Love Letters (Lisa Jackson) Books in Order
Part ofLisa Jackson Books in OrderExplore the Love Letters books by Lisa Jackson in order, with short summaries, series background, and tips on where to start.
Last updated: January 12, 2026
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Publication Order
4 books
D is for Dani's Baby
by Lisa Jackson
1995
A](https://www.amazon.com/dp/0373099851%22,%22description%22:%22A) romance with a baby twist that forces two people to rethink everything they assumed about the future. As they move from awkward to connected, they discover that commitment can start in unexpected ways.
C is for Cowboy
by Lisa Jackson
1994
A](https://www.amazon.com/dp/0373099266%22,%22description%22:%22A) western-flavored romance where a cowboy and a woman with her own plans can’t avoid each other for long. As feelings deepen, they must navigate pride, family pressure, and the kind of love that demands courage.
B Is For Baby
by Lisa Jackson
1994
A](https://www.amazon.com/dp/0373099207%22,%22description%22:%22A) romance where an unexpected baby changes everything, and two people have to grow up fast. Attraction comes easy, but building a real family takes honesty, patience, and a willingness to choose each other.
A Is for Always
by Lisa Jackson
1994
A](https://www.amazon.com/dp/0373099142%22,%22description%22:%22A) warm, relationship-driven romance about choosing love on purpose, not by accident. As two guarded people grow closer, they have to decide whether “always” is possible, and what it will take to get there.
Series background & context
Love Letters is a set of Lisa Jackson romances tied together by a playful alphabet hook and a shared, down-to-earth tone. The books are relationship-forward and designed to be quick, satisfying reads, with just enough complication to keep the couples honest.
Sometimes a title tells you exactly what you’re getting.
The four main entries, A Is for Always, B Is For Baby, C is for Cowboy, and D is for Dani’s Baby, point to what these stories do best: familiar romance setups with a little twist. You’ll find themes like unexpected parenthood, second chances, and the kind of attraction that refuses to behave politely.
Even when the premise starts light, Jackson takes the emotions seriously. Her characters often have real reasons to be cautious, past disappointments, family pressure, a job that doesn’t leave room for romance, or a protective streak they can’t quite explain. The books get their momentum from watching two people decide to risk hope anyway.
These romances are generally more about conversation and choice than about villains and crime scenes. Conflicts come from timing, trust, and the fear of repeating an old mistake. When Jackson adds external complications, they usually serve to force clarity, what do you really want, and what are you willing to change to get it?
The books are connected more by vibe than by a single ongoing plot, so you can read them in any order. If you like to go chronologically, the alphabet titles make it easy. If you prefer to choose by premise, pick the one that matches your mood and jump in. Reading in order does add a bit of extra comfort, since you may spot small references and familiar faces as you go.
Love Letters is a good choice if you want Lisa Jackson without the darker serial-killer energy of her thrillers. The stakes are personal, the focus stays on the relationship, and the endings deliver the warmth you want from a romance series.
This page puts the Love Letters books in order and gives you quick summaries so you can decide which “letter” you want to open first.
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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