Parent company | HarperCollins |
---|---|
Founded | 1949Winnipeg, Manitoba | in
Founder |
|
Country of origin | Canada |
Headquarters location | Toronto, Ontario |
Publication types | Books |
Fiction genres | Romance, action |
Imprints | Carina, Canary Street, Kimani, Love Inspired, Mira, Hanover Square, Park Row, Graydon House |
Revenue | $585 million [1] |
Official website | www |
Harlequin Enterprises ULC (known simply as Harlequin) is a publisher of romance, women's fiction and various other genres under multiple publishing imprints. Founded in Winnipeg, Canada, in 1949, from the 1960s, it grew into the largest publisher of romance fiction in the world.
Based in Toronto since 1969, [2] Harlequin was owned by the Torstar Corporation, the largest newspaper publisher in Canada, from 1981 to 2014. It was then purchased by News Corp [3] [4] and is now a division of HarperCollins. [5] [6] In 1971, Harlequin purchased the London-based publisher Mills & Boon Limited and began a global expansion program opening offices in Australia and major European markets such as Germany, France, Italy, Spain, Greece, Netherlands, and Scandinavia. Harlequin launched an audiobook program in 2015. [7]
Harlequin was founded in 1949 by Richard Bonnycastle in Winnipeg, Manitoba, as a paperback reprinting company. [6] [8] [9] He founded the business while working at Winnipeg's Advocate Printers, a branch of Toronto's Bryant Press, as a way to keep the presses busy. [10]
The business would be owned by Advocate Printers, Doug Weld of Bryant Press, and Jack Palmer, head of the Canadian distributor of the Saturday Evening Post and the Ladies' Home Journal . Palmer oversaw marketing for the new company and Bonnycastle took charge of the production. [10]
Harlequin released its first book, Nancy Bruff's The Manatee, in May 1949. [10] In the beginning, Harlequin typically acquired rights from other publishers, though a few original books were published as well. [10] Among the novels they reprinted were works by James Hadley Chase, Agatha Christie, Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, and Somerset Maugham. Their biggest success was Jean Plaidy's Beyond the Blue Mountain (1951). Of the 30,000 copies sold, only 48 were returned. [11]
Although the new company had strong sales in its nascent years, profit margins were limited, and the operation struggled to stay solvent. Following the death of Palmer in the mid-1950s, Bonnycastle acquired his 25% interest in Harlequin. With the company still struggling to survive, soon Weld departed and Bonnycastle, now in full control, transferred Weld's shares to secretary Ruth Palmour. [10]
In 1954, the company's chief editor died, and Bonnycastle's wife, Mary, began proofreading books at home and took over his duties. [12] [10] [8] Mary enjoyed reading the romances of British publisher Mills & Boon, and, at her urging, in 1957 Harlequin acquired the North American distribution rights to the category romance novels which had been published by Mills & Boon in the British Commonwealth. [13]
The first Mills & Boon novel to be reprinted by Harlequin was Anne Vinton's The Hospital in Buwambo (Mills & Boon No 407). [2]
The contract with Mills & Boon was based solely on a handshake, given each year when Richard Bonnycastle visited London. He would lunch at the Ritz Hotel with Editorial Director Alan Boon, the son of Gerald Mills, co-founder of Mills & Boon. The two would informally agree to extend their business agreement for an additional year. [14]
Mary Bonnycastle and her daughter Judy Burgess exercised editorial control over which Mills & Boon novels were reprinted by Harlequin. They had a "decency code" and rejected more sexually-explicit material that Mills & Boon submitted for reprinting. Upon realizing the genre was popular, Richard finally decided to read a romance novel. He chose one of the more explicit novels and enjoyed it. On his orders, the company conducted a market test with the novel he had read and discovered that it outsold a similar, tamer novel. [15] Overall, intimacy in the novels never extended beyond a chaste kiss between the protagonists. [13]
