Entry tags:
Fandom tropes
Snagged from
thisbluespirit , but grouped instead of ranked because I've written so few of them. It's a very bizarre list, and for that matter some strange tropes I've heard of actually aren't on it.
I have written:
I have written:
- Hurt/comfort (c'mon, hardly a surprise!)
- Body swapping
- Hogwarts AU (in my case, crossover)
- Amnesia (just temporary, and I loathe, loathe, loathe "it was for you own good", e.g. Donna Noble)
- High school/university AU
- Fairy tale/mythology AU (plus a Once Upon a Time crossover)
- Enemies to friends to lovers (my first M&B one, Avon/Servalan. Also temporary amnesia involved.)
- Characters swap roles AU (I don't mean in the bedroom)
- 'Groundhog Day'/karmic time loop
- Snowed-in cabin/isolated together for extended period of time
- Found families
- And they were roommates!
- Friends to lovers
- Coffee house AU/food service AU*
- Magical connection (telepathy, etc)
- Fake dating/fake marriage accidentally turns into feelings
- Royals/political marriage turns into feelings
- Loyalty kink
- Seemingly unrequited pining
- Vampires/werewolves AU
- 'Pride and Prejudice' AU
- Unusually specific occupation AU, like, the Author clearly has the same job
- 'They all work in an office' AU
- 'Falling for a coworker/teammate is a bad idea' except this is fiction so it works out
- Accidentally fell in love with the mission target
- They break up (but then they get back together)
- Unrequited pining
- Adopting/raising a baby
- Soulmate identifying marks (tattoo, red thread of fate, etc)
- Daemons
- 'Everyone is evil'/mirrorverse AU
- Alpha/beta/omega
- Selfcest (possibly due to time travel)
- Hot single parent(s)
- Supernatural creature/human romance
- Reincarnation/'25 Lives' AU
- Polyamory

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If I do this meme, I'm probably going to borrow your format of grouping rather than ranking, because I haven't hit many of the tropes either.
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* The Lucille Mazzarella books (series here), all written in Joisey. Some readers didn't like that style but I loved them. I tried a couple of others by the same writer but they were more the usual kind. I would read more Lucille if she wrote them.
Another series also apparently rated cosy is Inspector Hobbes, and they're great: feckless male protagonist helping unhuman (the term used) Inspector Hobbes (series here).
Some I've tried the first book of have been downright annoying with their lack of research about countries the author hasn't lived in, or in one case with a deeply unattractively sexist French love interest - just nope.