1990
Rooms of the Heart by Donna Hill Referenced in LaQuette's speech
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1991
Redeeming Love by Francine Rivers Seminal inspirational text
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1992
Season of Light by Lorna Michaels First own voices Jewish contemporary romance
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1992
Unforgivable by Joyce McGill First own voices Silhouette Intimate Moments
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1993
The Last Cavalier by Heather Graham Pozzessere Silhouette Shadows #1
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1993
Stone Butch Blues by Leslie Feinberg First genderqueer mainstream fiction with romantic elements
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1993
Dreaming of You by Lisa Kleypas Popularization of the non-aristocratic hero in historical romance
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1994
Invisible Life by E Lynn Harris Seminal own voices black gay romance
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1994
Serenade by Sandra Kitt Arabesque #1
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1994
Forever Yours by Francis Ray Arabesque #2
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1994
Night Song by Beverly Jenkins First black own voices historical
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1995
The Fictitious Marquis by Alina Adams First own voices Jewish historical
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1995
The Color of Love by Sandra Kitt Referenced in LaQuette's speech
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1998
Addicted by Zane The first black erotic romance to receive mainstream success
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1999
Forever True / Solo Tuya by Elaine Alberro Encanto First Class; published by Kensington, these titles were published in both English and Spanish in the same book
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1999
Summer Dreams / Suenos De Verano by Hebby Roman Encanto First Class; published by Kensington, these titles were published in both English and Spanish in the same book
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1999
Desert Kiss / Besos En El Desierto by Gloria Alvarez Encanto First Class; published by Kensington, these titles were published in both English and Spanish in the same book
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1999
Now And Always / Para Siempre by Caridad Scordato Encanto First Class; published by Kensington, these titles were published in both English and Spanish in the same book
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1999
Beyond Desire by Gwynne Forster Referenced in LaQuette's speech
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2000
Passing By Samaria by Sharon Foster The first black own voices inspriational; double RITA finalist
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2000
The Forsaken by LA Banks Early own voices black paranormal romance
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2001
Safe Harbor by Radclyffe Lesbian romance
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2001
Notorious by Vicki Lewis Thompson Harlequin Blaze #1
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2001
Suddenly You by Lisa Kleypas Early historical fat representation
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2001
Exposed by Julie Leto Harlequin Blaze #2
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2002
Born Confused by Tanuja Desai Hidier First South Asian young adult romance
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2002
The Surgeon by Tess Gerritsen Chinese American author and RITA winner
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2003
Never Again Once More by Mary B. Morrison Referenced in LaQuette's speech
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2004
A Night to Remember by Eve Vaughn Referenced in LaQuette's speech
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2004
Bet Me by Jennifer Crusie Early contemporary fat representation
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2005
Desperate Tigress by Jade Lee Early own voices historical
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2006
Solid Soul by Brenda Jackson Harlequin Kimani #1
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2006
Unforgiven by Lindsay McKenna Harlequin Nocturne #1
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2007
Adiós to My Old Life by Caridad Ferrer Cuban American author and RITA winner
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2008
Charmed by Koko Brown Referenced in LaQuette's speech
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2008
Irresistible Forces by Brenda Jackson The first black romance to hit the New York Times list
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2010
Butterfly Swords by Jeannie Lin Early own-voices Asian historical
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2011
Hot Head by Damon Suede First own voices M/M romance to be named to Goodreads Best of the Year list
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2013
Your Happy End by E.E. Ottoman First own voices transgender romance
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2012
Aristotle and Dante Discover the Secrets of the Universe by Benjamin Alire Saenz Seminal own voices Latinx queer romance
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2013
On A Night Like This by Barbara Freethy Amazon's Bestselling Author of All Time
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2015
The Saint by Tiffany Reisz First own voices queer author to win a RITA Award
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2017
The Moon in the Palace by Weina Dai Randel First own voices Chinese RITA Award winner
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2018
Total Bravery by Piper J. Drake First own voices Thai (Southeast Asian) romance
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2019
Bad Blood by M. Malone First black author to win a RITA Award. Shares milestone with Kennedy Ryan
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2019
Long Shot by Kennedy Ryan First black author to win a RITA Award. Shares milestone with M. Malone
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2019
My So-Called Bollywood Life by Nisha Sharma First South Asian author to win a RITA Award
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