Georgina Kincaid Books in Order
Part ofRichelle Mead Books in OrderSee the Georgina Kincaid books in order by Richelle Mead, with quick summaries, reading order, series background, and where to start.
Last updated: June 9, 2026
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Publication Order
7 books
Succubus Blues
by Richelle Mead
2007
Georgina Kincaid is a succubus with a bookstore day job and a very inconvenient crush on writer Seth Mortensen. When something ugly starts moving through Seattle's demon underground, charm alone will not save her.
Succubus Dreams
by Richelle Mead
2008
Someone is invading Georgina's dreams, draining her strength, and hinting at a terrifying future. Between a new succubus to mentor and a crisis with Seth, her love life and supernatural life both start to crack.
Succubus On Top / Succubus Nights
by Richelle Mead
2008
Georgina's relationship with Seth is hard enough when even a kiss can be dangerous. Then a disturbing change in her coworker Doug points to darker supernatural trouble, and Georgina has to act fast.
Succubus Heat
by Richelle Mead
2009
After a breakup leaves her reckless, Georgina is exiled to Vancouver and caught in a dangerous power play. When her demon boss vanishes and immortals lose their powers, she has to save Seattle without her usual edge.
Succubus Shadows
by Richelle Mead
2010
Helping plan Seth's wedding is bad enough, but Georgina has bigger problems than heartbreak. A new succubus sets her sights on Seth, and a dark force keeps reaching into Georgina's mind.
Succubus Revealed
by Richelle Mead
2011
Georgina is ordered out of Seattle and sent to Las Vegas, a dream city for a succubus and a suspicious move for everyone else. If there is a way out of the life she hates, it may cost her everything first.
City of Demons
by Richelle Mead
2016
In this Georgina Kincaid novella, Seattle's reluctant succubus is pulled into another burst of infernal chaos. It is a quick return to the series' mix of seduction, supernatural danger, and dark humor.
Series background & context
The Georgina Kincaid books are urban fantasy for readers who like their paranormal stories witty, sexy, and a little melancholy. Georgina is a succubus living in Seattle, which sounds glamorous until you realize she is also dealing with quotas from Hell, supernatural office politics, and the fact that real closeness is almost impossible for her. Her day job at a bookstore suits her better than her immortal one, and that mismatch is what gives the series its personality.
Georgina can seduce men, change her appearance, and walk through the supernatural side of the city with far more ease than most people can manage their commute. But she is not written as an untouchable fantasy figure. She is lonely, funny, self-aware, and often tired of the role she has been assigned. Much of the series turns on that tension. She is good at the job she hates, and bad at protecting the parts of herself that still want an ordinary human life.
That is where Seth Mortensen comes in.
Her relationship with Seth, a shy bestselling writer, is one of the emotional anchors of the books. Because Georgina is a succubus, physical intimacy is never simple, and Mead gets a lot of story out of that basic impossibility. Around them is a lively supernatural cast, including demons, vampires, imps, angels, and old enemies who make Seattle feel much larger and stranger than it first appears.
Each book brings its own problem, usually part mystery, part romantic disaster, part infernal mess. A strange creature turns up in Seattle. Dreams become dangerous. Powers vanish. Old bargains come due. Through all of it, Georgina has to improvise, flirt, negotiate, and occasionally hit her limit. The books are easy to fly through because the voice stays sharp, but they also keep coming back to bigger questions about guilt, choice, and whether someone marked as damned can still change.
Seattle matters here too.
The rainy streets, coffee shops, apartments, and bookstore shifts make the series feel grounded even when the plot heads somewhere wild. That mix is a big reason the books work. Georgina's world has demons and immortals in it, but it still feels like a place where people worry about work, bad timing, and awful relationship decisions.
If you want paranormal romance with grown-up characters, supernatural intrigue, and a heroine who is equal parts deadly and exhausted, this series is a great fit. Start with Succubus Blues and expect six books that blend humor, heartbreak, and demon trouble in a very readable way.
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.






















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