Plot Device
Amnesia
A character loses their memories — of a person, a past, or themselves — and the relationship has to be found, fought for, or rebuilt from nothing.
The Shadow Daddy Take
Falling for the same person twice should not be this devastating, and yet. Amnesia asks the cruelest question in romance: would you choose them again if you didn't remember why?
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Listed plainly, without euphemism. This trope may involve:
- memory loss
What it is
The slate gets wiped — a curse, an injury, a magical bargain — and someone wakes up missing the love they used to know. Sometimes both of them forget. Amnesia turns the relationship into a mystery the characters have to solve about their own hearts, with the reader holding the memories they lost.
Why it works
It’s a second chance with the safety off. The reader knows what these two were to each other, which makes every rediscovered spark unbearable and every flicker of buried recognition gut-wrenching. The trope quietly argues that real connection runs deeper than memory — that you’d find your way back even with the map erased.
Read this if
You want to be wrecked by the slow return of a familiar feeling, and you love the idea of a love that survives even being forgotten. Amnesia is for readers who like their hope hard-won and their reunions earned twice over.
Trope chemistry
Often travels with
Rarely seen with
Books with Amnesia
No books tagged with this trope yet.