J.A. Huss writes in multiple separate continuities. Some books belong to a big, interconnected “Company” storyline with recurring families and next-generation characters. Others are completely separate (standalone romances, dark romance, fantasy, and sci-fi).

If you want a dependable approach: pick one continuity, read that sequence in order, and only then switch lanes. That preserves reveals and avoids running into couples “already together” before you’ve met them.
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Reading map
If you want the core interconnected world: start with Rook and Ronin.
If you want a shorter, modern entry inside that same world: start with The Misters.
If you want a separate dark-romance duet: start with Sick Heart.
If you want a self-contained social-media era romance: start with Follow.
If you want fantasy-forward recent work: start with The Rumble and the Glory (Sacred Trinity) or Sparktopia (Game of Gods).
The Company world (the big interconnected continuity)
Rook and Ronin (start here for the long view)
- Tragic: A woman on the run collides with a man who doesn’t let go once he decides she’s his.
- Manic: The relationship deepens as the “who can you trust?” question gets louder.
- Panic: Survival and obsession tighten together until walking away stops being possible.
- Ford: A new couple steps in while the larger world starts showing its sharp edges.
- Spencer: The story expands again, setting up long-running characters and next-generation threads.
The Company sequence (spin-off entry point; follows after Rook & Ronin)
Read these in order if you want the deeper “shadow organization” foundation.
- The Company: A key origin incident reframes what the world really is.
- Meet Me in the Dark: A darker romance that pushes trust into uncomfortable territory.
- Wasted Lust: Desire turns dangerous as connections between families and factions tighten.
- Happily Ever After: A time-jump payoff that lands best after the earlier arcs.
- Three, Two, One (standalone alongside these events): A sharp, high-heat story that fits the same window of the larger timeline.
Bossy Brothers (a parallel entry point in the same world)
- In to Her: A “not quite what it seems” romance that seeds characters who matter later.
- Bossy Brothers: Jesse: A loud, confident romance with the first real “Company” signaling.
- Bossy Brothers: Joey: Chemistry meets ego, and neither wants to blink first.
- Bossy Brothers: Johnny: A bigger crossover feel as familiar names start surfacing.
- Bossy Bride: A relationship milestone with ripple effects for the wider cast.
- Bossy Brothers: Alonzo: A new couple steps up while the world’s darker side shows through.
- Bossy Brothers: Tony: Passion meets consequences, and the consequences don’t play fair.
- Bossy Brothers: Luke: The network of characters gets bigger, not simpler.
Creeping Beautiful (the “deep lore” branch)
- Creeping Beautiful: A dark, atmospheric start that reveals what the world costs its people.
- Pretty Nightmare: Trauma and tenderness collide in a romance that refuses to stay easy.
- Gorgeous Misery: The past presses in, and the present can’t ignore it anymore.
- Lovely Darkness: The payoff volume is highest if you’ve read the earlier entries in order.
The Misters (next-generation entry point; still inside the Company world)
- Mr. Perfect: Workplace chaos turns intimate when the boss becomes the problem and the solution.
- Mr. Romantic: A “good girl / bad reputation” setup that drags real feelings into daylight.
- Mr. Corporate: Power games turn personal when attraction stops being negotiable.
- Mr. Mysterious: Secrets aren’t sexy when they threaten everything, until they are.
- Mr. Match: The cast widens, and relationship outcomes start echoing across friends.
- Five (standalone inside the same world): A self-contained romance that can be read out of order, but clicks best once you know the world.
- Mr. & Mrs.: A return of legacy characters with a “where are they now?” satisfaction factor.
Kings of High Court College (short, self-contained inside the world)
- Bully King: A power dynamic romance where prestige becomes a weapon.
- Ruling Class: The fallout forces honesty, whether anyone is ready or not.
Sick World (a duet; same wider universe, no required crossover reading)
- Sick Heart: A brutal-feelings start that doesn’t pretend love is gentle here.
- Sick Hate: The second half that turns the first book’s damage into the main question: can this be rebuilt?
Separate continuities (safe to read without the Company world)
Social Media series (read in order)
- Follow: One reckless online connection becomes the start of a real-life obsession.
- Like: Attention turns addictive when the relationship becomes public-shaped.
- Block: The line between protection and possession gets crossed, and stays crossed.
- Status: The story locks into endgame territory, with reputations on the line.
- Profile: A deeper look at what’s real when everyone’s watching.
- Home: The landing point where the persona and the person finally collide.
Jordan’s Game (read in order)
- Total Exposure: A controlled “game” premise turns into an uncontrolled emotional problem.
- The Pleasure of Panic: High heat meets higher stakes as the rules stop working.
- The Boyfriend Experience: A “hire-a-boyfriend” setup becomes too real, too fast.
- Play Dirty: The conclusion pushes the characters to decide what they’ll risk to keep what they found.
The Turning series (read in order)
- Taking Turns: A high-intensity arrangement becomes the start of something dangerous to want.
- Turning Back: The emotional cost arrives, and nobody gets to pretend it’s simple anymore.
- His Turn: The final shift in power and vulnerability lands the story where it belongs.
I Am Just Junco (read in order; sci-fi / post-apocalyptic)
This series has multiple entries and later add-ons; follow the numbered order for the cleanest experience.
- Clutch: A lone survivor’s skills become the only currency that matters.
- Fledge: The world widens, and trust becomes a risk you take anyway.
- Flight: Survival turns strategic as alliances get tested.
- Range: The next stage forces bigger choices and harder truths.
- The Magpie Bridge: The story extends past the early arc into wider consequences.
- Return: The later payoff that works best after everything above.
Sacred Trinity (read in order; dark romance with broader, newer mythology)
- The Rumble and the Glory
- The Echo on the Water
- The Comfort in the Brave
- The Danger in the Damage
Game of Gods (read in order; speculative/fantasy)
- Sparktopia
- Godslayer
Recommended reading orders (pick one)
If you want the “most J.A. Huss” experience
- Rook and Ronin (1-5)
- The Company sequence (6-10)
- Creeping Beautiful (1-4)
- The Misters (1-7)
- Finish with Kings of High Court College and Sick World
If you want a shorter commitment first
- The Misters (1-7), then decide whether to go back to Rook and Ronin
If you want something totally separate from the Company world
- Social Media (1-6) or Jordan’s Game (1-4)
Latest release status
- Most recently listed release: Dead Daze (Story Fodder #3), published January 30, 2026.
- Next listed upcoming (near-term): Dust and Flowers (Book of Legion / Badlands MC #1), scheduled February 20, 2026.
Frank is the editor of BookSeries.blog, focusing on publication order, chronological timelines, and spoiler-free reading guides for book series and fictional universes.

