Robyn Peterman’s catalog is easiest to use if you stop thinking in terms of one giant master timeline. Her books cluster into distinct series, and the right reading order depends on which branch you want first: long-running vampire comedy, midlife paranormal chaos, witchy romantic comedy, shifter romance, or lighter side-series work.

For most readers, there are two especially safe entry points. Fashionably Dead opens her long-running Hot Damned series and gives you the best sense of her signature humor. It’s A Wonderful Midlife Crisis is the cleaner modern entry point if you want the newer paranormal women’s fiction side of her catalog.
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The fastest way to choose where to start
- Start with Fashionably Dead if you want the big flagship series.
- Start with It’s A Wonderful Midlife Crisis if you want the most popular later-series entry point.
- Start with Switching Hour if you want witches first.
- Start with Ready to Were if you want shifters first.
- Start with How Hard Can It Be? if you want romantic comedy without needing a huge series commitment.
The best reading order for most readers
This is the smoothest path through the catalog without making it feel like homework:
- Hot Damned
- Good to the Last Death
- Good to the Last Demon
- My So-Called Mystical Midlife
- Magic & Mayhem
- Shift Happens
- Sea Shenanigans
- Handcuffs and Happily Ever Afters
- Standalones and side titles
That order keeps her biggest worlds together, preserves the one clearly confirmed spinoff relationship, and leaves the lighter side branches for later.
Series by series: Robyn Peterman books in order
Hot Damned
This is the longest-running Robyn Peterman series and the one most likely to define whether her style works for you. Read it in order.
- Fashionably Dead (2013): Astrid’s story starts here, and this is the book that establishes the vampyre-comedy tone the rest of the series keeps building on.
- Fashionably Dead Down Under (2014): The second book widens the world and confirms that the series is not going to stay small or domestic for long.
- Hell On Heels (2014): This entry shifts attention to Dixie and opens the demonic side of the wider series world.
- Fashionably Dead in Diapers (2015): The series pushes its supernatural-chaos-meets-family-life energy harder here, so it works best after the first three.
- A Fashionably Dead Christmas (2015): This holiday installment is part of the main sequence and fits best in publication order.
- Fashionably Hotter Than Hell (2016): The vampyre and demon threads continue to tighten together, making this a core bridge book in the series.
- Fashionably Dead and Wed (2016): As the title suggests, this is a relationship-and-life-stage milestone book rather than a good entry point.
- Fashionably Fanged (2017): This late-middle installment keeps the supernatural family and world stakes moving forward.
- Fashionably Flawed (2017): By this point the series is leaning on established character history, so skipping ahead here would cost you a lot of context.
- A Fashionably Dead Diary (2017): This is a side-format entry at book 9.5 and is best treated as optional bonus material around the main run.
- Fashionably Forever After (2018): This book continues the later-series payoff phase and should be read after the previous core novels.
- Fashionably Fabulous (2018): Another late-series continuation, this one works as part of the same ongoing family-and-chaos arc.
- A Fashionable Fiasco (2019): The title signals more misadventure than reset, and it belongs squarely in the established sequence.
- Fashionably Fooled (2020): This keeps the Hot Damned momentum going and is not designed as a jumping-on point.
- Fashionably Dead and Loving It (2020): The series remains continuity-heavy here, with character history doing much of the work.
- Fashionably Dead and Demonic (2021): This entry pushes the demon side of the Hot Damned world even more visibly to the front.
- The Oh My Gawd Couple (2022): By now the series is playing with the full cast and long-built emotional dynamics.
- A Fashionable Disaster (2023): This is a pure late-series continuation and is best read only after the earlier books.
- Fashionably Fierce (2023): Another deep-series installment, this one depends on the accumulated character network around the series core.
- Fashionably Felonious (2024): The twentieth-stage Hot Damned world is fully established by here, so read in order for maximum payoff.
- A Fashionably Freakier Friday (2026): This is the newest currently listed Hot Damned novel and continues the flagship series rather than restarting it.
Good to the Last Death
This is the modern breakout series for many readers and the easiest Robyn Peterman world to recommend after Hot Damned. Read it straight through.
