Naked Werewolf Books in Order
Part ofMolly Harper Books in OrderExplore the Naked Werewolf series by Molly Harper in order, with brief summaries, reading order help, and a feel for the Alaska setting.
Last updated: July 1, 2026
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Publication Order
3 books
How to Flirt with a Naked Werewolf
by Molly Harper
2011
Mo Wenstein flees to Alaska for a clean start and finds a naked man with a bear trap on her porch. He is her infuriating neighbor Cooper, and he may or may not be the werewolf behind a string of attacks.
The Art of Seducing a Naked Werewolf
by Molly Harper
2011
Pack alpha Maggie Graham is supposed to scare off an outsider poking around werewolf territory near Grundy, Alaska. That plan gets complicated when the snooping researcher turns out to be smart, stubborn, and very kissable.
How to Run with a Naked Werewolf
by Molly Harper
2013
Anna Moder witnesses a shooting, loses her car, and rescues a wounded stranger who turns out to be a werewolf. Traveling with Caleb Graham might help her survive, but she is not sure she can trust him or his work.
Series background & context
These books take Molly Harper's paranormal comedy to rural Alaska, which is half the point. Grundy is cold, isolated, suspicious of outsiders, and close to a hidden valley where a werewolf pack has managed to live off the grid for generations. The weather, the distance, and the sheer inconvenience of getting anywhere all matter, so the setting never feels like wallpaper.
The first book, How to Flirt with a Naked Werewolf, brings in Mo Wenstein, a Southern transplant who thinks she's starting over in the far north and instead lands next door to Cooper Graham, a grumpy werewolf with bigger problems than manners. Later books widen the family story, following pack alpha Maggie Graham and then Caleb Graham, so the trilogy builds a fuller picture of the pack rather than repeating the same setup.
These are romance novels first, but they also lean into pack politics, outsider pressure, and the question of how long a secret community can stay secret. There is danger in the woods, tension with rival wolves, and the constant problem of humans noticing the wrong thing at the wrong time.
They're funny books, too. Harper gets a lot of mileage out of the awkward practical side of lycanthropy, including the nakedness problem promised by the titles. But the humor doesn't cancel out the stakes. People get hurt. Loyalties get tested. And the characters have to decide what home actually means.
If you like shifter romance with snow, small-town weirdness, and a little bite, this trilogy is an easy sell. Read it in order. The Graham family dynamics are much more satisfying that way.
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