Knights of Dallas Books in Order
Part ofNicole Snow Books in OrderThis page lists the Knights of Dallas books in order by Nicole Snow, with short summaries, small-town background, and easy where-to-start help.
Last updated: June 7, 2026
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Publication Order
4 books
The Best Friend Zone
by Nicole Snow
2020
A woman escaping a cheating ex lands back in small-town Dallas and straight into the orbit of the older best friend she never forgot. Old familiarity deepens into protection, heat, and a hard-earned second chance.
The Romeo Arrangement
by Nicole Snow
2020
Grace is broke, on the run, and caring for her sick father when Ridge Barnet offers an outrageous solution, a fake engagement. In small-town Dallas, make-believe starts feeling dangerously real.
The Hero I Need
by Nicole Snow
2021
A rogue zoologist shows up with a stolen Bengal tiger and ends up claiming she is a nanny to a gruff single dad. Hiding the animal is hard enough, but resisting Grady proves even harder.
The Worst Best Friend
by Nicole Snow
2021
In Dallas, a once-safe friendship gets complicated by old wounds, renewed attraction, and the pressure of home. Snow plays the best-friends-to-lovers angle with plenty of small-town emotion.
Series background & context
The Knights of Dallas books shift Nicole Snow into small-town territory, but not the sleepy kind. These romances are set around Dallas, North Dakota, a place where everybody notices everybody, grudges last a while, and even the most ridiculous fake-fiancee setup can start feeling believable if the town gets involved. The books are connected by place and crossover characters more than one giant plot, so they are easy to read one at a time.
Still, the town is the glue.
Snow's official reading notes describe Accidental Knight as a prequel or companion to the series, and that is useful context. Dallas is the sort of place that keeps pulling people back in, whether they arrive broke, heartburned, on the run, or just hoping for a reset. In The Romeo Arrangement, that means a fake engagement and a desperate heroine trying to keep her father safe. In The Best Friend Zone, it means old feelings and a friendship that never really stayed in the past. In The Hero I Need, the setup gets gloriously unhinged with a gruff single dad, a zoologist, and a Bengal tiger. The Worst Best Friend keeps the emotional focus on history, familiarity, and the trouble with thinking you already know someone.
The tone here is warmer than Snow's biker books and a little softer than her office romances, though there is still tension, protectiveness, and a steady undercurrent of suspense. The heroes are local legends, dependable, stubborn, and not always good at saying what they feel. The heroines tend to be women in transition, recovering from heartbreak, dealing with family strain, or trying to outrun a mess that followed them to town.
What readers usually get from this series is comfort with a kick. There are cabins, family businesses, gossip, old crushes, and scenic small-town routines, but they are paired with real stress, hidden pain, and heroes who step in hard once they decide someone matters. These books are romantic in a grounded way. Dallas is not a fantasy kingdom. It is a place where life gets inconvenient, neighbors get involved, and love has to make room for actual responsibilities.
If you like small-town romance with humor, emotional carryover, and a few bigger swings than usual, Knights of Dallas is a good lane. Start with The Romeo Arrangement if you want the official series opener, or with Accidental Knight if you want the wider town setup first.
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