- It’s A Wonderful Midlife Crisis (2020): The opener introduces the paranormal midlife premise and is one of the clearest modern entry points in Peterman’s catalog.
- Whose Midlife Crisis Is It Anyway? (2020): The second book turns the premise into a real ongoing world instead of a one-book joke.
- A Most Excellent Midlife Crisis (2020): This early-series entry confirms the fast, escalating rhythm of the whole sequence.
- My Midlife Crisis, My Rules (2021): The series gets more assertive and more settled in its identity here.
- You Light Up My Midlife Crisis (2021): This keeps the supernatural and romantic complications climbing without changing tracks.
- It’s A Matter of Midlife and Death (2021): The title is a fair signal that the series stakes are getting larger while still staying comic.
- The Facts of Midlife (2022): This is a midpoint book that works best once you already know the cast and running dynamics.
- It’s A Hard-Knock Midlife (2022): The later middle of the series keeps building pressure rather than resetting the premise.
- Run For Your Midlife (2023): This installment continues the same central arc and should not be treated as a standalone.
- It’s A Hell of A Midlife (2023): The series is fully in deep-continuity mode by this stage.
- A Leaner Meaner Midlife (2024): This continues the mature phase of the series and depends on the earlier emotional groundwork.
- Having the Time of My Midlife (2024): Another late-series continuation, this one belongs exactly where the numbering places it.
- Someone Save My Midlife Tonight (2025): The thirteenth book keeps the main line moving and is not a side story.
- Semi-Charmed Midlife (2025): This is the current penultimate listed book in the sequence.
- Got To Get You Into My Midlife (2026): This is the newest currently listed Good to the Last Death release.
Good to the Last Demon
This one matters because it is not just another separate series. It is explicitly presented as a spinoff of Good to the Last Death, so it works best after you are already comfortable in that world.
- As The Underworld Turns (2022): The spinoff begins here, shifting the focus to a demon-centered lead and launching a new branch from the midlife world.
- The Edge of Evil (2022): The second book proves this is a real continuation series, not a one-off detour.
- The Bold and the Banished (2023): This keeps the spinoff building its own identity while still benefiting from its parent-series context.
- Guiding Blight (2024): By this point the demon branch is fully its own ongoing line.
- Blaze of Our Lives (2024): The fifth book continues the Underworld-focused arc without serving as a reset.
- Another Underworld (2025): This is a later-stage continuation and best saved until the earlier demon books are done.
- Generally Hospitable (2025): This is the current listed endpoint of the spinoff sequence.
My So-Called Mystical Midlife
This is another midlife paranormal series, but it should be treated as its own lane rather than folded into Good to the Last Death unless Robyn Peterman explicitly links them more directly in future.
- The Write Hook (2021): This opener uses a writer-centered premise and starts a separate paranormal-romantic-comedy track.
- You May Be Write (2021): Book two continues the concept directly and is best read without interruption.
- All The Write Moves (2022): The third book pushes the same cast and setup further rather than rebooting the premise.
- My Big Fat Hairy Wedding (2022): This reads like the big event book of the core sequence.
- Johnson Jones’ Diary (2023): The currently listed fifth book extends the series beyond the wedding-stage milestone.
Magic & Mayhem
If you want witches first, this is the Robyn Peterman series to choose. It also appears to feed into a broader Magic & Mayhem Universe, but the core ten-book run stands on its own first.
- Switching Hour (2015): The series begins with witches and comedy, and it is the cleanest magical entry point in this part of the catalog.
- Witch Glitch (2015): The second book locks in the series tone and confirms this is a fast-moving supernatural comedy sequence.
- A Witch In Time (2016): The title signals broader magical complications, and the series continues in direct order from here.
- Magically Delicious (2016): This keeps the same witchy-romantic setup moving without turning into an anthology or side branch.
- A Tale of Two Witches (2017): The expanding cast and world make reading in order more important by this point.
- Three’s A Charm (2018): This is a mid-series escalation book rather than a place to begin.
- Switching Witches (2019): The later middle of the sequence continues the main magical-comedy arc.
- Your Broom or Mine? (2020): This entry keeps the witch-world relationship chaos front and center.
