8 Romance Novels Living in My Head Rent Free

8 Romance Books that are living in my head rent free right now.


These are in no particular order I’ll flag spoilers and mention content warnings where relevant but I just want to share with y’all about the books that just won’t leave and maybe if other people read them and tell me about them my brain will give up a bit more real estate for other thoughts like work and snacks. 



The Land of the Beautiful Dead by  R. Lee Smith 

Content warnings: Violence, so much violence, zombies, abuse, suicide, parental death, child death, torture, and mentions of sexual assault (there are probably more but I can’t recall off hand go in assuming more content warnings)

This book has broken me. In all the worse and best ways. It is a tome. Coming in at a whopping 733 pages, this book is intimidating to start. I’ll admit, when I went into it, I fully thought I’d DNF it after 25% percent. 

The writing of Smith is elegant, the story unfolds in a way that reminded me of floating down the river. The hours passed, the scenery passed, but I didn’t realize how much had changed (in the book and about myself) until I finished it and put the book down. That’s right, I read it in one sitting. I couldn’t stop. 

This book has all the story elements I usually avoid. An immortal lead, zombies, characters put into situations where they have to sell their bodies for safety, bitter hopelessness in a miserable world. And yet, I could not stop reading.

When I was done reading The Land of the Beautiful Dead, I was so enraptured by the way Smith approaches themes of death, dying, immortality, undying, and most importantly the good death. What does it mean to die a good death? What are you willing to sacrifice to have it? Who deserves a good death? And for the truly evil, should suffering continue after death.

Standing ovation. Gold Star. This book is a 10/10 thought provoker. There is steam, smut, and a brilliantly built romance that I should probably mention more, but you can get those in any Beauty and the Beast retelling. What I haven’t found anywhere else is the thought provoking, emotion churning, terrifyingly beautiful story in The Land of the Beautiful Dead. 


Serpents Mate by Susan Trombley

Anyone who follows me on Goodreads knows that I love alien romances. It is my current favorite sub genre to read. I like them campy, I like them scary, I like them weird, I like them steamy. Susan Trombley is the queen of making the truly alien romantic. 

The first book in the Iriduan Test Subject’s book (The Scorpion’s Mate) is brilliant, don’t get me wrong, but The Serpent’s Mate is the one that lives rent free. 

Particularly one scene. If you’ve read the book, the scene is the kiss

Unlike the first two books of the series, the alien male lead in Serpent’s Mate had volunteered to be a test subject. This book explores themes of patriotism, sacrifice, and what it means to choose between ideologies to find the truth. 

The sex scenes are steamy, the biology is fascinating, and the romance feels natural in the strangeness of a human and a serpent alien genetic test subject. 

To be honest, I adore every book I’ve ready by Susan Trombley. She really understands how to make the gaps in culture, language, and biology challenging to the characters and a key part of how the romance builds. Her books are wild rides of weird and I’m here for it. But this one is the one I can’t stop thinking about....and I first read it in October 2018.  



Glint (The Plated Prisoner Series Book 2) by Raven Kennedy

Content warnings: Most warnings related to violence and sex, power imbalance related abuse, cheating, harems, rot.


The most recent inclusion on this list, I read the first three books of the Plated Prisoner series over the weekend. The second book is the one that’s just broken me in all the best ways. 

This series is a King Midas retelling that is honestly a little hard to read. Not because of the prose (which are lovely) but the way that Raven Kennedy hits hurts

This wasn’t the first series of Raven Kennedy’s I’ve read (I loved the Pack of Misfits series and couldn’t get into the Cupid series and intend to try out her other books), but Gild, Glint, and Gleam punch with an accuracy and strength I was not prepared for in a King Midas retelling. 

The gut punches started in book one chapter one and didn’t stop (book three ends in a cliff hanger and book four isn’t out until May 2022 and I’m only a little bitter about it).

The themes that have captured my mind in a gilded cage are why this book has been placed on this list before the welcome is even overstayed. 

