Difference between revisions of "RITA®: Best Contemporary Single Title"

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* [[Kathleen Gilles Seidel]] - [[1995 RITA® Winners|1995]] - ''[[Again]]''
 
* [[Kathleen Gilles Seidel]] - [[1995 RITA® Winners|1995]] - ''[[Again]]''
 
* [[Nora Roberts]] - [[1994 RITA® Winners|1994]] - ''[[Private Scandals]]''
 
* [[Nora Roberts]] - [[1994 RITA® Winners|1994]] - ''[[Private Scandals]]''
* [[Kathleen Eagle]] - [[1993 RITA® Winners|1993]] - ''[[This Time Forever]]''
+
* [[Kathleen Eagle]] - [[1993 RITA® Winners|1993]] - ''[[This Time Forever - Kathleen Eagle|This Time Forever]]''
 
* [[Eileen Dreyer]] - [[1992 RITA® Winners|1992]] - [[A Man To Die For - Eileen Dreyer|''A Man to Die For'']]  
 
* [[Eileen Dreyer]] - [[1992 RITA® Winners|1992]] - [[A Man To Die For - Eileen Dreyer|''A Man to Die For'']]  
 
* [[Diane Chamberlain]] - [[1990 RITA® Winners|1990]] - ''[[Private Relations]]''
 
* [[Diane Chamberlain]] - [[1990 RITA® Winners|1990]] - ''[[Private Relations]]''

Revision as of 15:32, 28 January 2008

The Mainstream category was one of the original Golden Medallion categories when the RWA established their awards. In 1983, the name of the category became Contemporary Mainstream. The category was not included in the 1984 competition as RWA tried to refine categories by word count. In an unsurprising twist, the name of the category once again became Mainstream in 1985.

The RITA Single Title Release Category was introduced in 1986, replacing the Mainstream Category. In 1989, RWA settled on Single Title as the name for longer, standalone romance novels. It didn't last. The name of the Single Title category was changed to Single Title Contemporary in 1990 as part of an effort to create more discrete categories for the awards. In 1994, Single Title Contemporary became Contemporary Single Title. In 2004, the word "Best" was added to the title.

Winners