My best friend in New York talked me up to one of her acquaintances, describing me as someone who's well-versed in romance novels, especially Black romance novels written by Black women. (Which is incredibly kind, but also hilarious considering I didn't start reading romance in earnest until 2019 and there's so much I still have yet to discover!) Anyway, my friend asked me for recommendations on this acquaintance's behalf, and I agreed to make a list. Weeks ago. I just kept forgetting to do it. But since I'm in a space where I'm feeling weird about my writing again, and since I've taken my "lady of leisure" aspiration a little too seriously this year and didn't push myself to finish a single book in Q1 (which means new reviews aren't coming anytime soon), and since my best friend in Lusaka also happened to ask me for romantic and/or smutty recommendations today... I figured, let me quit playing and finally put this list together! So here are all the romance novels (or romance-adjacent books) I've read since 2019, with links to my reviews of them included. The first list showcases my favorites, in chronological order of when I finished them. The longer list has everything, in the same chronological order.
- The Wedding Party by Jasmine Guillory (Because it helped me develop a genuine interest in romance after a lifetime of being too snobbish to fully delve into the genre. My gateway drug, one could say.)
- If I Don't Have You by Sareeta Domingo (Because... just because. My ultimate favorite. Also, rest in peace to Sareeta Domingo, who passed away unexpectedly in September 2025.)
- Harbor by Rebekah Weatherspoon (Because... mind your business.)
- The Secret Lives of Church Ladies by Deesha Philyaw (Because Philyaw is bold enough and compassionate enough to acknowledge that holiness and horniness are holding hands, sitting side-by-side on the same pew, singing from the same African American Heritage Hymnal.)
- Boys Come First by Aaron Foley (Because a Detroit native wrote it. Plus it's GAY.)
- Sweet Vengeance by Viano Oniomoh (Because... mind your business. But also because of the influences of Monstica, "Demon 79", and Tati Richardson/T.M. Richardson. This was the beginning of Oniomoh becoming one of my favorite authors.)
- The Neighbor Favor by Kristina Forest (Because it's a cute story about book nerds. Plus it mentions N.K. Jemisin.)
- Afrekete: An Anthology of Black Lesbian Writing edited by Catherine E. McKinley and L. Joyce DeLaney (Because it felt like such a rare find when and where I found it. Plus certain entries helped me make sense of some big changes and big feelings I was navigating in 2024.)
- The Oath: A WhyChoose Novel by T.M. Richardson (Because there's a smidgen of that Philyaw-esque holy/horny dichotomy in there. Plus it mentions N.K. Jemisin.)
- If You Leave Me by Crystal Hana Kim (This is historical fiction and not necessarily a romance novel, but it came to mind while compiling this list so I decided to include it. Tortured love triangle, passionate affair, and yearning for what-could've-been.)
- The Wedding Party by Jasmine Guillory
- Girl, Woman, Other by Bernadine Evaristo (A story collection, not romance-focused, but it contains a few complicated love stories that merit attention.)
- If I Don't Have You by Sareeta Domingo
- While We Were Dating by Jasmine Guillory
- Joy by Victoria Christopher Murray (This is more about recovering from rape and holding onto one's faith after traumatic experiences, but it's still very relationship-focused.)
- Love in Color by Bolu Babalola
- Harbor by Rebekah Weatherspoon
- The Secret Lives of Church Ladies by Deesha Philyaw
- Sometimes I Trip On How Happy We Could Be: Essays by Nichole Perkins (A candid and sensual memoir-in-essays written by a romance connoisseur, who is currently writing her own romance novel.)
- Black Love Matters: Real Talk on Romance, Being Seen, and Happily Ever Afters edited by Jessica P. Pryde (An exceptionally curated collection of essays about Black romance writing and depictions of Black love across the decades/centuries.)
- Seven Days in June by Tia Williams
- Boys Come First by Aaron Foley
- I Think I Might Love You by Christina C. Jones
- The Perfect Find by Tia Williams
- Before I Let Go by Kennedy Ryan
- In Love & Trouble: Stories of Black Women by Alice Walker (Story collection, can veer into pessimism due to its acknowledgement of Black women's struggles, but its examinations of love still merit attention.)
- Now Is the Time to Open Your Heart by Alice Walker (More about healing, self-discovery, and decolonizing one's mind than romance, but again, some very noteworthy examinations of love here.)
- Will to Love by Doreen Rainey
- Adèle by Leïla Slimani (A suspenseful novel about a sex addict/hypersexual woman who hits a wall trying to keep up appearances as a "normal" person in society. Somewhat sad, but also juicy and scandalous.)
- Sweet Vengeance by Viano Oniomoh
- Just for the Cameras by Viano Oniomoh
- The Neighbor Favor by Kristina Forest
- The Sex Chronicles: Shattering the Myth by Zane
- Gettin' Buck Wild : Sex Chronicles II by Zane
- Afrekete: An Anthology of Black Lesbian Writing edited by Catherine E. McKinley and L. Joyce DeLaney
- Blackgentlemen.com by Zane
- Sistergirls.com by Zane (I'm including this book to acknowledge that I read it, but I honestly can't recommend it to anyone in good conscience.)
- The Air Between Us: An Erotic Romance by Shameka S. Erby
- One Day I Saw a Black King by J.D. Mason (I enjoyed this much more as a story about healing from grief and abandonment before it leaned hard into romance, but the romance is there if you want it.)
- The Oath: A WhyChoose Novel by T.M. Richardson
- The Offer: A PolyRomance by T.M. Richardson
- Homemade Love by J. California Cooper (A story collection with a similar vibe as Walker's In Love & Trouble, although slightly more humorous and hopeful.)
- You Made a Fool of Death with Your Beauty by Akwaeke Emezi (A very atypical romance novel. Prepare to be riveted and rattled, emphasis on rattled!)
- Sweet Surrender by Viano Oniomoh
- Two's Better by Viano Oniomoh