Harmony Springs Books in Order
Part ofMindy Klasky Books in OrderSee the Harmony Springs books by Mindy Klasky in order, with short summaries, small-town romance background, and help choosing a place to start.
Last updated: June 9, 2026
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Publication Order
4 books
Fly Me to the Moon
by Mindy Klasky
2015
Lexi Taylor survived a terrible fire, and veteran Tom Finn Finnegan has scars of his own. When he crashes into her holiday store and agrees to help fix the damage, sparks start flying in more ways than one.
Just One of Those Things
by Mindy Klasky
2016
Baseball star Matt Dawson comes home with big business plans, only to clash with Emily Barton, who is fighting to protect Main Street. Their small-town battle quickly turns personal, and much harder to walk away from.
The Way You Look Tonight
by Mindy Klasky
2017
Anne Barton has spent years carrying the secret of a devastating fire. When a charity stunt throws her together with firefighter Will O'Hara, their attraction burns bright, but both of them have old fears to face.
Harmony Lights
by Mindy Klasky
2021
Doctor Abigail Cohen returns to Harmony Springs for Hanukkah after her mother has a medical crisis. Seeing Ethan Weiss again brings old love, old secrets, and the question of whether a broken heart can really heal.
Series background & context
Harmony Springs is Mindy Klasky's small-town romance world, and the town does a lot of the heavy lifting. This is not just a backdrop with a cute Main Street and a few named shops. It feels like a place where people have history with each other, where local businesses matter, and where old mistakes can still shape a conversation years later. The town sits in West Virginia, in the Shenandoah River Valley, and the setting gives the books a mix of beauty, rootedness, and just enough isolation to make community ties matter.
That community is the heart of the series. These books are full of returning locals, shop owners, veterans, dancers, doctors, and people who thought they had outgrown the place, only to find that home still has a claim on them. Harmony Springs can be supportive, nosy, frustrating, and deeply comforting, sometimes all in the same chapter. That is part of the fun. When a character walks back into town, they are never just arriving at a location. They are stepping back into unfinished business.
Old feelings do not stay buried for long here.
Across the books, Klasky plays with some of the most satisfying small-town romance ingredients, second chances, hometown reunions, family pressure, holiday closeness, and the push-pull between ambition and belonging. One story may center on a woman trying to protect Main Street from outside change. Another may bring together a veteran and a shop owner who both carry scars. Another may send a heroine home during Hanukkah, where long-buried feelings start rising again alongside family obligations and festive traditions.
The tone stays warm without getting too soft. These are not conflict-free comfort reads where the town solves everything with a pie and a parade. Klasky's characters have real things to work through, grief, career setbacks, injuries, guilt, unrequited love, and the fear that going home means giving something up. What makes the series appealing is that those problems unfold in a setting built for connection. People notice when someone is hurting. They also notice when two people clearly belong together and are taking forever to admit it.
The town itself has a lived-in texture. Shops, local papers, holiday events, family homes, train stations, and Main Street storefronts all help the books feel grounded. Harmony Springs is romantic, but it is also practical. People worry about bills, businesses, caretaking, and community survival. That realism keeps the emotional stakes from floating away.
If you like small-town romances where place matters as much as plot, Harmony Springs delivers. The books are connected by setting and spirit more than by one long central arc, so they are easy to dip into. What you can expect every time is a strong sense of home, a cast of people who cannot quite escape each other, and love stories that grow out of real local ties rather than pure fantasy. It is a cozy setup, but there is enough friction in the town to keep things lively.
Edited by
Software engineer whose passion for tracking book recommendations from podcasts inspired the creation of MRB.
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