1. Pride and Prejudice
Jane Austen · 1813
The original enemies-to-lovers novel, and still the one every romance-comedy plot is quietly ripping off.
Everyone remembers the romance and forgets how funny this book is. Austen’s narration is dry and merciless about nearly every character except Elizabeth and Jane, and even they don’t get a total pass.
The reason this beats most “classic romance” recommendations is that Elizabeth is allowed to be wrong. She’s clever, she’s likable, and she still completely misreads Darcy and Wickham for most of the book. That’s a harder trick to pull off than a simple obstacle-then-happy-ending plot, and it’s why the book has outlasted two centuries of imitators.
Read it if: you want sharp, funny, socially observant fiction about money, marriage, and getting your first impression of someone completely wrong
Skip it if: you need constant plot momentum -- this is a novel of conversation and manners, not action, and the pace is closer to a slow-burn sitcom than a page-turner














