Sarah Jio Books in Order (Updated 2026-02-09)

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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.

Sarah Jio Books in Order (Updated 2026-02-09)

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)

  1. 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.
  2. The Bungalow (2011): A marriage is tested when a glamorous wartime friendship and a tropical setting expose what’s been unspoken.
  3. Blackberry Winter (2012): A modern reporter investigates a child’s long-ago disappearance as two mothers’ lives begin to echo each other.
  4. The Last Camellia (2013): A rare flower becomes the key to secrets spanning decades, where beauty and danger grow side by side.
  5. Morning Glory (2013): A houseboat community hides an old night’s truth, and a newcomer’s curiosity makes the past wake up.
  6. Goodnight June (2014): A legacy bookstore and a trail of letters draw a woman into a literary mystery tied to family and loss.
  7. 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.
  8. Always (2017): A seemingly settled life unravels when a figure from a first love returns in a way that changes every assumption.
  9. 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.
  10. With Love from London (2022): An inherited London bookshop becomes a doorway into a mother’s secrets and a daughter’s second chance.
  11. 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)


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.

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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.