Dec 26 only -- Free romance books
Dec. 26th, 2025 12:30 pmLinks to all platforms / booksellers.
https://www.romancebookworms.com/
As always, feel free to share.
More than anything, Mike Taylor wanted to be ordinary. Being a genius, he learned early in life, meant people expected too much. A career at the MI6 Help Desk seemed the perfect way to guarantee a lifetime of obscurity, until he got a very unusual tech support call.
We had our usual quiet Christmas Day: stockings, family zoom, salmon-elevenses, roast bird dinner with my brother Jonny, a silly film (Shaun the Sheep: Farmageddon). I even managed to drag the children out to the park for an hour or so before dinner, including some table tennis and frisbee.
One of my personal Christmas traditions is watching the Nutcracker, usually in a cinema broadcast, and I just couldn't make that work this winter. So I was really charmed to find a broadcast of the Royal Ballet's production on iPlayer; the advantage of watching it at home is that I can have a quiet chat with my brother alongside without bothering anyone else.
This morning I woke up nice and early and headed out for another of my booked hot yoga sessions, followed by dropping in on my old friend Shaun for a long-overdue catchup. This afternoon has mostly been reading and TV, and the evening will probably continue the same way.
How Caroline Daum ended up marrying Frederick the Great's lover: or, how to find yourself a suitable match in Frederician Prussia.
So instead of requesting 18th CE RPF this year, I requested fic for the 18th CE RPF German novel Sieben Jahre which is all about, well, Frederick the Great and his brother Henry/Heinrich (my problematic fave!) and their entire super dysfunctional family, and all the fascinating people around them!! Caroline Fredersdorf shows up very briefly but is awesome and memorable, and one of my prompts was for her backstory -- and I got this great story, both tender and hilarious, about how she ended up getting married to the King's chamberlain and lover Michael Gabriel Fredersdorf! It doesn't require any book knowledge, although knowing enough of the 18th CE history to know that Fredersdorf was, in fact, Fritz's chamberlain and lover is probably useful :)
I also got two (!!) Tiptree stories! (!!) James Tiptree, Jr. (Alice Sheldon) is one of those writers who had a fundamental effect on me as a young SF-reading adolescent. Yuletide rules allowed nominating anthologies this year, so I jumped on that because I love all these stories so much. And I adore how both of these stories interrogate the original stories' assumptions and open up new ways of looking at them!
That the Deity Who Kills for Pleasure Will Also Heal (6260 words) by Anonymous
Chapters: 1/1
Fandom: Her Smoke Rose Up Forever (anthology) - James Tiptree Jr., On The Last Afternoon - James Tiptree Jr.
Rating: Explicit
Warnings: Graphic Depictions Of Violence, Major Character Death, Rape/Non-Con
Characters: Original Characters
Additional Tags: Rape, Explicit Sexual Content, Ecocide, Agoraphobia, Background Human Sacrifice, Background Harm to Mice, Penis Fencing, Perhaps Something Will Be Saved From the Wreckage, Post-Canon
Summary:
Mysas says you’re gods from the sky, like the elders warned us. I think you’re just people. Gods wouldn’t look so frightened all the time, or sweat so much...
Ten thousand afternoons later, space travelers make contact again.
Post-canon for "On the Last Afternoon," dealing with what it means to be human; and the battle between humans and the ecosystem, and where does one draw the line? This can be read without knowing canon (it takes place generations after canon, in fact), although it's definitely very much in dialogue with the very different mindset of that story. (Sorry, I can't find an online version of the canon story.)
Remembering the Director of the Seventh Recitation: Oral Histories from the Imperial Archive (3597 words) by Anonymous
Chapters: 1/1
Fandom: Her Smoke Rose Up Forever (anthology) - James Tiptree Jr., The Women Men Don't See - James Tiptree Jr., The Last Flight of Dr. Ain - James Tiptree Jr.
Rating: Teen And Up Audiences
Warnings: Major Character Death
Characters: Ruth Parsons
Additional Tags: Oral History, Post-Canon, "Main Character Death" Just In the Sense That Everyone Dies Eventually, Background Ruth Parsons & Althea Parsons, Vietnam War, Lunar Forestry
Summary:
Five memories of Ruth Parsons, afterwards.