The romances proved to be hugely popular, and by 1964 the company was exclusively publishing Mills & Boon novels under the Harlequin imprint. [16] Although Harlequin had the rights to distribute the Mills & Boon books throughout North America, in 1967 over 78% of their sales took place in Canada, where the sell-through rate was approximately 85%. Richard Bonnycastle died in 1968 and his son, Richard Bonnycastle Jr., took over the company. He immediately organized the 1969 relocation of operations to Toronto, Ontario, where he built the company into a major force in the publishing industry. [2] In 1970, Bonnycastle Jr. contracted with Pocket Books and Simon & Schuster to distribute Harlequin romance fiction novels in the United States. [2]
On October 1, 1971, Harlequin purchased Mills & Boon. [17] This move was made primarily to secure the talents of Alan Boon and his editorial team. John Boon, another of the co-founder's sons, remained with the company as Managing Director overseeing British operations and English language exports to markets around the world, including Australia, India and South Africa. [14]
As North American booksellers were reluctant to stock mass-market paperbacks, Harlequin chose to sell its books "where the women are," [18] distributing them in supermarkets, drug stores and other retail outlets. [14] The company focuses on selling the line of books as a brand name, rather than individual titles. Headed by Larry Heisey, the marketing team modelled its techniques on those of Procter & Gamble. As well as selling through retail outlets, Harlequin established a direct marketing division taking as its inspiration the systems used by Reader's Digest. Rather than traditional advertising, the company focused on giveaways. A sampling of books within a line would be given away, sometimes in conjunction with other products, in the hopes that readers would continue to buy books within that line. [14] Harlequin Reader Service sold directly to readers who agreed to purchase a set number of books each month. [18]
At the time that Harlequin purchased Mills & Boon, the company only published one line of category romances. The Harlequin Romance line released six novels each month. At John Boon's urging, in 1973 Harlequin introduced a second line named Harlequin Presents. Designed partially to highlight three popular and prolific authors, Anne Hampson, Anne Mather, and Violet Winspear, these novels were slightly more sensual than their Harlequin Romance counterparts. Although Mary Bonnycastle disapproved of the more sensual nature of these novels, they had sold well in Great Britain, and the company chose to distribute them in North America as well. Within two years Harlequin Presents novels were outselling Harlequin Romance. [14]
In late 1975 Toronto Star Ltd. acquired a 52.5% interest in Harlequin, and in 1981 acquired the balance of the shares. [19]
By 1975, 70% of Harlequin's sales came from the United States. [2] Despite this fact, the company contracted with only British writers. Harlequin contracted its first American author in late 1975 when they purchased a novel by Janet Dailey. [20] [21] Dailey's novels provided the romance genre's "first look at heroines, heroes and courtships that take place in America, with American sensibilities, assumptions, history, and most of all, settings." [22] Harlequin was unsure how the market would react to this new type of romance, and was unwilling to fully embrace it. In the late 1970s, a Harlequin editor rejected a manuscript by Nora Roberts, who has since become the top-selling romance author, because "they already had their American writer." [23]
Harlequin terminated its distribution contract with Simon & Schuster and Pocket Books in 1976. This left Simon & Schuster with a large sales force and no product. [14] To fill this gap, and to take advantage of the untapped talent of the American writers Harlequin had rejected, Simon & Schuster formed Silhouette Books in 1980. [24] Silhouette published several lines of category romance, and encouraged their writers to experiment within the genre, creating new kinds of heroes and heroines and addressing contemporary social issues. [25]
Realizing their mistake, Harlequin launched their own line of America-focused romances in 1980. The Harlequin Superromance line was the first of its lines to originate in North America instead of in Britain. The novels were similar to the Harlequin Presents books, but were longer and featured American settings and American characters. [26]
