Avery Flynn Books in Order (Updated 2026-02-05)

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Avery Flynn writes contemporary romance that’s fast, funny, and emotionally sincere. Her books are arranged into clearly named series built around friend groups and workplaces, plus a handful of novellas and standalones.

Avery Flynn Books in Order (Updated 2026-02-05)

You don’t need a single, career-long order. What matters is finishing a series once you start it, because later books often reference earlier couples as settled history.


How to choose your first book (without overthinking it)

  • Want workplace rom-com energy with sharp banter? Start with Parental Guidance
  • Want a small-town, found-family feel? Start with Butterface
  • Want a quick, spicy read with minimal setup? Try Tomboy
  • Want to sample her tone in one book? Butterface or Parental Guidance both work well

Hartigans series (read in order)

A close-knit group of friends where each romance builds on the last.

  1. Butterface: A woman tired of being judged by her looks meets the one man who actually listens.
  2. Muffin Top: A body-positive heroine clashes with a man who challenges her assumptions about herself.
  3. Tomboy: A sports-loving woman navigates attraction that threatens her carefully guarded independence.
  4. Awk-Weird: Two people embrace their quirks and learn that chemistry doesn’t need polishing.

Why order helps: friendships and in-jokes accumulate as the series goes on.


Harbor City series (read in order)

A workplace-heavy romance line where professional overlap keeps the cast tightly connected.

  1. Parental Guidance: A strict image consultant and a single dad fake a relationship for work, and feelings refuse to stay fake.
  2. Tomboy Trouble: A confident woman and a guarded man test whether attraction can coexist with ambition.
  3. Trouble Maker: A reputation for chaos collides with the one person who sees the heart underneath.
  4. Crazy Stupid Fauxmance: A staged romance becomes inconveniently real when public opinion gets involved.

Ice Knights series (read in order)

Sports romance with overlapping teammates and plenty of locker-room camaraderie.

  1. Shots Fired: A scandal forces two professionals into close proximity they didn’t plan on.
  2. Hit and Run: A reckless decision turns into a slow reckoning with responsibility and love.
  3. Shot Caller: A leader on the ice struggles when control doesn’t work off it.

All In series (read in order)

A shorter run focused on risk, vulnerability, and stepping outside comfort zones.

  1. Make Me Stay: A woman on the run from her past meets someone who asks her to stop running.
  2. Make Me Yours: Two people circling each other finally choose honesty over safety.

Standalones and novellas (read anytime)

These don’t rely on the series above and can be picked up whenever the premise fits your mood.

  • Bang Theory: A surprise hookup turns complicated when real-life consequences appear.
  • The Friend Zone: A friendship strains when one person wants more than the rules allow.
  • Make Me Beg (novella): A shorter, high-heat story focused on consent, trust, and letting go of control.

A clean, spoiler-light reading plan

If you want structure without committing to everything:

  1. Butterface → finish the Hartigans series
  2. Parental Guidance → continue through Harbor City
  3. Pick either Ice Knights (sports) or All In (shorter emotional arc)
  4. Fill in standalones and novellas wherever you want quick reads

Common questions

Do Avery Flynn’s books need to be read in order?
Only within each series. Between series, you can jump freely.

Which series is most interconnected?
Hartigans and Harbor City, friendships and side characters matter more as the books progress.

What’s the safest single-book test?
Butterface gives the clearest sense of her humor, pacing, and emotional style.


Bottom line

Pick one series, start at book one, and read straight through. Once you finish, choose the next series based on vibe, workplace, sports, or small-town friendship. That approach keeps surprises intact and lets Avery Flynn’s strengths shine without turning reading order into a chore.

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Frank is the editor of BookSeries.blog, focusing on publication order, chronological timelines, and spoiler-free reading guides for book series and fictional universes.