Fantastical Truth

Fantastical Truth


249. What is ‘Romantasy’? | with Parker J. Cole

February 11, 2025

Once there was a fairly popular genre called Fantasy. He was well-known, great with kids, friendly with young men and women. But he wasn’t nearly as popular as the top-selling genre ever—Romance. Romance was everywhere. She was especially popular with female readers, who were carrying Romance everywhere. Fantasy began to grow jealous. But then something happened. Fantasy and Romance fell in love. And so they got a ship name: romantasy.


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Backstory: Parker J. Cole

Onscreen writer Parker J. Cole is an author, speaker, and radio show host with a fanatical obsession with the Lord, Star Trek, K-dramas, anime, romance books, old movies, speculative fiction, and knitting. An off-and-on Mountain Dew and marshmallows addict, she writes to fill the void the sugar left behind. To follow her on social media, visit her website at ParkerJCole.com.


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Quotes and notes

1. To review, why is romantic fiction so popular?

  • A reader’s ideal of Paradise influences his or her story preferences.
  • If your ideal Paradise is love and family, you’ll likely prefer romance.
  • If your ideal Paradise is a fantastical world, you’ll likely prefer fantasy.

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2. What do we mean by this new term ‘romantasy’?


  • Romantasy is when the romantic and fantasy aspects of the story are equally important
  • Romantasy is just a romance book with a fantasy world as a backdrop
  • Romantasy is when the plot would fall apart without the romance
  • Romantasy is a fantasy plot with a central romance that follows romance book “beats” (see: Romancing the Beat, by Gwen Hayes)
  • Romantasy is just fantasy with “spicy” scenes

M. K. Lobb at Writer’s Digest, Feb. 27, 2024


3. How does romantasy affect Christian fans?

  • Just last week, we saw one great challenge: fans demanding story porn.
  • But it would be unfair to blame romance/romantasy alone for this sin.
  • Both fantasy and romance awaken us to the magic of God’s forever-love.

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Top questions for listeners

  • What is your favorite “romantasy” story?
  • For you, who would win in a fight—fantasy or romance?
  • Or would the two embattled genres become “enemies to lovers”?