Harlequin had also failed to adapt quickly to the signs that readers appreciated novels with more explicit sex scenes, and in 1980 several publishers entered the category romance market to fill that gap. That year Dell launched Candlelight Ecstasy, the first line to waive the requirement that heroines be virginal. By the end of 1983, sales for the Candlelight Ecstasy line totaled $30 million. Silhouette also launched similar lines, Desire and Special Edition, each of which had a 90–100% sellout rate each month. [27] The sudden increase in category romance lines meant an equally sudden increase in demand for writers of the new style of romance novel. By 1984, the market was saturated with category lines and readers had begun to complain of redundancy in plots. [28] The following year, the "dampening effect of the high level of redundancy associated with series romances was evident in the decreased number of titles being read per month." [29] Harlequin's return rate, which had been less than 25% in 1978 when it was the primary provider of category romance, swelled to 60%. [30]
In 1984, Harlequin purchased Silhouette from Simon & Schuster. [31] Despite the acquisition, Silhouette continued to retain editorial control and to publish various lines under their own imprint. [17] Eight years later, Harlequin attempted to purchase Zebra, but the deal did not go through. Despite the loss of Zebra, Harlequin maintained an 85% share of the North American category romance market in 1992. [32]
Torstar Corporation, which owns Canada's largest daily newspaper, the Toronto Star , purchased Harlequin in 1981 and began actively expanding into other markets. [33] Although the authors of Harlequin novels universally share English as a first language, each Harlequin office functions independently in deciding which books to publish, edit, translate, and print, "to ensure maximum adaptability to the particulars of their respective markets." [34]
Harlequin began expanding into other parts of Europe in 1974, [35] when it entered into a distribution agreement with Cora Verlag, a division of German publisher Axel Springer AG. The companies signed a two-year agreement to release two Mills & Boon novels each month in magazine format. The books sold well, and when the agreement came up for renewal Harlequin instead purchased a 50% interest in Cora Verlag. The new joint venture format allowed Harlequin to receive more of the profits, and allowed them to gain continued distribution in Austria, Switzerland, and West Germany. As of 1998, Germany represented 40% of Harlequin's total European business. [36]
During this same period, Harlequin opened an office in the Netherlands. Although this office lost money in its first year, by its third year in business it had accumulated a profit. In 1979, the company expanded in Scandinavia with an office in Stockholm. [36] Expansion was rapid in both Finland and Norway. Within two years of its opening Harlequin held 24% of the market for mass-market books in Sweden. [37] Scandinavia offered unique problems however, as booksellers refused to sell the category romances, complaining that the books' short life span of one month created too much work for too little compensation. Booksellers and distributors also worried that the uniformity of Harlequin's book covers made advertising too difficult. Instead, Harlequin novels in Scandinavia are classified as magazines and sold in supermarkets, at newsstands, or through subscription. Harlequin retains their North American-style direct marketing. Its message in Scandinavia is very similar to that of North America, but its target audience differs slightly. [38]
The 1989 fall of the Berlin Wall gave Harlequin an opportunity to extend into previously closed markets. Cora Verlag distributed over 720,000 romance novels at border checkpoints to introduce East Germans to the company's books. [39] The same year, Harlequin's German joint venture began distributing books in Hungary. By 1991 the company was selling 7 million romances in Hungary, and by 1992 Harlequin had sold 11 million books in a nation which, at the time, contained only 5.5 million women. At the same time, Harlequin's wholly owned subsidiary in Poland was able to order initial print runs of 174,000 copies of each title, and the Czech Republic was purchasing over $10 million in Harlequin novels each year. [40] In 1992, Harlequin had its best year (as of 1998), selling over 205 million novels in 24 languages on 6 continents. The company released a total of 800 new titles in English, with 6,600 foreign editions. [41]
