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

Her catalog splits into tight, labeled series lanes (where order matters) and a large standalone shelf (where you can read by premise).
Affiliate Disclosure
As an Amazon Associate, I earn from qualifying purchases. This article may contain affiliate links. If you click one of these links, I may earn a small commission at no additional cost to you.
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
- Holding You: A young-love romance where timing and secrecy turn devotion into a test of endurance.
- Releasing Me: A continuation that forces the couple to choose between the past that shaped them and the future they want.
The Montgomery Sisters
- Undeniably You: A complicated, emotionally knotty romance where attraction creates collateral damage before it creates clarity.
- 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.
- End of Day: A romantic suspense opener where one moment shatters normal life and love becomes a lifeline.
- Middle of Knight: The pressure rises as danger tightens and trust becomes a daily decision.
- Dawn of Forever: The trilogy payoff where survival, sacrifice, and love finally collide head-on.
- Out of Love: A later, related story in the same universe where grief and desire pull in opposite directions.
- Because of Her: Another connected return where the past won’t stay buried and love is forced into the open.
Transcend
- Transcend: A mind-bending romance that treats love like a mystery you feel before you understand.
- Epoch: The sequel that expands the rules of the story world and raises the emotional cost of every choice.
- Fortuity: A third entry that deepens the “why” behind the connection and brings the arc to a fuller landing.
Life
- The Life That Mattered: A reality-tilting romance where grief, meaning, and love twist into something bigger than a relationship.
- The Life You Stole: The continuation where consequences compound and love has to survive the damage around it.
- Pieces of a Life: A childhood-to-adulthood love story that builds intimacy through years, not instant sparks.
- Memories of a Life: The conclusion where the past finally stops being a place to hide and becomes something to face.
Fisherman
- The Naked Fisherman: An age-gap, coming-of-age romance where first love is intense, formative, and not easily outgrown.
- The Lost Fisherman: A second book that confronts what time changes, and what it doesn’t.
Wildfire
- From Air: A Montana-set romance where risk is literal, and love catches in the middle of danger.
- From Nowhere: A follow-up where healing, family, and second chances have to be built on purpose.
Sunday Morning
- Sunday Morning: A small-town romance that leans tender and grounded, built on quiet moments and big feelings.
- The Apple Tree: A continuation where connection deepens and history starts shaping the present.
- A Good Book: A third entry that completes the emotional arc of the series world.
Chain of Lakes
- The Homemaker: A charged, messy romance where a “perfect arrangement” falls apart the moment feelings show up.
- 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
- Transcend (then continue through Epoch and Fortuity)
- Look the Part (standalone palate cleanse)
- Pieces of a Life → Memories of a Life (finish the big emotional arc)
If you prefer grounded, small-town warmth
- Sunday Morning → The Apple Tree → A Good Book
- Then try Wildfire for a higher-stakes setting shift.
If you’re here for romantic suspense
- End of Day → Middle of Knight → Dawn of Forever
- 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.
Frank is the editor of BookSeries.blog, focusing on publication order, chronological timelines, and spoiler-free reading guides for book series and fictional universes.