Post-canon for "The Women Men Don't See," with some worldbuilding taken from "The Last Flight of Dr. Ain." Just a really interesting set of interviews with a diverse set of aliens and humans and fascinating worldbuilding, about a potential future for Ruth Parsons and her life, that has a lot of thoughts about axes other than the women/men axis. Just really great. This can definitely be read without knowing "Flight," and while helpful to know "Women," it's not necessary, I think, to enjoy it. (The canon story is archived here, although the formatting is a little weird.)

The Pleasures of Reading, 2025
by Lesley Hall
During the past year I spent a fair amount of time immersed in two older lengthy romans fleuve. I signed up to an online reading group re-reading and discussing Anthony Powell’s 12-volume A Dance to the Music of Time (1951-1975) which is very English of a certain class and generation. Of my own accord I embarked (actually, I see I read the first volume back in 2024, but it was this year that the sequence really got its hooks into me) on the very different Lanny Budd series by left-wing US novelist Upton Sinclair. Sinclair had not really been on my horizon before, although I had some apprehension that his earlier works had had significant social impact and gained him a reputation as an important muckraker. This series consists of eleven long volumes (published 1940-1953), covering a period from before the First World War to the Cold War era.
The novels are a vast panoramic mixture of very assorted elements with a global perspective on the political currents of the time: the significance of the rise of fascism to the trajectory of the narrative struck considerable contemporary resonances. Lanny Budd is American but born and brought up in France within a cosmopolitan and artistic milieu: he is introduced doing Dalcroze exercises in company with his English and German friends (who go on to play significant continuing roles).
While a good deal of his adventures are straight-up thriller material, there are also observations of the differing social mores of the places he visits and the very diverse groups he mingles with, the social and technological changes going on, and a whole lot else, including the importance of art and music, his experiments with psychic phenomena, his “New Thought” guru stepfather, the new modern theories of child-rearing. I was also struck by the extent to which Lanny was by no means a two-fisted macho hero, but a mild-mannered art expert with useful family and social connections (excellent cover for his exploits), and his behavior toward women is exemplarily gentlemanly. Plus, there is a wide range of vivid women characters, if perhaps the occasional touch of “man of his day” authorial gender essentialism. One might cavil just a little at the way in which Lanny manages to find himself at the hot spots of history and in the presence of major players – some of these are plausible, given his convictions and missions, but others seem a bit too coincidental. But, really, the whole story just keeps moving along and took me with it, leaving me at the end of the final volume quite worrying that Lanny and his wife Laurel being strongly anti-Communist democratic socialists and anti-Stalinist activists was not going to save them, a short while down the line, from the adverse attentions of McCarthyism.
Of more recent works read in the past year, the ones that impressed me particularly (a very miscellaneous range!):
Maggie Helwig, Encampment: Resistance, Grace, and an Unhoused Community (2025): brilliant and intense account by an Anglican priest and long-time humanitarian activist about the homeless community outside her church in Toronto.
Lucy Mangan, Bookish: How Reading Shapes Our Lives (2025): I am always up for reading Lucy Mangan writing about books and reading.
Susan Sontag, On Women (collected 2023 but mostly written in 1970s).
Two romances that had what I like in romances, which is a good deal of hinterland in both the character’s own lives and in the world around them: Cat Sebastian, After Hours at Dooryard Books (2025) set in 1968 in a used bookstore in Greenwich Village and not the image of the liberated late ‘60s people envision, partly because the main characters are gay men at a time of continuing prejudice but also because that time was actually pretty dark. (I saw someone somewhere suggesting this was actually a historical novel incorporating a romance plot. Fair.) It also avoided what I find an annoying twist common in romance. Zen Cho, Behind Frenemy Lines (2025): contemporary-set romance, that had elements that made me wonder is Zen Cho going to add political thrillers to the several genres she has written in for the next act??
Sally Smith, A Case of Life and Limb (The Trials of Gabriel Ward #2) (2025): I mentioned her previous A Case of Mice and Murder as among my pleasures last year. This met the high bar already set and I am already in eager anticipation of the next volume in this series.
Isidore and Bayblonne settle in Bologna.