Harlequin moved into the Chinese market in January 1995. In China, the company produced books in both Mandarin and English. Twenty titles were offered each year in Mandarin, with print runs of 550,000 copies each. An additional ten titles were offered in English, with print runs of 200,000 copies each. [40]
In total,[ when? ] Harlequin has offices in Amsterdam, Athens, Budapest, Granges-Pacot, Hamburg, London, Madrid, Milan, New York, Paris, Stockholm, Sydney, Tokyo, and Warsaw as well as licensing agreements in nine other countries.[ citation needed ]
The editors in Harlequin's branch offices have a great deal of control over which Harlequin novels will be published in their market. An editor generally chooses a book after either reading it personally, receiving a favorable review of the book from someone else, or reading a tip sheet about the novel. [42] The editors accept a novel for one of four reasons: [43]
The novels published overseas are not necessarily contemporaries of those sold in North America or Europe. International editors are allowed to choose from Harlequin's backlist, and books published in a particular country may have been published in North America six or seven years previously. [44] As the novels are translated into the country's native tongue, the names of the hero or heroine may be changed and the title might not be translated literally. Furthermore, each novel is usually shortened by 10-15% from its original English version. This is usually accomplished by removing references to American pop culture, removing puns that do not translate well, and tightening the descriptive passages. [45]
This section needs to be updated.(June 2022) |
In 2002, Harlequin published 1,113 romance novels, more than half of all romances released in North America. The next most prolific publisher was Kensington Books, which released only 219 romance titles. [1] In 2006, Harlequin published books in 26 languages in 109 international markets. They sold a total of 131 million books, similar to the company's sales in 2005. [46]
The company is considered one of the most profitable publishers. Over $585 million worth of books sold in 2003 for gross profits of $124 million and a profit margin of 21%. Its large profit margin can be tied in part to the amount of advance that its authors receive. These advances are often smaller than the industry average and can total to only a few thousand dollars for a series romance. [1] Despite its profitability, and a 37.2% pay hike for Harlequin President and CEO Donna Hayes in 2011, [47] the firm's royalty program for authors is controversial. In 2011, the Romance Writers Association sent a letter to all members to "exercise due diligence in reviewing contracts" with Harlequin because "several members of RWA have expressed concern regarding" Harlequin's digital royalty rate changes and non-compete clauses. [48] This is not the first time Harlequin had been called out by the Romance Writers Association regarding Harlequin's treatment of their authors. In 2009, Harlequin was called out by the Mystery Writer's Association, Romance Writers of America, and Science Fiction Writers Association for schemes of making their authors pay for publishing. [49]
In 2012, a class action lawsuit was filed against Harlequin Enterprises, Ltd. from authors alleging the publisher had fraudulently licensed e-book publishing rights at low rates to one of its subsidiaries in order to pay royalties only on the licensing fees instead of on the full sales receipts; the publisher responded that its authors "have been recompensed fairly and properly". [50]
The lawsuit alleges that Harlequin deprives plaintiffs and the other authors in the class of e-book royalties due them under publishing agreements entered into between 1990 and 2004.
This section needs additional citations for verification .(May 2014) |
