Morgan Chase Books in Order (Updated March 27, 2026)

Morgan Chase writes sapphic romance in two main modes. One is contemporary firehouse romance with a found-family thread. The other is paranormal romance with fated-mate and power-balance elements.

Morgan Chase Books in Order (Updated March 27, 2026)

There is also a short workplace-romance novella sitting off to the side.

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.

The fastest way to choose where to start

  1. Start with Her Firefighter’s Touch if you want the clearest entry point and the safest reading experience for most readers. It opens the Station 11 series and appears to be the author’s best-known current lane.
  2. Start with Alpha’s Claim if you want the fantasy-paranormal side first. That begins Lunar Bonds and reads like a separate continuity rather than a crossover from Station 11.
  3. Start with The Chief’s Code only if you want a quick test read. It is a novella and currently looks like a one-book branch rather than the backbone of the catalog.

One clean recommendation

If you want the least complicated route, read:

  1. Station 11
  2. Lunar Bonds
  3. Banter Buddies

That keeps the stronger, more established contemporary series first, then moves into the paranormal trilogy, and leaves the novella for whenever you want a short extra.

Shelf one: Station 11

This is the series most readers should begin with. Goodreads and Romance.io both list it as a numbered sequence, and Romance.io notes that later entries can stand alone but are still best read in order.

  1. Her Firefighter’s Touch (2025): The series opener, built around a late-night false alarm and an artist-firefighter connection that establishes the firehouse setting and the series’ found-family tone.
  2. Her Firefighter’s Spark (2025): A wounded firefighter and a persistent personal trainer move the series deeper into healing, vulnerability, and station-family continuity.
  3. Her Firefighter’s Flame (2026): A single mother, a firefighter, and a bisexual-awakening romance widen the emotional range of the series while staying inside the same firehouse world.
  4. Her Firefighter’s Heart (2026): A ring-cutting emergency turns into a guarded-firefighter romance, keeping the station setting intact while shifting toward a more theatrical heroine and a more closed-off love interest.
  5. Her Firefighter’s Calling (2026): A high-school-crush setup brought back into adulthood, with Jo and Sloane pushing the series into a more openly second-chance-adjacent emotional space.
  6. Her Firefighter’s Home (forthcoming): Goodreads and Amazon series pages surface this as Station 11 book six, but I did not find enough stable detail to describe the story premise confidently yet. Treat it as announced but lightly documented for now.

Best reading rule for Station 11

Read these in numbered order. Even where the books are described as individually readable, the firehouse cast and emotional familiarity clearly build from book to book.

Shelf two: Lunar Bonds

This is the paranormal branch. Goodreads, Amazon, and Audible all support it as a three-book series separate from Station 11.

  1. Alpha’s Claim (2025): Opens Lunar Bonds with an explicit F/F paranormal setup centered on an alpha figure, a promised match, and a heroine choosing freedom over the future planned for her.
  2. Traitor’s Loyalty (2025): Enemies become lovers as betrayal shifts into belonging, making this the bridge book that turns the series from setup into emotional commitment.
  3. Keeper’s Heart (2025): The third book closes the trilogy and is best treated as the payoff volume after the relationship and loyalty tensions of the first two books.

Best reading rule for Lunar Bonds

Do not jump into book two or three first. This looks like the more continuity-dependent branch of the catalog.

Shelf three: Banter Buddies

This is currently a very small branch.

The Chief’s Code (2025): An enemies-to-lovers workplace romance novella that appears to function as a quick standalone rather than a major continuity series.

At the moment, I did not find a reliably confirmed second Banter Buddies book.

Recommended reading order for new readers

If you want one practical master list, use this:

  1. Her Firefighter’s Touch
  2. Her Firefighter’s Spark
  3. Her Firefighter’s Flame
  4. Her Firefighter’s Heart
  5. Her Firefighter’s Calling
  6. Her Firefighter’s Home when released
  7. Alpha’s Claim
  8. Traitor’s Loyalty
  9. Keeper’s Heart
  10. The Chief’s Code

This order favors the most established and best-documented series first, then moves into the paranormal trilogy, then finishes with the novella.

Do Morgan Chase books need to be read in order?

Not across the whole catalog.

Station 11, Lunar Bonds, and Banter Buddies look like separate shelves. Within each shelf, numbered order is the safest approach. Across shelves, you can choose by mood.

What about the older non-fiction and unrelated-looking titles?

Goodreads and ThriftBooks also attach older or clearly different works to the Morgan Chase name, including More Illustrated Word Smart, and Goodreads surfaces MAKE JOKES GREAT AGAIN as well. Because those titles do not fit the romance catalog and I could not confirm that they belong to the same active fiction author identity, I would not include them in a romance reading order.

Latest release status

The newest published Morgan Chase titles consistently surfacing in the checked sources are the 2026 Station 11 books Her Firefighter’s Flame, Her Firefighter’s Heart, and Her Firefighter’s Calling. The next clearly surfaced title is Her Firefighter’s Home, listed as Station 11 book six, though the release detail is still thin in the sources I found.

Final recommendation

For most readers, the right starting point is Her Firefighter’s Touch. Read Station 11 straight through first. Then move to Alpha’s Claim if you want Morgan Chase’s paranormal side. Save The Chief’s Code for a short extra once you know whether the voice works for you.

+ posts

Frank is the editor of BookSeries.blog, focusing on publication order, chronological timelines, and spoiler-free reading guides for book series and fictional universes.