Hm, I have the most trouble with historicals, because it's always a balancing act between if it is believable or if it has sympathetic characters.
I mean, the whole zeitgeist was so incredibly different, and the further back you go the more prevalent attitudes have changed.
So a character who is believably FROM THAT TIME PERIOD would pretty much NEVER be someone I'd want to hang out with, or have sympathy for. I've done far too much reading and know too much about their social attitudes.
Which means either I can't believe they're really from that time period, or they are jerks that I don't care about....
I tend to enjoy more the books that ignore historical accuracy and make characters who have modern attitudes (believing in personal agency is a big one for me).
So with that caveat, here are some historical romances that I still managed to enjoy:
(Most of these will have been out for a while; a library or a used book store is more likely to have them than something new. Although if you get ebooks I have no clue how that works for out-of-print):
"Desire" by Amanda Quick (particularly prone to Plot Convenient Coincidence, but the humor appealed to me)
"Mistress", same author (again, mostly because the set up really really entertains me; the plot itself I didn't find terribly compelling)
Pretty nearly anything by Judith A Lansdowne, but particularly her "The Mystery Kiss", "Shall We Dance", oh, heck, just any of them. Again, it's all about the humor.
Slightly less comedic, I do almost always check out the new books at the library by Mary Balogh, Jo Beverly, and Mary Jo Putney. (These three authors write books so similar to each other that I sometimes mix up which books are by which of them. So if you try any one of those three and enjoy it, go ahead and try the others, but if it isn't to your taste then skip the others.)
For fantasy romances, I mostly only have recommendations that are primarily fantasy genre and happen to have a romantic subplot.
The YA version, check out "The Changeling Sea", by Patricia A McKillip. I've had to buy a couple copies of that because I loan them out and people don't want to return them.
Sorcery & Cecelia (Or, The Enchanted Chocolate Pot), by Patricia Wrede and Caroline Stevermer, is also slightly more YA in feel, but capture regency romance as well as fantasy elements very well.
C.E. Murphy came out fairly recently with a fantasy remake of Pride & Prejudice. It's called "Magic & Manners" and really does feel very Austenian.
"Glamour in Glass", by Mary Robinette Kowal is also like an Austen novel with fantasy elements. That turned into a series so if you like it, you can continue.
The romance in Mystic and Rider, by Sharon Shinn, was long in developing but rang very true to me, and made me mist up at the end. But I admit that I primarily like the book for the political and magical portrayals of the world she created. The romance is not a big portion of the book.
The romance in "The Iron Duke" is much more overt, but that's more steampunk fantasy than straight fantasy, and it's STILL not primarily about romance.
eeeehhhhhh, that's all I can think of.
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