Name | Description |
---|---|
Harlequin American Romance | American protagonists and settings. Four titles released per month. [51] Re-released as Harlequin Treasury Harlequin American Romance 90s. [52] |
Harlequin Blaze | Erotica. Imprint was ended in 2017 and superseded by Harlequin Dare. [53] As of March 2022 Harlequin Dare has been ended and Harlequin Blaze is releasing four titles per month. [54] [55] |
Harlequin Dare | Erotica; four titles released per month. [56] Launched in 2017. [53] Defunct as of June 2021. [55] |
Harlequin Desire | Wealthy and successful American protagonist-focused. Six titles released per month [57] [58] |
Harlequin Duets | Defunct. Re-released as Harlequin Treasury Harlequin Duets 90s collection. [59] |
Harlequin E [60] | |
Harlequin Everlasting Love [61] | Defunct [62] |
Harlequin Flipside | Defunct as of 2004 [63] |
Harlequin Ginger Blossom | Defunct romance manga reprints. Formerly Harlequin Violet [64] |
Harlequin Heartwarming | Wholesome family- and community-focused plots. Four titles released per month [57] [65] |
Harlequin Historical | Historical romance. Six titles released per month. [66] Included Harlequin Historical Undone. [60] Only distributed outside of the United States as of 2004. [63] [67] |
Harlequin Intrigue | Romantic suspense. Six titles released per month [68] |
Harlequin KISS | Flirty first-encounter contemporary romances. Four titles released per month. [69] [70] |
Harlequin Love And Laughter | Defunct. Re-released as the Harlequin Treasury Harlequin Love & Laughter 90s collection. [71] |
Harlequin Medical Romance | Medical-focused protagonists and plots. Six titles released per month. [57] [72] |
Harlequin Mystique | 1977-1982[ citation needed ] |
Harlequin NEXT [61] | Launched in 2005. [63] Defunct. [62] |
Harlequin Nocturne | Paranormal romance. Two titles released per month. [73] Includes Harlequin Nocturne Cravings series. [74] |
Harlequin Nonfiction [75] | |
Harlequin Presents | Glamorous and wealth-based plots that often feature "alpha male" protagonists. Eight titles released per month. [76] Includes Harlequin Presents Extra erotica series. |
Harlequin Romance | Uplifting, feel-good plots. Four titles released per month [57] [77] |
Harlequin Romantic Suspense | Romantic suspense. Four titles released per month [78] |
Harlequin Signature Select | Defunct. Harlequin/Silhouette imprint.[ citation needed ] |
Harlequin Special Edition | Relatable protagonists. Six titles released per month [79] |
Harlequin Special Releases [80] | |
Harlequin Superromance | Emotional plots with happy endings. Four titles released per month [81] |
Harlequin Temptation | Only distributed outside of the United States as of 2004. [63] |
Harlequin Treasury [60] | |
Harlequin Western Romance | Westerns and cowboy protagonists. Four titles released per month. [82] |
The Harlequin Treasury imprint re-released a number of titles as collections. [83]
Kimani Press, which focuses on African-American protagonists, was formed by Harlequin in December 2005, with the purchase of the Arabesque, Sepia, and New Spirit Imprints from BET Books.
Name | Description |
---|---|
Kimani Arabesque [86] | "The soul of romance, passion, adventure and intrigue." |
Kimani New Spirit [61] | Defunct |
Kimani Romance [87] | These stories "feature sophisticated, soulful and sensual African-American and multicultural heroes and heroines who develop fulfilling relationships as they lead lives full of drama, glamour and passion." |
Kimani Sepia [61] | Defunct |
Kimani Special Releases | |
Kimani TRU [88] | Young adult |
Kimani Press [89] |
Name | Description |
---|---|
Silhouette Bombshell | Launched 2004. [63] Defunct. |
Silhouette Desire | Defunct. Re-released as Harlequin Treasury Silhouette Desire 90s. [85] |
Silhouette Intimate Moments | Defunct. Re-released as Harlequin Treasury Silhouette Intimate Moments 90s. |
Silhouette Nocturne | Defunct [62] [90] |
Silhouette Romance | Defunct. Re-released as Harlequin Treasury Silhouette Romance 90s. |
Silhouette Special Edition | Defunct. Re-released as Harlequin Treasury Silhouette Special Edition 90s. |
Silhouette Special Releases | Defunct [60] |
Silhouette Yours Truly | Defunct. Re-released as Harlequin Treasury Silhouette Yours Truly 90s. [91] |
Inspirational romance.
