Marriage of Convenience romance books
First the vows, then — somewhere neither expected — the love.
Marriage of Convenience reverses the usual order: the wedding comes first, for entirely practical reasons — an inheritance, an alliance, a green card, mutual protection — and love, if it comes at all, has to grow inside an arrangement that was never meant to be real. Two people bound by paperwork find themselves sharing a life, a home, and eventually far more than the contract specified.
The charm is the slow thaw. These are strangers or near-strangers forced into the intimacies of married life — shared space, shared name, shared appearances — while insisting it's all business. The accidental domesticity, the lines that blur, the moment one of them realizes the pretense has quietly become the truth: this is the trope's irresistible engine.
A favorite across historical and contemporary settings alike, this one pairs naturally with forced proximity and slow burn. If you love accidental intimacy, a practical bargain that turns real, and the swoon of two people falling into a love they'd contractually agreed not to expect, this is your shelf.
- A practical bargain that quietly turns real
- Accidental domesticity and blurred lines
- Slow-thaw intimacy between near-strangers
- Pairs beautifully with forced proximity

























