
The Adventures of Amina al-Sirafi
Shannon Chakraborty
Adventure-filled romance featuring pirates, treasure, and high-seas danger.
6 books with this trope
Pirate runs through romantasy as one of the genre's reliable engines. Adventure-filled romance featuring pirates, treasure, and high-seas danger. The books on this page take it in different directions, from quiet character studies to massive world-spanning sagas, but they all use pirate as more than decoration.

Shannon Chakraborty

Scott Lynch

Adrienne Young

Adrienne Young

Tricia Levenseller
Daughter of the Siren Queen
Traci Loudin
Traci Loudin
Pirate works in romantasy because it gives the romance somewhere to go. The trope creates structure: characters who can't behave normally because of their situation, relationships that have to work around real constraints, and stakes that don't disappear when the romance starts to develop. Authors who lean into pirate get to use it as a pressure system that shapes every scene, not just the romantic ones.
Like every trope, pirate can be done badly. The biggest failure mode is treating it as window dressing instead of a structural element. If a book labels itself as pirate but never uses the trope to drive the plot or shape the romance, the label is just marketing. The good versions use the trope to do real work, with consequences that matter beyond the relationship.
Browse the books on this page sorted by rating. The top five are the best entry points for the trope, with the rest filling out the genre's range. If you're new to pirate, start with the highest-rated title and work down. If you're a regular, the lower-ranked books often hide the most interesting takes on the trope.