Brides of Forsaken Bank Books in Order
Part ofLaura Beers Books in OrderThis page shows the Brides of Forsaken Bank series by Laura Beers in order, with summaries, background notes, and simple where to start help.
Last updated: June 9, 2026
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Publication Order
1 book
A Misplaced Lady
by Laura Beers
2020
In 1880s England, a young aristocratic woman is thrown off course by scandal and financial ruin. What follows is a historical romance about survival, pride, and finding a new place when the old one is gone.
Series background & context
Brides of Forsaken Bank looks like one of the smaller, more self-contained corners of Laura Beers' catalog. Instead of a large family network or a long-running spy thread, this series feels more focused on one community and on women whose lives have been knocked sharply off course.
The key note here is displacement. The known story in this setting, A Misplaced Lady, points to a heroine from the aristocracy whose world is upended by scandal and financial collapse in the 1880s. That already sets the series apart from Beers' more familiar Regency drawing rooms. The social rules still matter, but money, reputation, and survival seem to press closer to the surface.
That change matters.
What readers should expect is a historical romance where status is less secure than it first appears. A title or good name may open doors, but it does not protect anyone from bad investments, family mistakes, or the simple fact that society can turn very quickly. That gives the romance a slightly different feel. It is not just about finding love. It is also about rebuilding a life when the old one has stopped making sense.
Even so, the series still sounds recognizably like Beers. She tends to write heroines who are capable, proud, and forced to make hard choices, and heroes who need to look past first impressions. She also likes emotional movement, from suspicion to trust, from embarrassment to steadiness, from being acted upon to taking control.
So if you come to Brides of Forsaken Bank, expect a more intimate historical setup, with social pressure, practical trouble, and romance growing out of upheaval rather than comfort. It seems like a good fit for readers who enjoy Laura Beers but want to see her work in a slightly different period mood, one where class still matters, but money troubles and scandal can reorder everything very fast.
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