Name | Description |
---|---|
Love Inspired [92] | |
Love Inspired Classics [93] | |
Love Inspired Cold Case [94] | |
Love Inspired Historical [95] | Historical fiction |
Love Inspired Inspirational Romance [96] | |
Love Inspired Mountain Rescue [97] | |
Love Inspired Novels [98] | |
Love Inspired Special Releases [99] | |
Love Inspired Suspense [100] [101] | Romantic suspense |
Name | Description |
---|---|
Carina Press [102] | |
Carina Adores [103] | LGBTQ+ romance |
Canary Street Press [104] | |
DellArte Press | 2009-2015 [105] |
Gold Eagle | Defunct as of 2014 |
Graydon House [106] | |
Hanover Square Press [107] | crime, thrillers, high-concept fiction, narrative history, journalism. memoir [108] |
Heartsong Presents [60] | |
Canary Street [109] | Formerly HQN, launched 2004 [63] |
Inkyard Press | Formerly Harlequin TEEN [110] [111] |
LUNA | 2004–2017 [112] [63] |
MIRA Books [113] | |
Park Row Books [114] | |
Red Dress Ink | 2004–2014 [115] [63] |
Rogue Angel | Defunct [62] |
Spice | Defunct; now published under HQN. [116] Included Spice Briefs (defunct). [117] |
Worldwide Library [118] | |
Worldwide Mystery [119] | |
Worldwide Suspense [120] |
In the early 1990s, many of Harlequin's authors began leaving the company to write single-title romances for other publishers. To retain their top talent, in October 1994 Harlequin launched the MIRA Books imprint to publish single-title romances. Most of their early novels were written by well-known Harlequin authors, including Heather Graham Pozzessere, whose novel Slow Burn (2001) [121] launched the imprint. [122] For its first few years, MIRA produced four novels each month. Of these, one would be an original novel, while the other three were repackaged backlist by other Harlequin authors. [123]
Harlequin has expanded its range of books, offering everything from romance novels under its various Harlequin and Silhouette imprints; thrillers and commercial literary fiction under the MIRA imprint; erotic fiction under the Spice imprint; Bridget Jones-style "chick lit" under its Red Dress Ink imprint; fantasy books under the LUNA imprint; inspirational fiction published under the Steeple Hill and Steeple Hill Café imprints; [63] African-American romance under its Kimani Press imprints; male action-adventure books under Gold Eagle imprint; and single-title romances under the Canary Street imprint.[ citation needed ]
In 2009, Harlequin Enterprises announced the creation of a vanity press imprint, Harlequin Horizons. [124] [125]
The Mystery Writers of America, Romance Writers of America, and Science Fiction Writers of America denounced the move and revoked the eligibility of Harlequin's other imprints for their associations' conferences and awards. [124] [126] Following the backlash, the imprint changed its name to DellArte Press. [127]
Harlequin Enterprises operates Harlequin More Than Words, a community investment program to reward women's work in communities across North America. The company solicits nominations of women who are making notable contributions to their communities. Five women are chosen as Harlequin More Than Words award recipients each year, and a donation of $50,000 is divided equally among their charitable causes. A collection of romance-fiction short stories inspired by their lives is then written by five of Harlequin's leading authors. Authors contributing to the More Than Words anthology include Diana Palmer, Debbie Macomber, Susan Wiggs, and Linda Lael Miller. The first anthology was published in 2004, with a new volume published annually. Proceeds from the sale of the book are reinvested in the Harlequin More Than Words program.
A romance novel or romantic novel is a genre fiction novel that primary focuses on the relationship and romantic love between two people, typically with an emotionally satisfying and optimistic ending. Authors who have contributed to the development of this genre include Maria Edgeworth, Samuel Richardson, Jane Austen, and Charlotte Brontë.
Mills & Boon is a romance imprint of British publisher Harlequin UK Ltd. It was founded in 1908 by Gerald Rusgrove Mills and Charles Boon as a general publisher. The company moved towards escapist fiction for women in the 1930s. In 1971, the publisher was bought by the Canadian company Harlequin Enterprises, its North American distributor based in Toronto, with whom it had a long informal partnership. The two companies offer a number of imprints that between them account for almost three-quarters of the romance paperbacks published in Britain. Its print books are presently out-numbered and out-sold by the company's e-books, which allowed the publisher to double its output.
Nora Roberts is an American author of over 225 romance novels. She also writes as J. D. Robb, Jill March, and Sarah Hardesty.
