Christina C. Jones writes contemporary romance that blends humor, intimacy, and emotionally grounded Black love stories. Her catalog mixes connected relationship arcs with true standalones, so the key is knowing which books build on each other and which are safe to read anytime.

This guide avoids technical language and focuses on reader-facing clarity: what needs order, what doesn’t, and where to begin.
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The simplest way to start
- If you want a connected romance with the most payoff: start with The Wright Love
- If you want a one-book experience: start with Pull Me Close or I Think I Might Love You
- If you want to sample her tone without commitment: choose any standalone below
Once you start a connected set, finish it before moving on.
The Wright Brothers books (read in order)
These novels are tightly linked. Each book focuses on a different brother, but relationships, family dynamics, and outcomes carry forward.
- The Wright Love: A guarded woman and a confident man circle attraction while learning what trust really requires.
- A Wright Kind of Love: A slow-burning connection grows as past hurts and expectations are finally confronted.
- The Wright Man: A romance built on patience and intention reaches its emotional payoff.
Why order matters: Later books assume you already know how earlier relationships resolved.
Standalone novels (read in any order)
These stories do not depend on each other. Pick by mood.
- Pull Me Close: Two people drawn together by circumstance learn that vulnerability is the real risk.
- I Think I Might Love You: A friendship shifts into something deeper once honesty replaces avoidance.
- Extra Love: A relationship that was never meant to last demands a decision about what “enough” really means.
- Getting Schooled: Returning to unfinished business forces a reckoning with growth and desire.
- Still Not Enough: A woman decides whether love can meet her needs without shrinking her.
Shorter works and novellas (optional extras)
These can be read anytime and are best treated as add-ons rather than required reading.
- More Than Enough: A compact romance centered on reassurance, choice, and emotional safety.
- All I Need: A short, focused love story about timing and recognition.
(Availability and packaging can vary by edition; some shorter works appear bundled with others.)
A reading plan that feels natural
If you want a smooth experience without spoilers:
- The Wright Love
- A Wright Kind of Love
- The Wright Man
- Choose any standalone that fits your mood
- Add shorter works whenever you want something quick
If you only want one book, skip straight to a standalone, no setup required.
FAQs
Do Christina C. Jones books all connect?
No. Only specific groups (like the Wright Brothers) share continuity.
What happens if I read the Wright books out of order?
You’ll still follow the main romance, but earlier couples’ endings will be casually revealed.
Is there a “best” first book overall?
The Wright Love is the clearest introduction if you want her character work and relationship depth in full form.
Bottom line
For the cleanest experience, read the Wright Brothers books in order, then explore the standalones freely. Christina C. Jones rewards readers who follow connected stories straight through, but she’s just as welcoming if you only want a single, satisfying love story.
Frank is the editor of BookSeries.blog, focusing on publication order, chronological timelines, and spoiler-free reading guides for book series and fictional universes.

