Laura Bradbury writes in a few distinct “lanes”:
- The Grape Series (memoir-style, France/Burgundy life chapters),
- The Winemakers Trilogy (romantic fiction set in wine country),
- Romancing Oxford (contemporary romance), plus a small handful of standalones and nonfiction.

One thing to know up front: the Grape Series is sometimes numbered differently depending on the retailer/list you’re looking at. The cleanest experience is to follow the real-life timeline order (listed below), because those books build on earlier life events.
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Reading Order Compass
If you want memoir/travel-in-France (the core brand): start with My Grape Escape.
If you want romance fiction with a clear 3-book arc: start with A Vineyard for Two.
If you want rom-com university vibes: start with Oxford Wild.
If you only want one standalone romance: pick Unlikely Match.
The Grape Series (Memoir) – Best in real-life timeline order
These books can be read alone, but they make the most sense as a life sequence.
- My Grape Escape (2013): A leap from a London law track into Burgundian village life, where “starting over” becomes the series’ defining move.
- My Grape Village (2014): Settling into village reality turns the dream into logistics, friendships, and the daily work of making France feel like home.
- My Grape Year (2015): The origin-story chapter that looks back to the exchange-student year that first imprinted Burgundy on her life.
- My Grape Wedding (2016): The relationship-and-family stakes come into focus, shifting the series from adventure to long-term building.
- My Grape Paris (2018): A Paris chapter that widens the emotional and geographic scope while still tracking the same life arc.
- My Grape Cellar (2019): A shorter, more reflective installment that turns inward and takes stock of what’s been accumulated and what’s been lost.
- My Grape Quebec (2020): A Canada-facing chapter that contrasts “where I’m from” with “where I chose,” tightening the identity thread.
- My Grape Christmas (2020): A seasonal entry that uses holiday rituals to show how a once-foreign place becomes tradition.
- My Grape Baby (2023): Motherhood in France becomes the lens, with cultural differences driving both comedy and genuine pressure points.
- My Grape Child (2024): A later-life continuation that’s widely listed as the tenth Grape book, best read after My Grape Baby for full context.
The Winemakers Trilogy (Fiction) – Read in order
This is a straightforward romance trilogy with an intended sequence.
- A Vineyard for Two (2019): A wine-country setup launches the trilogy’s central relationship problem and establishes the social world it keeps returning to.
- Love in the Vineyards (2020): The emotional complications expand, and the story leans harder on what Book 1 set in motion.
- Return to the Vineyards (2021): The payoff volume, where earlier choices finally demand a definitive direction rather than another detour.
Romancing Oxford (Fiction) – Read in order
A small contemporary romance series designed as a set.
- Oxford Wild (2021): A fish-out-of-water Oxford term becomes the spark, setting up the tone and expectations for the series world.
- Oxford Star (2023): The follow-up deepens the “Oxford romance” concept and works best once you’ve absorbed the series’ first-book rhythms.
Standalone romance
These don’t require anything else.
- Unlikely Match (2022): A high-stakes romance rooted in medical and personal vulnerability, built to stand alone without shared-universe homework.
Nonfiction and writing craft
These are separate from the fiction and memoir storylines, so you can read them anytime.
- Philosophy of Preschoolers (2014): A short, humorous “parenting reality” book that plays like a breather between heavier projects.
- How To Write a Beloved (and Bestselling) Memoir (2021): A craft-focused guide built around the practical steps of shaping lived experience into a readable story.
- Bisous & Brioche (2020; later paperback editions exist): A cookbook-and-story blend that complements the France setting but doesn’t affect any reading order.
Suggested reading routes
Route A: The “Grape first” route (best continuity feel)
Start with My Grape Escape, then continue through the Grape list in order.
Route B: The “I only want fiction romance” route
Read the Winemakers Trilogy in order → then Oxford Wild → Oxford Star → Unlikely Match anywhere.
Route C: The “one-book tryout” route
Memoir: My Grape Escape
Romance: Unlikely Match
Series: A Vineyard for Two
FAQs
Do the Grape books have to be read in order?
Not strictly, but the emotional and life-context layering is clearer if you follow the timeline order above.
Why do I see different numbering for the Grape Series?
Some lists emphasize My Grape Year as “Book 1,” but chronologically the memoir arc begins with My Grape Escape. If you want the least confusing experience, start with Escape.
What’s the newest book right now?
As of February 27, 2026, the newest widely listed title is My Grape Child (2024).
Bottom line
If you’re here for the signature France memoir experience, start with My Grape Escape (2013). If you’re here for romance fiction with a clean arc, start with A Vineyard for Two (2019) and read straight through the trilogy.
Frank is the editor of BookSeries.blog, focusing on publication order, chronological timelines, and spoiler-free reading guides for book series and fictional universes.

