying the characters in realistic situations such as Kassandra dealing with her affair, Walmar acting as an overprotective father to Ariana and Gerhard, and Ariana struggling to find her family

  • Analysis of the Old Romanticism Genre through Izzy, Willy-Nilly

    613 Words  | 2 Pages

    When we think of romance novels, one's first thought might be of the kind we see at the newsstand while waiting to check out at the grocery store. Visions of a white knight like Fabio whisking away the fair damsel in distress. Romance novels for the young adult are appealing because many romantic symbols relate directly to what they're experiencing both physically and emotionally in their lives; that of youthfulness and hope. The protagonist of Izzy, Willy-Nilly is Isobel Lingard, a/k/a Izzy;

  • Sexuality In Sir Gawain And The Green Knight

    827 Words  | 2 Pages

    In the romances of the Middle Ages, and in most of today’s genres, sexuality is never explicitly illustrated. To avoid graphic images, authors have used flowery language or intense innuendo to portray sexuality. Just like today’s readers, audiences from the Middle Ages wanted ‘the guy to get the girl’. Sir Gawain and the Green Knight is a satire for the aristocrats of the Middle Ages; when audiences expect romantic and sexual interactions between the Lord and the Lady, the author does not deliver

  • The Fault in Our Stars by John Green

    797 Words  | 2 Pages

    wonderful yet tragic best-selling novel The Fault in Our Stars tells a heart-wrenching story of two teenage cancer patients who fall in love. Augustus Waters and Hazel Lancaster live in the ordinary city of Indianapolis, where they both attend a support group for cancer patients. Falling in love at first sight, the two are inseparable until Augustus’s cancer comes out of remission, turning Hazel’s world upside. This is one of the best young-adult fiction novels of the year because it keeps readers

  • Jane Eyre

    1106 Words  | 3 Pages

    true heathens, as they are; and the desires may imagine all sorts of vain things: but judgment shall have the last word in every argument, and the casting vote in every decision.”1 Such powerful words were found in the famous romance novels of Charlotte Bronte. Through her novels Jane Eyre and The Professor Bronte’s life experiences were reflected by her main characters as they sought independence, conceived images as symbols of important events in their lives, and they exhibited commitment to their

  • Cuzak's Boys

    1211 Words  | 3 Pages

    central traits of realism. My Antonia, a realist novel by Willa Cather, chronicles the life and development of Jim Burden. Jim is an upper class, well-educated young boy who grows into a Harvard graduate and successful lawyer. His journey and development is constantly assisted by others, whether it is Antonia Shimerda, a poor Bohemian immigrant that Jim befriends, or Gaston Cleric, a college professor and comrade of Jim. It is not until the end of the novel that Jim can exist as a free character, independent