Jewel E. Ann Books in Order (Updated February 15, 2026)

Jewel E. Ann writes contemporary romance that often leans high-emotion, high-concept, or twisty in structure.

Jewel E. Ann Books in Order (Updated February 15, 2026)

Her catalog splits into tight, labeled series lanes (where order matters) and a large standalone shelf (where you can read by premise).

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A different way to pick your start

Instead of “start with book one,” pick the shape of story you want:

  • Time-bending, fate-forward romance (3 books): start with Transcend
  • Romantic suspense with a defined trilogy spine: start with End of Day
  • Sweeping childhood-to-adult love story (2 books): start with Pieces of a Life
  • Small-town, relationship-first series (3 books): start with Sunday Morning
  • You only want one book: start with Look the Part (standalone)

Continuity map

Read in order (same couple / same core arc):

  • Holding You (2)
  • Jack & Jill (3 + later related novels)
  • Transcend (3)
  • Life (4)
  • Fisherman (2)
  • Wildfire (2)
  • Sunday Morning (3)
  • Chain of Lakes (in progress)

Safer to read anytime (standalones):

  • Most other titles listed under “Novels” on her bibliographies.

Series reading orders (publication order)

(Every entry includes a one-line “what it is.”)

Holding You

  1. Holding You: A young-love romance where timing and secrecy turn devotion into a test of endurance.
  2. Releasing Me: A continuation that forces the couple to choose between the past that shaped them and the future they want.

The Montgomery Sisters

  1. Undeniably You: A complicated, emotionally knotty romance where attraction creates collateral damage before it creates clarity.
  2. Naked Love: A later return to the family thread, where love is messy, earned, and never as simple as it sounds.

Jack & Jill

This lane begins as a trilogy and later adds related novels that build on the same world.

  1. End of Day: A romantic suspense opener where one moment shatters normal life and love becomes a lifeline.
  2. Middle of Knight: The pressure rises as danger tightens and trust becomes a daily decision.
  3. Dawn of Forever: The trilogy payoff where survival, sacrifice, and love finally collide head-on.
  4. Out of Love: A later, related story in the same universe where grief and desire pull in opposite directions.
  5. Because of Her: Another connected return where the past won’t stay buried and love is forced into the open.

Transcend

  1. Transcend: A mind-bending romance that treats love like a mystery you feel before you understand.
  2. Epoch: The sequel that expands the rules of the story world and raises the emotional cost of every choice.
  3. Fortuity: A third entry that deepens the “why” behind the connection and brings the arc to a fuller landing.

Life

  1. The Life That Mattered: A reality-tilting romance where grief, meaning, and love twist into something bigger than a relationship.
  2. The Life You Stole: The continuation where consequences compound and love has to survive the damage around it.
  3. Pieces of a Life: A childhood-to-adulthood love story that builds intimacy through years, not instant sparks.
  4. Memories of a Life: The conclusion where the past finally stops being a place to hide and becomes something to face.

Fisherman

  1. The Naked Fisherman: An age-gap, coming-of-age romance where first love is intense, formative, and not easily outgrown.
  2. The Lost Fisherman: A second book that confronts what time changes, and what it doesn’t.

Wildfire

  1. From Air: A Montana-set romance where risk is literal, and love catches in the middle of danger.
  2. From Nowhere: A follow-up where healing, family, and second chances have to be built on purpose.

Sunday Morning

  1. Sunday Morning: A small-town romance that leans tender and grounded, built on quiet moments and big feelings.
  2. The Apple Tree: A continuation where connection deepens and history starts shaping the present.
  3. A Good Book: A third entry that completes the emotional arc of the series world.

Chain of Lakes

  1. The Homemaker: A charged, messy romance where a “perfect arrangement” falls apart the moment feelings show up.
  2. The Muse: A second entry (announced/upcoming in listings) set to expand the series’ world and themes.

Standalone novels (read anytime)

These do not require series order. If you’re browsing, treat this as a menu.

  • Idle Bloom: A first-love romance where growing up means re-learning the person you thought you knew.
  • Only Trick: A heartbreak-forward story where the “right thing” and the “wanted thing” refuse to match.
  • One: A high-concept romance built around identity, connection, and what love asks you to risk.
  • Scarlet Stone: A twisty romance where attraction and danger share the same heartbeat.
  • When Life Happened: A life-interruption romance where love arrives in the middle of the plan falling apart.
  • Look the Part: A slow-burn, opposites-attract romance where a guarded single dad meets a woman who won’t be managed.
  • A Place Without You: A second-chance, big-emotion romance where absence becomes its own kind of history.
  • Jersey Six: A raw survival-to-safety story where love is tangled with resilience and revenge.
  • Perfectly Adequate: A romance about messy self-worth, imperfect choices, and finding something real anyway.
  • Not What I Expected: A relationship curveball where the future arrives in a form nobody planned.
  • For Lucy: An emotional romance with grief in the background and healing at the center.
  • What Lovers Do: A relationship-first romance about desire, honesty, and the cost of not saying what matters.
  • Before Us: A tender, reflective romance that leans into memory, meaning, and the quiet weight of love.
  • If This Is Love: A story that tests whether love is a feeling, a decision, or both, under pressure.
  • Right Guy, Wrong Word: A romantic setup where timing is right, feelings are real, and communication is the landmine.
  • I Thought of You: A reunion-tilted romance where the past keeps resurfacing at the worst (and best) moments.

Recommended reading paths (no backtracking, no confusion)

If you want maximum “Jewel E. Ann energy” fast

  1. Transcend (then continue through Epoch and Fortuity)
  2. Look the Part (standalone palate cleanse)
  3. Pieces of a Life → Memories of a Life (finish the big emotional arc)

If you prefer grounded, small-town warmth

  1. Sunday Morning → The Apple Tree → A Good Book
  2. Then try Wildfire for a higher-stakes setting shift.

If you’re here for romantic suspense

  1. End of Day → Middle of Knight → Dawn of Forever
  2. Continue with Out of Love and Because of Her if you want more in that world.

FAQs

Do I have to read the Life books in order?
Yes. The four-book sequence is designed to build on what you learn about the characters and the story world.

Is Jack & Jill “just” a trilogy?
It starts as a trilogy, but later connected novels are commonly listed in the same world. If you want the cleanest experience, finish the trilogy first.

What’s the safest single-book sample?
Look the Part. It’s a standalone and a reliable snapshot of her voice and pacing.

Are box sets required?
No. Boxed sets are packaging, not new continuity, unless a specific edition says it includes bonus chapters.


Bottom line

For most readers, the cleanest first step is Transcend: A mind-bending romance that treats love like a mystery you feel before you understand. If you’d rather avoid a multi-book commitment, start with Look the Part: A slow-burn, opposites-attract romance where a guarded single dad meets a woman who won’t be managed.

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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.