The series could have been titled: 

Power, Security, and the Art of Weaponizing Love: What we give up to feel safe and how to get it back. 

I stayed up until 3am reading this series and I don’t regret a second of my lost sleep. I felt every cutting word as Auren’s story developed. The world unfolded like a golden sheet floating into a fire. Absolutely brilliant and I feel my understanding of how I as a person have traded my own power, love, and sense of self for feelings of safety. I receive a catharsis I didn’t know I needed related to this trade off and I’m earnestly grateful for having read these books. That said, they’re absolutely brutal. Had I tried to read these ten years ago, I probably would have ended up in a much worse place. Please take the content warnings at the top into consideration before proceeding. 



Beyond the Next Star by Melody Johnson

Content warning: PTSD, violence, medical related humiliation and trauma, alien abduction, human/non-human pairing


Beyond the Next Star is a different sort of alien abduction romance and it’s beautiful. The story is in dual POV and we learn early on that the alien male lead has purchased a human as an emotional support animal.

Yup, you read that right. 

Alien romances have referenced humans as pets for years so I didn’t think this book would be as earth shattering for me as it was. But it was. 

The story is a series of emotional whiplashes as we follow these two sentient beings coming to grasp with the reality of their individual situation. There are hilarious scenes, like the alien trying to train the human in much the way humans train dogs. And there are gut punches as we follow the female human character as she’s treated like a pet and regular vet trips and all the misery that entails. 

I think of this book all the time. How much agency do our pets have? I’ll be honest, as a pet lover this book has really made me question my life and what I’m doing with it. 


Grr!: An Alien Warrior Romance by Zeta Star

Content warning: Alien abduction, non-human/human pairing

This book made me angry. Immediately after I read it, I wrote a several hundred word diatribe to my friends explaining how angry this book made me. 

Why did it make me angry?

A book called Grr! Has no right to be as good as this book was. The title and blurb do not do this book justice.

It hits all the charming, steamy, campy, fun that the rom-com sphere of alien romances hit while having an action packed adventure without the deus ex machina that seems to happen in most alien romances that would compare. 

I adored the way that the characters worked together despite a language barrier. I loved that they worried about each other feeling taken advantage of as they fell for each other. I loved this book so much, after reading it on KU....I bought it and then proceeded to pester everyone I know to read this book because I needed more people to be as aggressively angry about how stupidly good this book is when it has no right to be with a title of Grr!

Love Code by Ann Aguirre

This is another sequel that outshines the first book in my opinion. Strange Love is the first book in the Galactic Love series and it’s precious. I mean, there is a talking dog. What more do you need? 

Apparently a lot because that’s what Aguirre gave me in Love Code. I downloaded this after a glowing review on reddit and this book did not let me down. It’s probably the least dark of all the books on my list. Just thinking about the characters in this book lightens my heart, warms my soul, and makes me positively giddy. 

The amount of consent and consent affirmation in this book is a breath of fresh air (particularly compared to the rest of the books on this list). 

The romance is genuine and explores a lot of the themes from the other books, but in a positive context. When the power imbalance between the leads in Love Code is addressed, it’s to affirm that both characters understood the power imbalance and how to make sure the one with less power was safe, secure, and knew they were not expected to  behave in a certain way to continue getting that safety. 

The book explores life, living, and unlife through the lens of an AI into a meatsuit. Aguirre approaches discovering what it means to be alive with and without flesh in a hilarious, heartfelt book that will forever be embedded in my brain. 

Gladiator Queen by Auryn Haley

This is another series I read back in 2018. The whole trilogy is available in a bundle on Kindle Unlimited. It was a story I initially clicked on because the title cracked me up and I was in an ironic mood. (Sidenote: this is how I fell down the Ice Planet rabbit hole also in 2018. My irony reads often lead to obsessive fandom). 

The details are fuzzy on what happens in which of the three books so I’ll keep my discussion to why this lives rent free in my head. 

