Fiona Cole Books in Order (Updated 2026-02-09)

Fiona Cole writes romance across several separate story lines. Some are quick, early-career contemporaries; others are longer, more interconnected worlds where side characters keep stepping back onto the page.

Fiona Cole Books in Order (Updated 2026-02-09)

If you dislike spoilers about who ends up with whom, the simplest approach is: finish one series before starting the next.

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A good starting point (based on what you’re in the mood for)

  • Most interconnected, most talked-about: start with Voyeur (then keep going in order).
  • Rom-com energy with “how did this happen?” setups: start with Blame it on the Champagne.
  • Earlier, relationship-forward contemporary: start with Where You Can Find Me.
  • Newest direction: start with Aspen.

King’s Bar Series (read in order)

  1. Where You Can Find Me (2015): A connection built on late-night honesty forces two people to admit what they want before it slips away.
  2. Deny Me (2016): A relationship heats up fast, but the real conflict is whether either of them can handle the truth out loud.
  3. Imagine Me (2017): One night becomes a recurring temptation, and the “just once” promise refuses to hold.

Shame Me Not (read in order)

  1. Shame (2017): A woman’s carefully managed image cracks when desire and judgment collide in the same place.
  2. Make It to the Altar (2018): Love gets its second chance while wedding pressure turns every old wound into a fresh argument.

Voyeur World (best read straight through)

This is the core reading line most readers mean when they ask for “Fiona Cole in order.” The books share a setting and a web of relationships, so later stories work best after the earlier ones.

  1. Voyeur (2018): A forbidden fixation becomes impossible to ignore once secrecy turns into emotional dependence.
  2. Lovers (2018): Attraction turns into a negotiated relationship where boundaries are tested, and rewritten, by trust.
  3. Savior (2019): A controlled arrangement shifts when protection starts looking a lot like devotion.
  4. Another (2019): Two people trying not to want each other realize their restraint is the most fragile thing they own.
  5. Liar (2019): A relationship built on half-truths faces the moment where honesty is either liberation or destruction.
  6. Surrender (2020): A couple on the edge of “forever” discovers that commitment still demands hard conversations.
  7. Watch With Me (2020): A return to the world’s heat and intimacy highlights how much trust has to be chosen, not assumed.
  8. Teacher (2020): A taboo dynamic becomes a love story when both characters insist on growth instead of excuses.
  9. Falter (2022): A confident façade slips, and the person behind it has to learn how to be loved without performing.
  10. Goner (2022): A relationship confronts consequences that can’t be flirted away, forcing a real reckoning.

Blame It on the Alcohol (read in order)

These are connected by tone and setup style, and they’re most fun when read as a trio.

  1. Blame It on the Champagne (2020): A disastrous night ends with a “we can’t have done that” morning, and now they have to deal with it.
  2. Blame It on the Tequila (2021): A dance-floor spark turns into a high-risk decision that keeps echoing after the music stops.
  3. Blame It on the Vodka (2022): Vegas energy collides with real feelings, and the aftermath refuses to stay contained.

Aspen (read in order)

  1. Aspen (2024): A new connection grows sharp-edged and intense as both characters fight what feels inevitable.
  2. Lucian (2025): The next story deepens the world, pushing loyalty and desire into the same high-pressure lane.

Shared-world and multi-author appearances (optional)

These don’t sit inside the series above in a way that affects continuity, so treat them as add-ons.

  • Stories of September (2020, with others): A contribution that leans into emotion-forward romance with a shared anthology theme.
  • Just for a Little While (2021): A shorter story that focuses on immediacy, what happens when “temporary” starts feeling permanent.
  • Happily Ever After Cookbook (2022): A collection that includes contributions connected to romance community projects rather than one ongoing storyline.

(If you want, I can separate “fiction only” from “anthology/contributor” items into two clean lists.)


Reading order that stays simple

If you want one plan that won’t backfire:

  1. Voyeur → keep reading in order through Goner
  2. Blame It on the Alcohol trilogy
  3. AspenLucian
  4. Circle back to early works: King’s Bar, then Shame Me Not

Bottom line

If you’re choosing just one place to begin, Voyeur is the clearest gateway because it leads into the most connected reading experience. If you want something lighter and faster, start with Blame It on the Champagne and read that trilogy straight through.

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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.