After Hours (AC Arthur) Books in Order
Part ofAC Arthur Books in OrderSee the After Hours books in order by AC Arthur, with quick summaries, legal-drama series notes, and an easy guide to where to start.
Last updated: June 30, 2026
As an Amazon Associate, we earn from qualifying purchases (at no extra cost to you).
Publication Order
3 books
Office Policy
by AC Arthur
2004
Attorney Cienna Turner is assigned a major sexual harassment case and forced to work with Keith Page, the colleague who stirs up old pain and new desire. Then the office scandal turns personal.
Corporate Seduction
by AC Arthur
2007
When erotic emails flood a law firm, paralegal Reka Boyd clashes with Khalil Franklin, the sexy IT man trying to uncover the truth. Office drama and attraction heat up at the same time.
Laws of Attraction
by AC Arthur
2019
Attorney Kelly Brandon takes on a sexual harassment case and runs straight into Sterling Layne, the one-night stand now hired to manage the fallout. Desire returns just as the case turns dangerous.
Series background & context
After Hours is built around Page & Associates, a big city law firm where ambition, office gossip, scandal, and attraction all feed off one another. Arthur knows this terrain well enough to make it feel lived in. The legal details never drown the romance, but the work pressure, egos, and behind-the-scenes maneuvering shape everything.
Nobody gets to keep their life neatly separated here.
The books are romantic suspense at heart. Office Policy, Corporate Seduction, and Laws of Attraction all put smart, driven professionals in situations where work conflict and personal desire crash together hard. Sexual harassment claims, revenge plots, leaked emails, and high-profile clients create the public problems. The private ones come from old wounds, ambition, and the fact that these characters are often trying to stay in control while their emotions do the opposite.
One of the nicest things about this series is that the women at the center do not feel interchangeable. They are capable, busy, and used to handling pressure. That makes the romances stronger because the attraction is never the only thing going on. A woman can be trying to win a case, protect her reputation, and keep herself safe all at once. Love has to make room inside that reality.
The office setting also gives the books a closed-in, high-stress feeling that works in their favor. People know each other too well. They work late. They hear rumors. They misread motives. A personal mistake can become a professional disaster in a heartbeat. Arthur gets a lot of tension out of that without ever forgetting that readers are here for chemistry too.
These books can be read one at a time, but together they create a fuller picture of the firm and the people moving through it. Friends, coworkers, and recurring names keep the setting connected even when the central couple changes.
If you like your romance with career women, sharp banter, legal-world pressure, and a little real danger humming in the background, After Hours is a strong pick. It has the heat Arthur readers expect, but it also has that extra edge that comes from knowing one bad choice could blow up everything.
Edited by
Software engineer whose passion for tracking book recommendations from podcasts inspired the creation of MRB.
Lead investor at 3one4 Capital whose startup expertise and love for books helped shaped MRB and its growth.

















Comments
Did we miss something? Have feedback?
Help us improve this page by sharing your thoughts