M. Robinson Books in Order (Updated February 15, 2026)

M. Robinson is a contemporary romance author whose catalog is built around tight “lanes”: duets, trilogies, and small series where reveals and relationship outcomes carry forward.

M. Robinson Books in Order (Updated February 15, 2026)

If you read within a lane in order, you’ll avoid nearly all accidental spoilers.

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A practical way to start

Choose what you want first, then follow that lane straight through:

  • Dark/mafia-leaning romance: start with El Diablo (El Diablo) or El Santo (Saint-Sinner)
  • High-angst family saga: start with Road to Nowhere (The Jameson Brothers)
  • Connected standalones with crossover: start with Complicate Me (The Good Ol’ Boys)
  • Celebrity/fame romance: start with VIP (VIP)
  • Modern “easy entry” series of standalones: start with Second Chance Contract (Second Chance)

Read-by-lane publication order

El Diablo

  1. El Diablo: A dangerous, obsessive romance where loyalty and love are inseparable from the threat around them.
  2. Sinful Arrangement: A high-stakes follow-up where commitment comes with terms, and consequences.

Optional bundle/collection

  • Los Diablos: A collected edition commonly listed alongside the duet; useful for completion, not required for story flow.

Saint-Sinner

  1. El Santo: A dark romance where devotion clashes with violence, and love becomes a form of loyalty.
  2. El Pecador: The continuation where sin, sacrifice, and fallout land with no clean exits.

The Jameson Brothers

These are interconnected; Lost Boy can be read alone, but it lands better after the first two.

  1. Road to Nowhere: A hard-edged, high-angst beginning where love is tested by survival and choice.
  2. Ends Here: The direct continuation where consequences catch up and healing isn’t linear.
  3. Lost Boy: A character-focused story about rebuilding after damage, with shared-world context in the background.

Optional bundle/collection

  • Road to Nowhere & Ends Here Box Set: A two-book bundle that doesn’t add new continuity.

The Good Ol’ Boys

Connected standalones with crossover, best read in order for friend-group continuity.

  1. Complicate Me: A messy, intimate romance where feelings refuse to stay simple.
  2. Forbid Me: A temptation-forward story built around the thing they both know they shouldn’t do.
  3. Undo Me: A second-chance romance where forgiveness is harder than love.
  4. Crave Me: A chemistry-first romance where wanting someone forces the truth out.

Optional bundle/collection

  • The Good Ol’ Boys (collection): An omnibus-style edition often listed as “book 1-4” together.

VIP

  1. VIP: A fame-and-desire romance where the spotlight makes every mistake louder.
  2. The Madam: A power-tilted continuation where control becomes its own addiction.
  3. MVP: A high-profile romance where winning publicly doesn’t solve what’s broken privately.

Spin-off / adjacent

  • Tempting Bad: A VIP-adjacent second-chance romance focused on prominent side characters.

Pierced Hearts Duet

  1. Choosing Us: A long-bond, high-feelings romance where the past keeps writing the present.
  2. Choosing You: The conclusion where love has to survive what was already said and done.

Life of Debauchery

  1. From the First Verse: A music-leaning, diary-toned romance that starts beautiful and turns brutal.
  2. ’Til the Last Lyric: The finale where consequences, recovery, and devotion collide.

Love Hurts Duet

  1. Hated You Then: Enemies-to-lovers tension where history fuels every spark and every wound.
  2. Love You Now: The payoff where love has to outlast the damage it didn’t prevent.

Playboy Pact

  1. The Kiss: A friends-to-lovers setup where one moment breaks the “just friends” rules.
  2. The Fling: A fling-with-terms romance where feelings don’t follow the agreement.

Second Chance

These read like connected standalones; order helps, but each couple’s story is built to resolve within its own book.

