Romance readers are passionate. Devoted. Fiercely loyal.
We champion debut authors. We shout about five-star kisses. We cry over third-act breakups like they personally wronged us.
But in today’s digital bookish world, where ARCs flow freely, affiliate links sparkle seductively, and influencer culture hums in the background, devotion must come with discernment.
Behind every “I loved this so much!” post lies something we don’t talk about enough:
Transparency.
Because loving romance is beautiful.
Protecting trust? That’s sacred.
Have you ever wondered:
- When does a gifted ARC require disclosure?
- Can you post affiliate links without saying so?
- Are Amazon reviews allowed if you know the author?
- Does “honest review” mean the same thing everywhere?
We don’t ask these questions to shame anyone.
We ask them because our community deserves clarity.
Let’s lay the foundation every romanceaholic should know:
1. FTC Disclosure Guidelines (U.S.)
The Federal Trade Commission requires clear disclosure when there is a “material connection” between the reviewer and the brand.
That includes:
- Free books (ARCs)
- Paid promotions
- Affiliate links
- PR boxes
- Sponsored content
Disclosure must be:
- Clear
- Conspicuous
- Easy to understand
“Thanks to the author for a free copy” counts.
Hiding it in hashtags? Risky.
Burying it at the bottom? Not ideal.
Transparency isn’t optional, it’s protection.
2. Amazon Reviewer Policies
Amazon has strict rules about reviews.
You cannot:
- Review books written by close friends or family.
- Review if you have a financial interest in the book.
- Exchange reviews (“I’ll review yours if you review mine”).
- Accept compensation in exchange for positive reviews.
Even ARC reviews must be:
- Honest.
- Independent.
- Free from manipulation.
Amazon removes suspicious reviews and sometimes accounts.
That five-star swoon? It has rules.
3. Platform Disclosure Standards (Bookstagram, BookTok, Blogs, etc.)
Each platform has expectations:
- Sponsored posts must be labeled clearly.
- Affiliate links must be disclosed.
- Paid partnerships must be tagged.
- “Gifted” should be visible, not microscopic.
Trust is currency in the romance space.
Readers can feel authenticity, and they can feel when something’s off.
💬 The Poll:
Be honest with yourself and with us:
When you post about a romance book, do you:
A. Always disclose clearly.
B. Sometimes forget, but mean well.
C. Assume it’s obvious if it’s an ARC.
D. Feel unsure about the rules.
No judgment. Only growth.

Romance is built on trust.
Trust between characters.
Trust between the reader and author.
Trust between the reviewer and the community.
Disclosure doesn’t dim enthusiasm.
It deepens credibility.
Because the heart of romance isn’t just passion
it’s integrity.
Romance is vast, but love remains the center.
And love, dear reader, is always honest.

🖤 Romanceaholic
A Digital Romance Magazine
Love stories. Taken seriously.
Devotion across every trope.
Romanceaholic exists for readers who believe love deserves more than trends it deserves thoughtful examination, emotional depth, and intention.
If you’re ready for romance that holds, begin here:
Carmen’s Keepers | The Keeper Shelf | Stayed Up, No Regrets
Because hype fades.
Devotion endures.
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