Love Lines: The Romance Reader's Guide to Printed Pleasures

Publisher
Facts on File
Location
New York
Publication year
1983
Comment

This is not an academic work but I'm including it anyway because it could be a useful resource. It includes quotes from a number of authors working at the time, as well as editors (including Vivian Stephens) and describes how romance was changing in the early 1980s.

There are short biographies of a number of authors but I've not tagged all of them, just some of the ones who're given a bit more attention/who gave quotes. For example, there are some pages about how Jude Deveraux dressed dolls to understand clothing/fashion for her novels (141-144), Bertrice Small claims to be "partially responsible for soothing things down" (127) with regards to rape in "bodice-rippers" (there is more about rape and sex elsewhere, including 139-140) and Roberta Gellis commenting on marriage in the Middle Ages (145-46).

There are sections on different publishers, including Candlelight Ecstasy, Silhouette, Tapestry Romance, Mills & Boon, Harlequin. As evidence of how Gallen went "a step or two further" than other romance publishers, it's mentioned that "In By Invitation Only by Monica Barrie [...] two minor characters become involved in a homosexual affair" (182).

The book includes a lot of photographs of covers, and there's some discussion of cover art: e.g. re Silhouette specifically, on page 166, and then more generally, including entries on specific illustrators, on pages 276-302.

Works in this collection