Amanda Prowse Books in Order (Updated February 22, 2026)

Amanda Prowse writes emotional, character-led fiction in two main connected series (each with its own continuity) plus a larger body of standalone novels you can read in any order. If you want to avoid spoilers and repeated character references, treat the series separately and read each one straight through.

Amanda Prowse Books in Order (Updated February 22, 2026)

How the reading order works

You have three lanes

  • Lane A: No Greater Love (a longer connected run; best read in series order)
  • Lane B: No Greater Strength (a second connected run; best read in series order)
  • Lane C: Standalones (pick freely by premise; no continuity requirements)

A simple rule that won’t fail you

If a book is clearly labeled as part of No Greater Love, No Greater Strength, or One Love, Two Stories, read that line in order. Everything else is “choose what grabs you.”

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If you want just one starting point

  • Start with Poppy Day if you want a series experience where later books echo earlier choices (No Greater Love #1).
  • Start with Perfect Daughter if you want a different series entry with a tighter, later-era feel (No Greater Strength #1).
  • Start with The Art of Hiding if you want a standalone with immediate stakes and zero series commitment.

Series reading orders

No Greater Love series (read in order)

  1. Poppy Day (2011): A relationship-and-consequence story where one event reshapes a family’s future choices.
  2. What Have I Done? (2013): A reputation-tilting scandal story built around private truth colliding with public judgment.
  3. Clover’s Child (2013): A motherhood-centered novel that pushes identity, obligation, and love into conflict.
  4. A Little Love (2013): A close-focus story where care, sacrifice, and resentment wrestle for the same space.
  5. Christmas for One (2014): A seasonal entry that still belongs to the same continuity and lands best after the earlier books.
  6. Will You Remember Me? (2014): A memory-and-relationship story where what’s forgotten changes what can be forgiven.
  7. A Mother’s Story (2015): A high-emotion family novel that assumes you’ve seen how this world handles consequences.

Optional adjacent items often listed with this continuity (not required, but best read after you’ve started the series):

  • The Game (2013)
  • A Christmas Wish (2013)
  • The Ten-pound Ticket (2014)
  • Something Quite Beautiful (often listed as short fiction/collection material)

(These are commonly grouped alongside the series in bibliographies, but they are not the core numbered run.)


No Greater Strength series (read in order)

  1. Perfect Daughter (2015): A family-and-secrets story where the “perfect” version of someone becomes a liability.
  2. The Second Chance Café (2015) (also published as The Christmas Café): A community-centered reset story about rebuilding after loss.
  3. Three-and-a-half Heartbeats (2015): A grief-and-recovery novel focused on the aftershocks of tragedy.
  4. Another Love (2016): A relationship story about what survives when certainty doesn’t.
  5. My Husband’s Wife (2016): A marriage-and-identity story shaped by divided loyalties and social pressure.
  6. I Won’t Be Home for Christmas (2016): A seasonal entry that still carries the emotional logic of the series run.

One Love, Two Stories (read in order)

These books are designed as complementary perspectives rather than a long serial continuity, so order matters for context.

  1. Anna (2018): A love story told from Anna’s side, built around belonging, vulnerability, and fear of repeating the past.
  2. Theo (2018): The same relationship reframed through Theo’s history, changing what you think you “knew.”
  3. How to Fall in Love Again: Kitty’s Story (2018) (also published as Kitty): A related character’s path to starting over, best read after Anna and Theo.

Standalone novels in publication order

Use this list if you like reading by release year, or if you’re collecting.

  1. The Food of Love (2016): A relationship-and-family story where devotion and expectation stop being easy to separate.
  2. The Idea of You (2017): A love-and-selfhood novel about the gap between the life you built and the life you want.
  3. The Art of Hiding (2017): A hidden-life thriller of domestic reinvention, where one secret demands another.
  4. The Coordinates of Loss (2018): A grief-shaped novel about what remains when certainty is removed.
  5. The Girl in the Corner (2018): A recovery-and-resilience story where the real battle is living after the headline moment.
  6. The Things I Know (2019): A tense family-centered story about the cost of keeping the peace.
  7. The Light in the Hallway (2019): A home-and-identity novel where stability is tested by what can’t be unlearned.
  8. The Day She Came Back (2020): A return-and-reckoning story where the past doesn’t arrive gently.
  9. An Ordinary Life (2021): A life-in-full portrait of love, endurance, and what gets carried quietly for years.
  10. Waiting to Begin (2021): A second-chance story about timing, choice, and the courage to restart.
  11. Mr Portobello’s Morning Paper (2021): A gentler, community-leaning story anchored in everyday kindness and connection.
  12. To Love and Be Loved (2022): A relationships-first novel built around emotional truth rather than perfect outcomes.
  13. Picking Up the Pieces (2023): A rebuilding story where recovery is practical, messy, and earned.
  14. All Good Things (2023): A family-and-fallout novel about what people do when “keeping it together” becomes the problem.
  15. Very Very Lucky (2024): A close-focus story about turning points and the ripple effects of one altered path.
  16. Swimming to Lundy (2024): A coastal-set, emotionally driven story about escape, return, and what you can’t outrun.
  17. This One Life (2025): A relationship-and-consequence novel about choosing the life you can live with, not the one that looks best on paper.
  18. Ever After (2025): A later-life reinvention story where happiness is treated as a decision, not a prize.
  19. Life as Planned (2026): A life-interruption story where the “plan” becomes the antagonist.

Upcoming titles commonly listed for 2026 (release timing can vary by edition/territory):

  • Fifteen Minutes (2026)
  • The Way Home (2026)

Short fiction and collections (optional)

If you’re reading for continuity, treat these as extra rather than essential.

Collections

  • Stories from the Heart (2017)
  • Something Quite Beautiful: Seven short stories (2021)

Novellas / short stories (selected)

  • Imogen’s Baby (2016)
  • Miss Potterton’s Birthday Tea (2016)

Non-fiction (separate from the novels)

  • The Boy Between (2020) (with Josiah Hartley)
  • Women Like Us (2022)

Children’s / picture books (separate continuity)

  • The Smile That Went a Mile (2021)
  • Today I’m in Charge (2023)

FAQ

Do Amanda Prowse’s standalones share characters?

Not in a way that requires an order. The standalones are designed to be picked up independently.

What if I accidentally start with the wrong series book?

You can still follow the plot, but you’ll often lose the “why this matters” layer. If you realize it early, jump back to the series start and come forward.

I see two titles that look like the same book, what’s going on?

Some books are published under alternate titles (for example, The Second Chance Café is also known as The Christmas Café, and How to Fall in Love Again: Kitty’s Story may appear as Kitty). If you’re collecting, match by premise and publication year.


Conclusion

If you want the clearest, spoiler-safe route, begin with Poppy Day and read No Greater Love straight through. If you’d rather sample without commitment, pick any standalone from the publication list, The Art of Hiding is a clean “try one” entry with no series baggage.

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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.