- The Bad Boys of Assjacket (2020): A later-series installment that assumes you already understand the series’ voice and cast.
- The Newly Witch Game (2021): The tenth listed core book serves as the current endpoint of the main Magic & Mayhem run.
Shift Happens
This is the shifter branch and reads best in strict order.
- Ready to Were (2014): The series opener introduces the shifter side of Peterman’s paranormal comedy style.
- Some Were In Time (2015): The second book continues the same world and confirms the pun-heavy, romantic tone is here to stay.
- No Were To Run (2016): This middle entry keeps the series escalating instead of changing direction.
- Were Me Out (2017): By book four, the series is well into established-continuity territory.
- Were We Belong (2019): This is the current listed endpoint of the Shift Happens run.
Sea Shenanigans
This is a lighter six-book paranormal-romance branch and can be read after the bigger flagship series.
- Tallulah’s Temptation (2018): The series starts here with a fresh coastal or sea-linked romantic-comedy setup.
- Ariel’s Antics (2018): Book two continues the same playful branch with a new title-focused installment.
- Misty’s Mayhem (2018): The third book keeps the series in linked-romantic-chaos mode.
- Madison’s Mess (2019): This continues the line in the same character-focused pattern.
- Petunia’s Pandemonium (2019): Another same-world entry that belongs in order with the rest of the sequence.
- Jingle Me Balls (2019): The sixth book closes the current listed run with a holiday-leaning title and late-series placement.
Handcuffs and Happily Ever Afters
This is the compact romantic-comedy branch. It is one of the easiest Peterman series to finish quickly.
- How Hard Can It Be? (2013): This is the real series starter and the right place to begin the Handcuffs line.
- Pirate Dave & His Randy Adventures (2013, novella/side entry): This is presented on Robyn Peterman’s site as part of the series, but it reads more like a side piece than the main next full novel.
- Size Matters (2013): This is the second main full-length Handcuffs novel and should follow either directly after book one or after the Pirate Dave side entry if you want everything.
- Cop A Feel (2014): This is the third main Handcuffs novel and the natural endpoint of the core sequence.
Standalone or separate side title
- Beauty Loves the Beast (2019): This is best treated as a separate paranormal romance title rather than forced into one of the larger running series.
Publication order or series order?
For Robyn Peterman, series order is the order that matters.
Her titles are very often built around recurring cast chemistry, cumulative supernatural chaos, and long-running relationship payoffs. Reading by raw publication date across all series would jumble unrelated worlds together and weaken the character continuity that makes the books work.
The one series relationship that matters most
If you only remember one continuity rule, make it this one:
Read Good to the Last Death before Good to the Last Demon.
That is the clearest confirmed parent-series and spinoff relationship in the current catalog, and it is the place where reading out of order would be most likely to blur context.
What is the best starting point overall?
For a first Robyn Peterman book, the best choices are:
- Fashionably Dead if you want the flagship series.
- It’s A Wonderful Midlife Crisis if you want the cleaner later-era entry point.
- How Hard Can It Be? if you want a shorter, lower-commitment test read.
FAQs
What is Robyn Peterman’s most popular series?
The two biggest entry routes are Hot Damned and Good to the Last Death, with Hot Damned as the long-running flagship and Good to the Last Death as a major later-era favorite.
Do I need to read every Robyn Peterman series in order?
No. Read within each series in order, but do not worry about alternating between unrelated series.
Which Robyn Peterman series is best for new readers?
Hot Damned is the classic starting point. Good to the Last Death is the easiest modern starting point.
Is Good to the Last Demon a separate series?
Yes, but it is best treated as a spinoff of Good to the Last Death, not as a totally independent starting point.
Final recommendation
Start with Fashionably Dead (2013): It is the clearest introduction to Robyn Peterman’s long-form style, humor, and paranormal-romantic chaos.
If that sounds too big, start with It’s A Wonderful Midlife Crisis (2020): It gives you a newer, cleaner on-ramp into one of her strongest later series without asking you to commit to the full Hot Damned backlist first.
Frank is the editor of BookSeries.blog, focusing on publication order, chronological timelines, and spoiler-free reading guides for book series and fictional universes.

