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The journalist heroine in a romantic comedy movie was so ubiquitous, she almost became a cliché. From Never Been Kissed to 13 Going on 30, a magazine job was basically the pinnacle of importance for a woman in a rom-com. In a Vogue article about the phenomenon, Emma Specter wrote that she believed the origin to be His Girl Friday, the classic Hollywood film starring Rosalind Russell, which set the gold standard for witty repartee between romantic leads. Since the trend has been so historically successful, romance novels about journalists are an excellent option for any romance lover.
The great thing about romance novels about journalists is that they don’t all take place in New York. That was the common problem with journalist rom-coms in the 1990s and 2000s. Writers live everywhere and are constantly producing and covering the local happenings. As a New Yorker, I still appreciate all the New York-specific journalist romances, but there are many more to dive into.
Love on the Byline (Plays and Players #1) by Xio Axelrod
Like many writers in her generation, Blake Dillon is stuck on the fluff beat instead of the important journalism she wants to do. The celebrity-focused profiles she produces means she’s sent to cover new celebrities. She doesn’t expect to run into her college sweetheart, Oliver. As the celebrity’s assistant, Ollie is around Blake as much as the subject of her profile. When old feelings resurface, they both have to face what they want from each other and their careers.


Attachments by Rainbow Rowell
Remember Y2K? I’m old. Anyway, in 1999, we all were preparing for our computers to spontaneously explode by the new year. Lincoln is in IT and oversees emails at a newspaper in Nebraska. He’s essentially just meant to look for possible breaches of conduct over the email and shoring up the system for Y2K. He soon gets addicted to reading the email exchanges between Beth and Jennifer and starts falling hard for Beth. They both know each other from a distance, but Lincoln especially has to figure out how to explain himself to Beth.


We Could Be So Good (Midcentury NYC #1) by Cat Sebastian
Nick Russo is the kind of New Yorker who will give you a handkerchief to get you to shut up—gruff but kind. When Andy Fleming, third-generation nepo baby of The Chronicle, enters the newsroom, Nick is moved by Andy’s general forgetfulness to show him the ropes of hard news. Then Andy’s fiancée suddenly leaves him, so Nick displays his usual tact and forces Andy to be his roommate to keep an eye on him. But Nick is deep in a story about police corruption, and the stakes for both of their futures are far too high to focus on something like an inconvenient crush.
Trust Me (Holmes Brothers #5) by Farrah Rochon
Mackenna Arnold is ready to take New Orleans politics by storm. She’s gunning for the mayoral office and is getting mentorship from the current mayor to step into the job. When she learns shocking information about the current mayor, she chooses to enlist local journalist Ezra Holmes to help. Ezra is a constant pain in her ass and the younger brother of a friend, but she knows he can sniff out a scandal. The two work together to root out corruption and find something more along the way.
If you’re invested in the writers of romance novels about journalists, you can dive into romance novels about writers and even librarians. For the journalist theme, there are plenty of great mysteries and thrillers about them.