Whitney G. Books in Order (Updated 2026-02-09)

Whitney G. writes contemporary romance that comes in two main shapes:

  • Tightly connected sets where it’s best to read in sequence (because the relationship dynamic escalates book to book).
  • True standalones where you can jump in anywhere without missing context.
Whitney G. Books in Order (Updated 2026-02-09)

If you’re spoiler-sensitive about couple outcomes, stick to the orders below inside each named set.

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Book cover images in this article are provided courtesy of Open Library.


If you’re only choosing one place to begin

  • Fast, bingeable, and signature Whitney G. energy: start with Reasonable Doubt: Volume 1
  • Friends-to-lovers with long history: start with Sincerely, Carter
  • Workplace romance with mature leads: start with Mid-Life Love
  • A single-book sample (no series rules): start with Two Weeks Notice

Reasonable Doubt (read in order)

  1. Reasonable Doubt: Volume 1: An intense connection begins with sharp rules and even sharper chemistry.
  2. Reasonable Doubt: Volume 2: The push-and-pull turns personal when trust becomes the real battleground.
  3. Reasonable Doubt: Volume 3: The final stretch forces honesty, no loopholes, no exits, no half-love.

Optional extras (if you want every scene):

  • Reasonable Doubt: Extended Epilogue: A longer “where they land” moment after the dust settles.
  • Reasonable Doubt: Bonus Scenes: Extra material that adds texture rather than new plot.

Sincerely Yours (read in order)

  1. Sincerely, Carter: Childhood best friends reach the age where the feelings stop being ignorable.
  2. Sincerely, Arizona (short companion): A closer look at the same world that reframes what “just friends” really meant.
  3. Forget You, Ethan: Enemies-to-lovers turns volatile when the past keeps showing up uninvited.
  4. Forget You, Rachel (short epilogue): A brief, tidy follow-up that closes emotional loose ends.
  5. Take Care, Taylor: Rivalry matures into something heavier when old grudges finally crack.
  6. Take Care, Audrey (short epilogue): A small afterword that confirms where things stand.

One Week (read in order)

  1. On a Tuesday: One day changes everything, and the romance is shaped by what’s left unsaid.
  2. On a Wednesday: The follow-up digs into consequences and the work of choosing each other again.

Turbulence (read in order)

  1. Turbulence: A job-in-the-sky setup becomes a grounded romance when attraction stops being “only on flights.”
  2. Turbulence: The Epilogue: A short “after” that shows the couple living with their choice.

Empire of Lies (read in order)

  1. King of Lies (also listed under an alternate title in some editions): A marriage built on image starts rotting from the inside.
  2. Queen of Lies: The public story and the private story collide, and someone has to break first.
  3. Legacy of Lies: The endgame arrives, truth, consequences, and whatever survives them.

Forbidden Wishes (read in order)

  1. I Wish I Would’ve Told You: A missed moment becomes the thing neither character can stop circling.
  2. I Wish I Would’ve Chosen You: Choosing wrong, or choosing late, has a price.
  3. I Wish I Would’ve Warned You: The final piece turns regret into a decision that has to be lived with.

Holiday Homecoming (read in order)

  1. The Office Party: A work holiday event turns into a relationship problem with no clean exit.
  2. The Office Guest: A “temporary” situation becomes intimate faster than expected.
  3. The Office Games: The playful competition stops being playful when real feelings keep score.

Naughty Bedroom Collection (read in order)

  1. Can I Come Over?: A late-night impulse becomes a pattern neither of them can pretend is casual.
  2. Can You Handle It?: Desire escalates, but the real test is what happens in daylight.

Steamy Coffee Collection (read in order)

  1. Naughty Boss: A workplace dynamic crosses the line and refuses to step back.
  2. Dirty Doctor: Professional distance collapses when the attraction won’t stay contained.
  3. Cocky Client: A client-relationship spark turns into a power shift neither planned for.

The Firm (read in order)

  1. Filthy Lawyer: A legal-world romance where control starts as a weapon and ends as a weakness.
  2. Dirty Judge: A higher-stakes follow-up that pushes boundaries, reputation, and restraint.

Wasted Love (read in order)

  1. Wasted Love with You: Season 1: A serialized romance built for bingeing, with momentum that doesn’t pause politely.
  2. Fated Love with You: Fate is convenient, until it becomes unavoidable.
  3. Awaited Love with You: The final payoff delivers the “why them” answer the slow burn has been building toward.

You Belong With Me (read in order)

  1. Break Up with Him, for Me: A messy ask forces a messy truth into the open.
  2. Pretend It’s Real, for Me: Pretending works, right up until it stops being pretend.

Falling for Mr. Statham (read in order; title variants exist)

This older set is sometimes listed under alternate names/editions. The safest approach is to follow this core story order:

  1. Mid-Life Love (also seen as Resisting the Boss in some listings): A fresh start turns into an age-gap workplace romance with sharp edges.
  2. At Last: The relationship faces real-life pressure where love has to be more than heat.
  3. Over Us, Over You: A later installment that continues the same world and emotional ripple effects.

Standalone novels (read anytime)

  • Two Weeks Notice: A fed-up assistant tries to quit, and discovers her boss won’t make it easy.
  • My Enemy Next Door: Proximity turns rivalry into the kind of tension that keeps escalating.
  • The Other Belle: A “not who you think” situation reshapes the romance once the truth lands.
  • One Sweet Lie: A lie meant to simplify life becomes the thing that complicates everything.
  • Pretty Cruel Love: A darker-leaning romance where affection and cruelty sit uncomfortably close.

Short fiction (optional extras)

  • The Layover: A quick-hit romance built around a brief window and immediate chemistry.
  • My Last Resolution: A “new year, new rules” premise that turns into a very personal exception.
  • Thirty Day Boyfriend: A time-limited arrangement that stops feeling time-limited.
  • Forever Writing You: A romance shaped by creative work, intimacy, and what gets written between the lines.

The calm, no-mistakes plan

If you want the most straightforward experience:

  1. Reasonable Doubt (Vol. 1-3) → 2) Sincerely Yours → 3) pick any other set by mood → 4) use standalones as palate cleansers anywhere.
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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.