Gladiator Queen is a story of a delicate princess thrust into the gladiatorial pits of her country because of political machinations. The world building enraptured me. The action sequences were heart pounding, terrifying, and gut wrenching in a way that I couldn’t look away, even when I wanted to.  It’s clear that Hadley spent a lot of time researching gladiators, fighting styles, and common injuries. 

That alone might have been enough to make this series refuse to leave my cranial apartment complex, but there is so much more to the Gladiator Queen. The romance is a slow burn that at no point feels guaranteed. The stakes are high and when the life and death stakes seem to go away, higher stakes take their place. 

This series also spends time to live in the horror of the pits, but, unlike a lot of violent content in romance novels, it spends the time after to process the pain. The characters struggle with the guilt of what they’ve been forced to do to survive and lean on each other to make it through. The characters’ emotional struggles and handling of their trauma in a way that feels both real and cathartic is art, pure and simple. 

That said, I cannot get myself to reread this series, which is rare for me. I think about this book a lot and it has had an impact on the way I see references to gladiators in the media. 


Phoenix Unbound by Grace Draven

Grace Draven is an absolute character queen. I waffled between Radiance and Phoenix Unbound for this spot because both books of Draven’s live rent free in my head, but I went with Phoenix Unbound because it has a few more elements that linger for me. 

This book hits a few themes that other books on this list have hit. As I wrote this paragraph I discovered that this book has all the elements of the other books that live rent free in my head in one way or the other.

The characters struggle with themes of self vs the whole, hiding elements of the individual’s identity, trading power for security. There is exploration of the good death, and culture shock. The characters have to grapple with what it means to perpetuate their own ideologi

On top of all that, it also has gladiators. I know what doesn’t this book have?

So those are eight of the books living rent free in my head. Honorable (non romance) mentions: ,most books by Drew Hayes (if you play DND and haven’t read NPCs what are you doing with your life), Caitlin Doughty, and William Shatner’s autobiography Up Till Now.

What books are living rent free in your head? I’m dying to know.



The Impostor

On the Eve of the release of my eighth book, I’m going to talk about my biggest insecurity.: being found out as an Impostor.

Impostor graphic.jpg

It’s more than doubt. It’s more than insecurity. It’s more than anxiety. It’s a constant nagging feeling that you don’t belong. That your life is a lie. That everything you’ve worked hard for to achieve wasn’t earned. 

Every critical comment is truth and every bit of praise is a lie. It’s pervasive. Daunting. Paralyzing. 

And you’re supposed to pretend you’re not feeling it. Because faking it until you make it is what you’re supposed to do, right?


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Let me tell you about Impostor Syndrome. 


In a few hours, my eighth book, Ursa Minors, will be out on Amazon to purchase or borrow using Kindle Unlimited.  I was fortunate to have dozens of preorders. Fans of the books reached out after it was delayed and sent good wishes along to the proofreader for whom I delayed the publication. 

I have over 1,500 ratings on Goodreads and hundreds of positive reviews on Amazon. I’ve been a full-time writer for almost a year. 

Long story short, I have the success that many self-published authors hope for in their “dare to dream big” fantasies. 

And I feel like a fraud. 

I feel like a failure. 

I feel like every 5 star review is a person being way too nice and all the one star reviews aren’t brutal enough. And that is my Impostor Syndrome. 


I feel guilty all the time that the books I love to write are the books that people want to read. 

I feel guilty that those books aren’t better. That I didn’t put more of my heart, soul, or editing budget into them.

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I struggle as a self published author balancing investing in more expensive editors, getting a proper formatter, and other experts versus the return on that investment. And the fact that I am fortunate enough to even be able to ponder that while authors I’ve read and enjoyed are working three jobs and are happy to sell a single copy of their books. 


