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Mad Villages Books in Order

Part ofChristina Jones Books in Order

This page shows the Mad Villages books by Christina Jones in order, with quick summaries, reading order, and notes on the magic and where to start.

Last updated: June 7, 2026

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Publication Order

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5 books

1

Hubble Bubble

by Christina Jones

2004

Forced into early retirement at fifty-five, Mitzi Blessing faces a future that feels far too small. Then she discovers her grandmother's old cookery book, and village life begins to fizz with fresh purpose, mischief, and a hint of magic.

2

Seeing Stars

by Christina Jones

2005

City girl Amber arrives for a summer in the country and finds herself among villagers who live by constellations, moon lore, and strange little rituals. Sceptical at first, she is pulled into the fun, and then into something harder to explain.

3

Love Potions

by Christina Jones

2006

Aromatherapist Sukie Ambrose starts using her cottage garden in her homemade products and accidentally stirs up more than nice scents. Soon her lotions and massages are nudging people toward romance in wonderfully inconvenient ways.

4

Heaven Sent

by Christina Jones

2007

With thirty looming, Clemmie wants a proper job and a proper love life, preferably involving fireworks boss Guy Devlin. But Guy's baggage is heavy, his life is complicated, and Clemmie's grand plans are anything but simple.

5

Happy Birthday

by Christina Jones

2008

Jilted on her wedding day, Phoebe Bowler turns to grumpy neighbour Rocky just when her life is falling apart. Then an expert in birthday magic enters the picture, and Phoebe starts wondering if fate can be nudged along.

Series background & context

The Mad Villages books are linked romantic comedies set in eccentric rural communities where everyday life is only half in charge. These are not epic fantasy novels in disguise. They are village stories, full of neighbours, gossip, work, parties, disappointments, and sudden crushes, with a light magical shimmer running underneath it all.

The series opens with Hubble Bubble, and that is the best place to understand its tone. Mitzi Blessing, pushed into early retirement at fifty-five, thinks her world has started to shrink. Instead, a discovery from her grandmother's past nudges her back into action and turns ordinary village life into something far more lively. Mitzi is one of Jones's classic heroines, grounded, funny, a bit underestimated, and stronger than anyone realises, and she gives the series its emotional centre.

From there, the books widen the lens. In Seeing Stars, city girl Amber arrives in the country and finds herself in a community that takes constellations, lunar rituals, and old customs far more seriously than she expects. Her sceptical outsider view makes the setting especially fun, because readers get to learn the rules of the place as she does. The villages in this series are not just pretty backdrops. They shape the action. People notice things, festivals matter, and even private problems have a way of becoming public business.

Nothing stays small for long.

Later books keep introducing new central characters while holding on to the same shared world. Love Potions follows aromatherapist Sukie Ambrose as her handmade products start producing romantic consequences she never planned. Heaven Sent gives Clemmie a looming birthday, a job hunt, and a dangerous interest in a fireworks entrepreneur. Happy Birthday throws jilted Phoebe Bowler together with grumpy Rocky Lancaster and then adds birthday magic to the mix. The pattern is clear: each book stands on its own, but the pleasure comes from returning to a place where love, timing, coincidence, and a bit of mischief are always ready to collide.

What makes the series work is its balance. The magical touches are playful rather than heavy. They sit beside very recognisable worries about work, loneliness, confidence, and starting again. Jones keeps the stakes human. People want jobs, homes, affection, reassurance, or one solid chance to reshape their lives. Even when something odd happens, the books stay rooted in practical feelings and comic social chaos.

If you like romances with a strong sense of place, this is a lovely series to sink into. Expect an ensemble feel, recurring faces, village celebrations that go off course, and heroines who are usually a lot tougher than they think. The mood is warm, funny, and gently offbeat. The magic is part of the fun, but the real draw is the sense of community, and the way Jones makes these villages feel busy, nosy, inconvenient, and impossible not to love.

Edited by

Richard Reis

Software engineer whose passion for tracking book recommendations from podcasts inspired the creation of MRB.

Anurag Ramdasan

Lead investor at 3one4 Capital whose startup expertise and love for books helped shaped MRB and its growth.

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All 5 Mad Villages Books in Order (Complete List 2026)