Dynasties: Tech Tycoons Books in Order
Part ofShannon McKenna Books in OrderSee the Dynasties: Tech Tycoons books by Shannon McKenna in order, with romance summaries, family drama background, and where to start.
Last updated: June 8, 2026
As an Amazon Associate, we earn from qualifying purchases (at no extra cost to you).
Publication Order
4 books
How to Marry a Bad Boy
by Shannon McKenna
2022
Marcus Moss needs a temporary wife. Geneticist Eve Seaton needs backing for her start-up. Their deal looks simple on paper, until real attraction and hidden motives threaten to blow up the arrangement.
Married by Midnight
by Shannon McKenna
2022
Ronnie Moss needs a husband before midnight to secure her place in the family company. A sexy stranger steps in to help, but a rushed Vegas wedding comes with secrets, surprises, and much higher stakes than she expected.
The Marriage Mandate
by Shannon McKenna
2022
Tech heiress Maddie Moss must marry or risk losing the family company, so she picks the one man guaranteed to cause trouble, Jack Daly. Their fake engagement starts as strategy and turns into something much harder to control.
Their Marriage Bargain
by Shannon McKenna
2022
CEO Caleb Moss needs a marriage to protect control of MossTech. Tilda Riley needs to save her family's company, and their child links them in ways neither can ignore once old feelings and new sabotage start colliding.
Series background & context
This series takes Shannon McKenna's love of power struggles and drops it into a sleek family-business setup. The books revolve around the Moss family and their company, MossTech, where money, innovation, loyalty, and control are all tangled together. At the center is a blunt problem with great romance-engine potential: marry, or risk losing the company. From that setup, McKenna builds a string of sharp, high-pressure contemporary romances full of negotiation, suspicion, and attraction that refuses to stay professional.
The family pressure is the whole point.
Each book follows a different couple, but the Moss clan gives the series its continuity. Caleb, Maddie, Marcus, and Ronnie are all dealing with the same family machine, the same expectations, and the same ticking clock. The relationships start with bargains, fake engagements, temporary marriages, old heartbreak, or outright strategic chaos, then get messier from there. These are not quiet, low-stakes courtships. They are boardroom romances where the family fortune, public image, and sometimes an entire company are all sitting at the table with the couple.
The tech side gives the series a slightly different flavor from standard billionaire romance. MossTech is tied to food, agriculture, science, and start-up culture, so the books are not just about penthouses and private jets, though there is plenty of glossy atmosphere. You also get mergers, investors, research, sabotage, hostile takeovers, and people trying to protect work they actually care about. That gives the romantic conflict a practical edge. Love matters here, but so does the future of the business.
The tone is polished and fast-moving, with a lot of chemistry and plenty of family interference. McKenna has fun with women who are just as capable and strategic as the men, which keeps the books from turning into pure alpha-posturing. Tilda, Maddie, Eve, and Ronnie all walk in with their own plans, and none of them are content to be decorative solutions to a male problem. That push and pull makes the pairings lively.
If you want Shannon McKenna with more glamour, more corporate maneuvering, and slightly less outright mayhem than the suspense books, this is a very easy series to sink into. The novels are linked but readable on their own, and together they make a satisfying run of family-business romances where everybody thinks they are making a deal, right up until feelings ruin the spreadsheet.
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