Orcs Love Curvy Girls Books in Order
Part ofMichele Mills Books in OrderSee the Orcs Love Curvy Girls books by Michele Mills in order, with summaries, series background, and a clear place to start.
Last updated: June 10, 2026
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Publication Order
3 books
Orcs Do It Better
by Michele Mills
2025
Ellie's awful ex brings trouble to her lawn, and the reclusive orc next door answers with one punch and a feral declaration that she is his bride. Then they have to work together.
Orcs Do It Harder
by Michele Mills
2025
Anna has spent years hiding under another name when a threat forces her to run again. Orc Keric Irontree stops her at the bus station and offers safety, but only if she lives as his mate.
Orcs Do It Wilder
by Michele Mills
2026
Journalist Sloane lists an orc media handler as her emergency contact and later gets kidnapped while chasing a political story in Colombia. Jonus Irontree comes for her, and rescue is only the beginning.
Series background & context
Orcs Love Curvy Girls is Michele Mills moving from novella-length orc setups into longer, roomier stories. These books still have the fierce possessive heroes and the comic shock of meeting an orc in the modern world, but they give the relationships more space to breathe.
The world feels bigger here.
Orcs Do It Better starts with Ellie, her difficult ex, and the reclusive orc next door, Garlen Underwood. That first meeting sets up a key part of the series, human and orc lives are crossing more openly now, but old customs still matter. Orc scenting, dark-of-winter bride instincts, community rules, and the fear of what mating means all shape the romance. Orcs Do It Harder carries that into a more suspenseful setup, with Anna on the run and Keric Irontree offering sanctuary at a remote Maine commune. Orcs Do It Wilder widens the scope again, sending Jonus Irontree into a rescue mission when a journalist he cares about is kidnapped in Colombia.
So while the books are romantic and often funny, there is real external pressure too.
A lot of the charm comes from the Irontree family and the larger orc community around them. Teachers, neighbors, relatives, and old customs all keep feeding the sense that these are connected stories, not just three isolated couples. The orcs here are not generic fantasy muscle. They are trying to live beside humans, protect tradition, and figure out what integration looks like without losing themselves.
If you want Michele Mills's orc romances with fuller plots, a stronger family network, and more sustained worldbuilding, this is the series to browse. It keeps the sweetness and steam, but it lets the wider community matter too.
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