Dragonfury Scotland Books in Order
Part ofCoreene Callahan Books in OrderSee the Dragonfury Scotland series by Coreene Callahan in order, with short summaries, series background, and where to start in the Highlands.
Last updated: June 9, 2026
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Publication Order
7 books
Fury of a Highland Dragon
by Coreene Callahan
2015
Framed for cyber espionage, hacker Ivy Macpherson runs straight into Scottish dragon warrior Tydrin while trying to stay ahead of the FBI. Their second-chance romance unfolds against a hidden magical world and the wreckage of old mistakes.
Fury of Denial
by Coreene Callahan
2017
Blinded in an ambush long ago, dragon warrior Wallaig lives for revenge until his enemies target pastry chef Amantha Leblanc. Saving her forces them into a dangerous night of pursuit, sharp banter, and hard choices.
Fury of Shadows
by Coreene Callahan
2017
Scottish pack leader Cyprus has spent years hiding a brutal secret, until an old enemy resurfaces and targets human book conservator Elise Woodward. Protecting her means returning to the shadows he hoped to leave behind.
Fury of Persuasion
by Coreene Callahan
2021
Scottish dragon warrior Vyroth is wasting away in an underground prison when salvage hunter Nicole Biscayne lands in the same nightmare. To get out alive, they must trust each other before enemies and old secrets close in.
Fury of Isolation
by Coreene Callahan
2022
Cate Biscayne is taken hostage by criminals hunting her con-man father, and brutal Scottish dragon warrior Rannock is the last person she wants to need. Their search through the underworld turns into a race against time and darker magic.
Fury of Frustration
by Coreene Callahan
2023
Exiled dragon warrior Kruger has built a ruthless empire in the Scottish Highlands. When Ferguson McGilvery arrives to claim a surprise inheritance, their clash pulls her into old magic, family trouble, and a bond neither wants.
Fury of Misfortune
by Coreene Callahan
2023
Scottish dragon operative Levin works in the shadows until reporter Priya Burman lands in the middle of a deadly investigation. Their search for the truth pulls them into cult power, dark magic, and a mission that could cost everything.
Series background & context
Dragonfury Scotland takes the hidden-dragon world of the main Dragonfury books and plants it firmly in the Scottish Highlands. These stories follow a separate pack of dragon warriors, men who live hard, fight harder, and guard their own corner of the world with claws out. The series works as a connected spin-off, so each book delivers its own romance while also feeding a larger conflict that keeps growing behind the scenes.
The setting does a lot of the heavy lifting here. The books lean into Highland weather, remote ground, old grudges, and the sense that ancient magic never really went away. Humans stumble into that world from all kinds of directions. In Fury of a Highland Dragon, Ivy Macpherson is a hacker on the run when she collides with Tydrin. In Fury of Shadows, Elise Woodward, a struggling book conservator, gets caught between pack business and an old enemy. Later books bring in a pastry chef, a salvage hunter, a hostage pulled into the criminal underworld, and an investigative reporter chasing the wrong lead at exactly the wrong time.
That variety helps keep the series lively.
The Scottish dragons are linked by pack loyalty, but they are not all built the same way. Cyprus carries command on his shoulders. Wallaig is driven by revenge. Vyroth is stubborn enough to make trouble even before the trouble finds him. Rannock, Kruger, and Levin each bring their own scars, temper, and style of protection. The romances are fated and intense, but Callahan usually gives them a practical edge. These men are not just falling in love. They are trying to stay alive, keep their pack intact, and stop the next disaster before it lands.
The ongoing tension comes from more than one direction. Rogue Dragonkind, corrupt power structures, criminal networks, and darker magical forces all press in on the series. That means the books often feel like a blend of paranormal romance and suspense. There are rescues, manhunts, prisons, surveillance jobs, and sudden bursts of violence, but there is also a strong domestic thread running underneath. Once a heroine is brought into the pack, the question becomes not only whether she will survive, but whether she can imagine this hidden world becoming home.
These books feel a little rougher around the edges than the main Dragonfury line, in a good way. The men are more isolated, the weather is harsher, and the threats often hit close to the bone. Even so, the same emotional engine is there: found family, damaged people learning trust, and romance that lands in the middle of a wider war.
If you want the full arc, start with Fury of a Highland Dragon and keep going in order. The Scottish series rewards that approach because the pack dynamics, outside enemies, and political fallout all build from book to book. By the time you reach titles like Fury of Isolation, Fury of Frustration, and Fury of Misfortune, you are not just checking in on one couple. You are watching a whole dragon clan fight to hold its ground.
Edited by
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