Anne Mather is the pseudonym used by Mildred Grieveson, a popular British author of over 160 romance novels. She also signed novels as Caroline Fleming and Cardine Fleming.
Janet Anne Haradon Dailey was an American author of numerous romance novels as Janet Dailey. Her novels have been translated into nineteen languages and have sold more than 300 million copies worldwide.
Barbara Keiler, known more widely by her pseudonym Judith Arnold, is an American author of crime fiction and over eighty-five romance novels. She has been writing since 1983, and has also been published under the pen names Ariel Berk and Thea Frederick.
Anne Hampson was a British writer of over 125 romance novels in Mills & Boon from 1969 to 1998. She published historical romance novels under the pseudonym Jane Wilby. Although she retired in 1998, in 2005 she published two romance and a crime novel. She has been written an autobiography entitled Fate Was My Friend.
Violet Winspear was a British writer of 70 romance novels in Mills & Boon from 1961 to 1987.
Irish Thoroughbred is American author Nora Roberts's debut novel, originally published by Silhouette in January 1981 as a category romance. Like other category romances, the novel was less than 200 pages and was intended to be on sale for only one month. It proved so popular that it was repackaged as a stand-alone romance and reprinted multiple times. Roberts wrote two sequels, Irish Rebel and Irish Rose.
Richard Arthur Northwood Bonnycastle was a Canadian businessman. He formerly owned and was the publisher of Harlequin Enterprises, the world's largest publisher of romantic fiction, as well was an owner of thoroughbred racehorses Harlequin Ranches. He was part of the Bonnycastle family founded in Canada by British military officer, Sir Richard Henry Bonnycastle.
Richard Henry Gardyn Bonnycastle was a Canadian lawyer, fur trader, adventurer, and a businessman who helped found and then owned the romance novel publishing company, Harlequin Enterprises.
Love Inspired is an imprint of Harlequin Enterprises that is focused on Christian Fiction.
Linda Goodnight is an American author of inspirational romance, contemporary romance and women's fiction. In 2008, she received the Romance Writers of America RITA Award for Best Inspirational Romance for her novel A Touch of Grace.
Amanda Renee is an American romance novelist.
Sarah Mayberry is an Australian contemporary romance author and television screenwriter. She has written several novels for Harlequin Mills and Boon, as well as scripts for the television soap opera Neighbours. She was a storyliner for the New Zealand medical drama Shortland Street and co-created the teen drama series Karaoke High with Kirsty McKenzie. Mayberry and her works have been nominated for several awards, and she won the Favourite Erotic Romance accolade at the Australian Romance Readers Awards in 2015.
Thea Harrison is the pen name of American author Teddy Harrison, who writes paranormal romance, sci-fi fantasy, and contemporary romance novels, including the New York Times and USA Today bestselling Elder Races series. Harrison has also written contemporary romance novels for Harlequin Mills & Boon under the pen name Amanda Carpenter.
Donna Hill is an American author of romance, mystery, and women's fiction. She has written over seventy novels, twenty short stories, and edited multiple anthologies. Three of Hill's novels have been adapted for screen.
Vivian Lorraine Stephens is an American editor of romance novels, literary agent, and founder of Romance Writers of America (RWA). While at Dell Publishing, she created and was the editor of Candlelight Ecstasy, a romance line that revolutionized the genre in the 1980s. In 1980, as part of the Candlelight Romance line, she published Entwined Destinies by Rosalind Welles, the first category romance novel by an African-American author to feature African-American main characters. "A Black editor in a predominantly white industry, Stephens sought to incorporate the voices of women of color into the burgeoning romance industry." Over the course of her career, Stephens helped launch Sandra Kitt, Jayne Ann Krentz, and Beverly Jenkins, among others.
Tiffany Reisz is an American author. She is best known for the Original Sinners series of erotica and she has won the RITA Award and a Lambda Literary Award.
The following is a list of books by Debbie Macomber, an American author of romance novels and contemporary women's fiction.