Customers who walk into the Tropes & Trifles store know they’re about to encounter a happy ending. In fact, it’s guaranteed.
Tropes & Trifles, which opens Saturday, is a romance-only bookstore and romance books have two unbreakable rules: A love story must be front and center and the book must end happily.
“This is the one section where we can’t guarantee you a happy ending or, at least a happy ending for the romance,” said Tropes co-owner Caitlin O’Neil, pointing to the small “Not Quite Romance” shelf, which contains, for instance, thrillers with love stories that aren’t the focus of the plot. All of the other books in the store — roughly 5,000 of them — promise a wedding or at least an ardent kiss at the end.
With romance books accounting for almost 20% of U.S. book sales, the south Minneapolis store may be on the crest of a boom, with love-themed bookshops shaping up as a trend.
“We thought we would be the fourth [all-romance store] in the country. Then, five opened last year,” said co-owner Lauren Richards, who said the nearest stores she knows of are in Chicago and Kansas. Tropes had been doing pop-ups at breweries and themed events, selling up to 100 titles in a weekend, but the two decided last fall to open a brick-and-mortar store, at 2709 E. 38th St. (across the street from Northbound Brewpub and a couple of blocks west of the 38th Street light rail station).

The intervening months have been filled with construction that expanded the sales space from 500 to 800 square feet, ordering books and shelving books, in categories that include historical, paranormal, contemporary and dark romance (said O’Neil, “This is where you have people falling in love with villains or morally gray characters.”). There’s also been a lot of paper-folding — above the Romantasy shelves is a wall of colorful origami dragons, which Richards folded while bingeing “Love Is Blind” episodes.
The woman met five years ago in a book club. A romance book club. That’s where Richards, who had been a political consultant, first joked about opening a bookstore. A month later, she joked about it again.
“I was like, ‘Twice is a pattern,’ ” said O’Neil, a book publicist and translator who direct-messaged Richards to find out how serious she was.