Which Penguin Random House Imprints Publish Romance Novels?

2025-08-30 14:44:53 317

4 Answers

Blake
Blake
2025-08-31 20:23:24
Working in a bookstore for several years taught me to think in categories rather than company names, but if you want imprint-specific guidance: Berkley is the clear romance hub at Penguin Random House — they have dedicated romance lists and are very active in contemporary, historical, romantic suspense, and paranormal romance. New American Library/Signet traditionally handles mass‑market romance reprints and staples, which is handy if you’re looking for pocket‑sized series or backlist finds.

Ballantine and some of the Random House trade imprints will publish contemporary and women’s fiction with strong romantic arcs; these are often marketed as single‑title trade novels rather than genre mass‑market. Putnam and select Crown or Viking titles can show up for more literary romance or crossover titles that appeal to both book‑club readers and romance fans. For LGBTQ+ romance and diverse voices, check imprint catalog notes and PRH’s dedicated lists — they’re increasingly curating those titles specifically.

When I’m hunting: use subject tags on library catalogs, search the Penguin Random House site for 'romance' filter options, and follow imprint newsletters. That combo usually uncovers new releases and which imprint is currently leaning into which subgenre.
Amelia
Amelia
2025-09-02 11:56:29
I’m pretty picky about my rom‑coms, and I’ve learned that Penguin Random House spreads romance across multiple imprints rather than keeping it in just one place. Berkley is the main romance label I check first — lots of contemporary, historical, and romantic suspense live there. New American Library/Signet pops up for mass‑market romance and reprints. Ballantine and some Random House trade imprints take single‑title contemporary and women’s fiction with romantic plots, while Putnam and a few Crown/Viking titles might handle more literary‑leaning romances.

Quick tip: use the Penguin Random House website’s filters or follow imprint newsletters and Goodreads lists to see who’s publishing what this season — it keeps the discovery fun.
Thomas
Thomas
2025-09-02 15:02:48
I’m the kind of person who reads in bed with a tea mug and a spreadsheet of imprints (don’t judge), so here’s a practical take: Berkley is the go-to romance imprint within Penguin Random House — they publish a ton of subgenres (historical, contemporary, suspense, paranormal). New American Library (often seen under Signet) handles mass‑market and reprint romance editions. Ballantine and some Random House trade imprints will pick up contemporary romance and crossover women’s fiction that leans romantic.

Also don’t forget Putnam and a few Crown or Viking titles when you’re looking for more literary or adult single‑title romances. The landscape is fluid — editors move imprints and lines evolve — so I usually check the imprint page on the Penguin Random House website, Goodreads lists, or my favorite indie bookstore’s staff picks to see who’s publishing what this season.

If you want, I can list specific subgenres and where they’re most commonly found across those imprints.
Dylan
Dylan
2025-09-05 22:10:10
If you’re poking around for where Penguin Random House publishes romance, the short guided tour I keep in my head starts with Berkley — that’s the imprint most folks point to when they want everything from historical and contemporary to paranormal and romantic suspense. I’ve found more than a few comfort reads on Berkley shelves while hunting for something light to take on a weekend trip.

Beyond Berkley, romance shows up all over PRH’s house of imprints. Ballantine and other Random House trade imprints often carry contemporary and women’s fiction with strong romantic storylines, while New American Library (Signet) covers a lot of classic mass‑market romance formats. Putnam and some Crown/Viking titles will skew toward romantic literary fiction or crossover mainstream books with a big romance element.

If you want a clean list, think of Berkley first, then check Ballantine, NAL/Signet, Putnam, and the larger Random House/Penguin/Bantam family for single-title romances. I also like to follow PRH’s newsletters and the romance tags on Goodreads — they point to which imprints are actively pushing titles in specific subgenres.
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