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Sarah Jio’s novels are individual stories, not a continuing series. You can start anywhere without missing required backstory. The main benefit of reading “in order” is simple: it shows how she leans more confidently into her signature blend of romance, mystery, and past/present timelines over time.

If you want an easy path, read the novels from earliest to latest. If you just want one book to test the vibe, jump to the starting-point section below.
The novels (first publication order)
- The Violets of March (2011): A woman retreats to a quiet island and finds a diary that pulls her into an older love story with sharp edges.
- The Bungalow (2011): A marriage is tested when a glamorous wartime friendship and a tropical setting expose what’s been unspoken.
- Blackberry Winter (2012): A modern reporter investigates a child’s long-ago disappearance as two mothers’ lives begin to echo each other.
- The Last Camellia (2013): A rare flower becomes the key to secrets spanning decades, where beauty and danger grow side by side.
- Morning Glory (2013): A houseboat community hides an old night’s truth, and a newcomer’s curiosity makes the past wake up.
- Goodnight June (2014): A legacy bookstore and a trail of letters draw a woman into a literary mystery tied to family and loss.
- The Look of Love (2014): A woman who can “see” love is given a deadline that forces her to question what love really counts as.
- Always (2017): A seemingly settled life unravels when a figure from a first love returns in a way that changes every assumption.
- All the Flowers in Paris (2019): Two women, decades apart, are linked by letters in a Paris apartment and a history that refuses to stay buried.
- With Love from London (2022): An inherited London bookshop becomes a doorway into a mother’s secrets and a daughter’s second chance.
- Insignificant Others (2025): A woman caught in a romantic time loop is forced to re-meet “almosts” until she understands what she’s truly choosing.
Continuity note: these are standalones. Any recurring pattern is thematic, not plot-based.
Collections and shared projects (optional)
- Grand Central (2014, anthology with multiple authors): A set of linked stories that circle the same iconic location, each entry offering a different kind of reunion.
This isn’t required for any of the novels, so treat it like an extra.
Where to start (pick your mood)
- You want peak “Jio” vibes, romance + mystery + time-echoes: Blackberry Winter
- You want a bookish setup with family questions and cozy atmosphere: With Love from London
- You want Paris, secrets, and dual timelines: All the Flowers in Paris
- You want a lighter, high-concept romantic engine: Insignificant Others
- You want to see everything develop from the beginning: start with The Violets of March and read forward
Questions readers usually have
Do I need to read these in order?
No. Choose by premise and go.
Is there a “chronological order” that’s different?
Not in a useful way, because the books don’t share a single storyline.
Are any titles the same book under a different name?
One edition note comes up often: With Love from London has also been published under the title The Bookshop on Primrose Hill in some markets.
Bottom line
If you want the simplest, no-regrets approach, read the novels from 2011 → 2025 in the list above. If you only want one, start with Blackberry Winter for the clearest snapshot of what she does best.
Frank is the editor of BookSeries.blog, focusing on publication order, chronological timelines, and spoiler-free reading guides for book series and fictional universes.

