The titles of over twenty such ancient Greek romance novels are known, but most of them have only survived in an incomplete, fragmentary form.
[5] In other European languages, terms cognate with "romance" are used in French, German, Italian and Portuguese, while novela is used in Spanish.
[2] Although the plots of the surviving novels appear to be relatively conventional, entailing the fulfilled heterosexual desire of a beautiful and usually virtuous young couple, this impression of uniformity and moralism may be an illusion created by later Christians, who decided which to copy for posterity.
Even so, the surviving texts (arguably with the exception of Xenophon's Ephesian Tale) show great sophistication in their handling of character, narrative and intertextuality.
[7] Two stories included by Reardon in his list of novels have survived only as summaries: Antonius Diogenes's The Wonders Beyond Thule and Iamblichus' Babylonian History.