  1. Second Chance Contract: A second-chance, high-status romance where a “deal” can’t contain old feelings.
  2. Second Chance Vow: A vow-and-reunion story where promises are heavier the second time.
  3. Second Chance Scandal: A rekindled romance where exposure threatens the rebuilding.
  4. Second Chance Love: A comeback romance where chemistry returns before trust does.
  5. Second Chance Rival: Rivals forced close enough to remember what they used to mean.
  6. Second Chance Mine: A possessive, high-heat second chance where “mine” becomes a boundary line.

Beckham Dynasty

  1. Tempting Enemy: Enemies-to-lovers where rivalry turns personal and then irreversible.
  2. Perfect Enemy: A sharper continuation where pride and desire keep drawing blood.
  3. Sinful Enemy: The escalation where obsession and consequence finally meet head-on.

Optional bundle/collection

  • The Beckham Dynasty (collection): A 1-3 set that compiles the trilogy.

The Billion-Dollar Men

  1. Bossy Billionaire: A workplace second-chance romance where success can’t replace the person you lost.
  2. Vicious Tycoon: A high-intensity follow-up where power and need blur fast.
  3. Filthy Mogul: The finale with an antihero edge where the line between protection and possession gets thin.

Love Triangle Duet

Status note: Book 2 is widely listed as coming soon in several places.

  1. We Are Yours: A forced-proximity love triangle where secrets strain loyalty and brotherhood.
  2. Say You’re Mine: The continuation (commonly listed as upcoming) where choices have to become final.

Standalones, shorts, and collaboration titles (separate from the lanes above)

  • She Was Mine First: A friends-to-lovers second-chance romance set against a wedding countdown and old regret.
  • Inherited Holiday: A holiday romance where an inheritance forces a reluctant return to a Christmas-obsessed hometown.
  • Two Sides: Gianna: A darker romantic suspense with shifting truths and a heroine caught between versions of the same story.
  • Keeping Her Wet: A steamy anthology-style novella that revisits multiple couples in scene-focused chapters.
  • Keeping Her Under the Mistletoe: A short holiday novelette with bonus scenes featuring established couples.

Co-writes / clearly branded collaborations (treat as separate continuity unless stated otherwise in the book)

  • Mafia Casanova (with Rachel Van Dyken): A mafia romance built around danger, swagger, and a hero who plays for keeps.
  • Falling For The Villain (with Rachel Van Dyken): A villain-leaning romance where the wrong choice feels inevitable.
  • Come Here and Kiss Me (with Willow Winters): A heat-forward romance designed for fast, chemistry-first reading.
  • The Chemistry of Us (with Rachel Van Dyken): A relationship story driven by proximity, tension, and emotional reckoning.
  • Signed in Blood (with Willow Winters): A darker collaboration title commonly listed as a separate work from her main series lanes.

A clean “recommended order” for new readers who want range

  1. Complicate Me (to sample her connected-standalone style)
  2. Road to Nowhere → Ends Here (to see the full angst arc land)
  3. VIP (for celebrity/fame romance)
  4. Pick your intensity lane next: El Diablo (darker) or Second Chance Contract (lighter structure, still emotional)

Important continuity notes

  • Duets/trilogies: read strictly in order (El Diablo, Saint-Sinner, Love Hurts, Pierced Hearts, Life of Debauchery, Beckham Dynasty).
  • Shared-world crossovers: strongest in The Good Ol’ Boys and The Jameson Brothers.
  • Collections/box sets: convenient, but not new continuity unless explicitly labeled as “bonus content.”

FAQs

Can I read Lost Boy first?
You can, but it hits harder after Road to Nowhere and Ends Here, where the shared history is established.

Is Tempting Bad required for the VIP trilogy?
No. It’s a spin-off; read it after VIP if you want more time with that world.

What’s the safest “no cliffhanger” start?
Start with Complicate Me or Second Chance Contract, since they read most cleanly as self-contained romances.


Bottom line

If you want one dependable entry point: start with Complicate Me, then follow The Good Ol’ Boys in order. If you’re here specifically for maximum intensity, start with El Diablo (and keep that duet in sequence).

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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.