Hannah Nicole Maehrer is an American author whose viral TikTok comedy series became the bestselling cozy-fantasy romcom Assistant to the Villain.
Hannah Nicole Maehrer is an American author whose path to publication is one of the most distinctive in recent fantasy — a viral social-media comedy series that became a bestselling book. The author of the Assistant and the Villain series, beginning with Assistant to the Villain, Maehrer built her audience by performing short, funny skits on TikTok before turning the premise into a cozy-fantasy romantic comedy that charmed readers worldwide. Her work represents the lighter, funnier end of the romantasy spectrum, and her success is a striking example of how social media now functions as a launchpad for publishing careers.
From TikTok Skits to Bestseller
Maehrer first developed the premise that would make her name as a serialised comedy on TikTok, performing short scenes in which an upbeat assistant deadpanned her way through the absurdities of working for a fearsome villain. The series amassed an enormous following, and the book grew directly out of that audience’s appetite — which is why it reads the way it does. Its episodic structure, punchy comic timing, and reliance on character chemistry over intricate plotting are all inheritances from its short-form origins, and they are the source of both its charm and its appeal.
This skit-to-novel pipeline is emblematic of how thoroughly social media now shapes what gets published. Maehrer is among the most likeable success stories of that pipeline: an author who built a devoted audience through genuine comic talent and then translated it into a book that delivered exactly the warmth and humour her followers had come for. Her rise reflects a broader moment in which platforms like TikTok can turn a creator’s voice into a publishing phenomenon, and in which readers increasingly discover their next favourite book through the personalities they already follow.
The Assistant and the Villain Series
The series that made Maehrer’s name has one of the most purely charming premises in recent fantasy: a workplace comedy set in an evil lair. Assistant to the Villain introduces Evie Sage, who takes a job as personal assistant to the realm’s most feared figure, known simply as The Villain, in order to support her ailing family. The novel mines enormous comedy from the gap between the man’s terrifying reputation and the mundane realities of his operation — payroll, paperwork, henchmen with feelings, a suggestion box — while a sweet, banter-driven slow burn develops between the irrepressible assistant and her glowering employer.
The series, continuing through Apprentice to the Villain and beyond, leans into cozy, low-stakes warmth rather than epic stakes or intricate worldbuilding. Its pleasures are comic and character-driven: the absurdity of villainous bureaucracy, the deadpan banter between Evie and The Villain, and the found-family ensemble of lair employees who give the world its heart. Maehrer’s books function as palate cleansers in a genre full of darker, heavier offerings — the light, funny, feel-good reads that fans reach for when they want to be charmed rather than wrecked.
Comedy as the Main Event
What sets Maehrer apart from the romantasy pack is that her books are genuinely, consistently funny. The humour is the main event, and it gives her work a buoyancy that the genre’s angstier entries often lack. She plays the office-comedy-meets-dark-fantasy juxtaposition for everything it is worth, and her comic timing — honed in the unforgiving format of short-form video — translates effectively to the page. The romance, sweet and low-heat, is built on banter and small thawing moments rather than spice, and it is all the more endearing for it.
This commitment to comedy is paired with genuine warmth. Beneath the jokes, Maehrer’s books are about loyalty, found family, and the way the labels “hero” and “villain” rarely survive close acquaintance. The combination of laughter and heart is the source of the intense affection her readers feel for the series.
A Distinctive Place in the Genre
Maehrer occupies a valuable niche in contemporary romantasy: the cozy, comedic, lighthearted register that offers respite from the genre’s more punishing fare. As readers increasingly seek comfort reads — books that reliably make them feel good rather than emotionally devastate them — her work has found an eager audience, and her TikTok origins keep her closely connected to the community that drove her success.
Reception and Significance
The Assistant and the Villain series has been a substantial commercial success, embraced by readers seeking funny, sweet, low-stakes fantasy romance, and it has made Maehrer one of the standout new names of the cozy-fantasy moment. Her career is significant not only for the books themselves but for what it represents — the growing power of social-media creators to build publishing careers directly from their audiences, and the genre’s appetite for warmth and humour alongside spectacle and spice.
For readers in the mood for lighthearted banter, a sweet slow burn, and a genuinely funny take on fantasy tropes, Hannah Nicole Maehrer is among the most reliable choices in the genre, and the Assistant and the Villain series among its most charming. Her continued output keeps her at the forefront of romantasy’s sunniest, most comedic wing.
Where to Start
Begin with Assistant to the Villain, the book that grew out of Maehrer’s viral TikTok series and launched the Assistant and the Villain series. Its workplace-comedy-in-an-evil-lair premise, banter-driven slow burn, and found-family warmth are the perfect introduction to her cozy, comedic register. Readers who enjoy it can continue into Apprentice to the Villain and beyond as the romance deepens. For anyone in the mood for a light, funny, low-stakes palate cleanser between heavier reads — a romantasy that charms rather than devastates — it is the ideal place to start and a standout of the genre’s sunniest wing.