Impostor Syndrome cuts hard, it cuts deep, and is so common. I can’t even say it’s rarely talked about, because it’s not some deep dark hidden secret in the author world. My writing group talks about dealing with Impostor’s Syndrome all the time. And the tragedy of this is that sometimes I feel like an Impostor for even talking about having Impostor’s Syndrome because I don’t feel good enough  to even have it. Impostor Syndrome is for people who are good enough to be in a position of relative success but don’t think they belong there. 

Let that sink in for a second. I feel like an Impostor for even daring to admit I have Impostor Syndrome.


There are many better definitions of Impostor Syndrome, but the only one that matters to me is fucking fuckety fuck this


So why bring this up? Why post this on the blog instead of a teaser for Ursa Minors or a plea to buy my books?


I think so much of my life as an author is hoping that my books get seen, read, and reviewed, that I’ve forgotten that I am a person. I’m not an author. I’m Lynn Katzenmeyer. I have insecurities and flaws. I have hobbies and favorite foods. 

Since going fulltime, I’ve lost myself to my Impostor Syndrome. Fighting to prove to myself that my books and through that I’m worth the time and energy and money that people spend with my books. 

My books are a part of me, I’d be lying if I said they weren’t. But I’m not just my books. 


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I think authors are pressured to maintain an image. The public face for their authorial empire. The perfect narrative machines. We cultivate the imperfections we allow to show. A picture of a messy office on Instagram, a mention of procrastinating on a deadline on twitter, a Facebook post apologizing for a delay. Because being honest with our readers that the book we’re shilling isn’t our favorite, or we were convinced into a developmental change that we aren’t 100% confident in, or that the book the readers are begging for is beyond our current creative grasp. (Of course none of these are things I’m dealing with because all my new releases are my favorite and I’m totally confident in every word of every book........)


Long blog post short TLDR:  Impostor Syndrome sucks. Ursa Minors is great. #buymybooks?


If you are experiencing Impostor Syndrome, here are things I have found that help me. 


  • Talking to people in the field I’m in. For me, it’s other authors. I’ve read their books. I know how amazing they are. Hearing them have similar doubts and insecurities as me helps. A lot. 

  • Memes. Google Impostor Syndrome Memes and feel all the feels. (I would link them or have them here but I’m not sure about how embedding other people’s work is with the legalities and while I’m happy to pay artists to license stuff I’m not paying for memes for a blog post sorry)

  • Watching Chef Stephanie Cmar on Top Chef. Yup, I know that sounds weird. Let me explain. Season 10 episode one, she doesn’t make the cut to be on Top Chef. Does she disappear into obscurity? No, not our girl Stephanie, she comes back in Season 11. After a brutal controversial elimination in Season 11, she again, returns. Stephanie then comes into Top Chef Season 17 All Stars. This woman opens up this season fangirling about the other chefs. Her interview cutaways throughout the season are about her self doubt and insecurities. Her personal failings but she goes back every challenge and does her best and has fun. There is a brilliant interview where she talks about making it to Italy and just being excited to have done it. To be happy with her food and to do her best. 

    • I’m tearing up just writing this which is how much I’ve relied on Top Chef for my Imposter Syndrome. But she is such a treasure and I wish she had a restaurant so I could try her food! 

  • Knowing what is Impostor Syndrome and what is genuine self criticism. Am I being hard on myself because I don’t feel like I’m good enough or am I being hard on myself because I need to improve?

    1. Where is the criticism coming from? Am I editing? ~Might be something to work on. Am I laying in bed at night trying to sleep? ~probably Impostor Syndrome. 



I am so grateful and humbled for every person who has ever picked up one of my books, even if it was to read a half a page and say “nope, not for me.” The past year has been a wild and crazy year and I don’t know what’s coming next. But whatever comes next, I’ll still write. I might just be slower at it ;)


Ursa Minors releases Feburary 22nd. Full Disclosure: Fallen Lorde is still my favorite of all the books I’ve written, but Ursa Minors is a pretty close second. For those of you that choose to read it, I hope you enjoy it.


I love you all.